Friday, September 5, 2014

NC: Mattie Rice

Via Carl

The itty, bitty picture the rag posted, with an ulterior motive, obviously.

http://ak-cache.legacy.net/legacy/images/Cobrands/charlotte/Photos/ea903861-634d-470f-8c8e-26a0a0ed5248.jpg
 The actual image.

Mattie Rice, a slave's daughter who urged Union County to erect a marker honoring the Confederate Army service of her father and other slaves, died Monday in High Point, her family said. She was 91.

The Union County native is believed to be among the last people in the state with a parent who was enslaved, said Earl Ijames, (A good man) a curator at the North Carolina Museum of History.


A2

"Her fortitude and her dignity was evident from the first moment I met her," said Ijames, who also had supported the marker drive. He praised Rice's persistence over the years in highlighting her family background, work that illuminated a long-forgotten chapter of state history.

In December 2012, Rice helped dedicate the marker in Monroe to her father and nine other Union County men. Nine of the men were slaves and one was a free black man, all of whom served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War then received tiny (The same as white Confederates, dorkhead) state pensions for their service late in life.



http://www.ncocr.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/12.12.08-Union-County-Confederate-Pensionsers-of-Color-Marker-unveiled-by-Mattie-Clyburn-Rice..jpg

The granite marker at at the Old County Courthouse is thought to be the first of its kind in the nation to honor black men who worked, willingly or not, for the Confederacy. The marker was placed in front of a century-old Civil War monument from the Jim Crow era.

Rice's father, Wary Clyburn, died in 1930 at about age 90 when his daughter was 8.


https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjtERCj5OWAkqrHkTzW50a2WNItyeNwjysTUem7D4Pqocf5tp9RmZi0FWGvfOBFwln-uqqXQRs32HcPx1SwQP3OkscbDFc8qhgq3gTjH5DAUyifx3JoN7S3kz9fHjTLzwSQc3XMdlXaNo/s1600/WaryClyburn.jpg

During the war, he ran away from his plantation in South Carolina to join his master's son, working as his bodyguard and cook. He spoke proudly about risking his life to save the son, dragging him to safety after he had been wounded in battle, Rice recalled. 

6 comments:

  1. What a great story about an awesome woman - thanks for posting a classy picture of Ms. Rice. Wowza, her daddy was 82 when she was born - that's impressive! (Love your Worthless Charlotte Observer edit, Brock ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. :) Thank you sweetie and too bad you can't make the PATCON this time.

      Delete
  2. I still be very sad over my big boo boo (((

    ReplyDelete
  3. I will make it all better come May ;)

    ReplyDelete