Mr. Nunn's Address of Friday Evening, May 16, 1919 |
Delivered on the
occasion of the Presentation of the Historical Books of Col. Whitford to
the Library Association of New Bern, N. C. |
Mayor Edward
Clark presented the Historical Books of Col. John D. Whitford, which had
been donated by his son, Mr. Reid Whitford. The gift was accepted on
behalf of the Association by the President, Mr. T. A. Green. |
Judge O. H. Guion in his usual
pleasant manner introduced the speaker of the evening, Hon. R. A. Nunn,
who gave the following sketch of Col. Whitford's life, as follows: |
|
“The late Col. John D. Whitford, son of Hardy Whitford, and Mary J.
Clark, his wife, was like many of our best and most useful men, of
English and Scotch-Irish ancestry. He was born in New Bern, Wednesday,
17 August, 1825. Through both parents he was related to many of the
first families in the county. His father was a prominent merchant in
this town 100 years ago. As a boy he attended the old New Bern Academy
and had the educational advantages of that old institution where
several men afterwards famous received their training. He did not pursue
his studies in college nor university, but such was his diligence in
acquiring knowledge of people, public affairs and commercial interest,
and so great was his love for books, history and general literature, he
was early recognized as an accomplished scholar of great learning and
unusual talent and distinguished for his retentive memory of folks and
events. When he was barely 21 years of age he was elected Mayor of the
town, or Intendent, as the office was then designated. He always
manifested practical and substantial interest in the development of the
community and as soon as he was placed at the head of the local
government and such schemes characterized his whole active life. Under
his administration the streets were improved, ponds were drained, old
creek bottoms filled in, and brick sewers, then called aqueducts,
constructed for drainage purposes. Every now and then some of these old
aqueducts are found when excavations are made and they never fail to
excite interest because none of this generation knows how or when they
were built so far beneath the present surface, but as a fact they are or
were among the first if not the very first underground brick aqueducts
constructed in the state. He also promoted and caused to be erected the
beautiful shell-rock wall around Cedar Grove Cemetery to protect the
burying ground from the hogs, goats, and cattle, which roamed at large
all around and over the town in those days. He believed in the
enforcement of the town ordinances and it is related that on one
occasion when he had caused a woman of some prominence to be arrested
for violation of the new ordinances designed to protect pedestrians and
duly made and provided to prevent and remedy the common evil of throwing
waste water from the windows of houses, most of which were built flush
with the street and with porch and steps jutting out half-way across the
sidewalk, he resisted all appeals of influential friends of the
misdemeanant and went on with the prosecution and pronounced the
offender guilty, but having demonstrated that justice is blind, he
exemplified that it is also merciful, by paying the ten dollar fine
which he imposed. |
“After his term of service as mayor, he was appointed United States
Collector of Customs at this port. New Bern then enjoyed a large
coastwise and foreign trade. A great many vessels were owned by
residents of the town and a thriving export and import trade was carried
on extensively. The office of collector was therefore an important and
responsible position. |
“Soon after this he began to devote much of his time to the great work
of his life. As a young man he enjoyed the friendship of William Gaston
he remembered as a small child, John Stanly, and he had imbibed the
spirit and hope of these men and of Judge A. D. Murphey, and others like
him, who on the early days of our progress had the vision to see what
North Carolina was destined to be when the natural resources of the
state were developed. He joined hands with men like Col. Peter G. Evans,
Alonzo T. Jerkins, William G. Bryan, Charles Slover, John Blackwell,
John R. Justice, William H. Washington, George S. Stevenson, Moses W.
Jarvis, Edward R. Stanly, Fred P. Latham, Israel Disosway, Hardy B.
Lane, James C. Stevenson, George Green, Henry G. Cutler, Alexander
Miller, and Alexander Mitchell, and fired than with enthusiasm and
ambition to execute the plans and hopes of the leading men of the
previous generation, and through his untiring efforts and life
management the great plan of joining the east and west assumed form and
life. |
“The Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company having been incorporated
by the General Assembly of 1853, the first meeting of the stockholders
was held in the courthouse at New Bern, Wednesday, 14 July 1854. The
minutes of the meeting show that the action to organize was made by John
D. Whitford, Esq. The first general meeting of the stockholders was held
20 and 21 July, 1854, and the company organized and John D. Whitford,
At. T. Jerkins, E.R. Stanly, R.N. Taylor, F.P. Latham, Wm. P. Moore,
George Green and George S. Stevenson were elected directors, and by them
Mr. Whitford was elected president of the company. He was still a very
young man for such a position and the responsibility it entailed. When
his selection was considered a signal honor at the time, yet it was
universally agreed that no man was more deserving. Without interruption
he continued as president for ten years with most gratifying success. |
“In his report to the stockholders in July, 1855, Mr. Whitford speaking
of the object of the company said; ‘The importance of the great work
before us cannot but be apparent to every man from Beaufort to
Goldsboro; yes from the ocean to the mountains. The project was
conceived a quarter of a century ago, and originated in the patriotic
minds of such men as William Gaston, John Stanly and John Washington.
They believed it to be a great work of deep interest to the state, and
which was to be an important contributor to its resources. Let us then
imitate the example of those great and good men. Let us work constantly
and energetically to the day of its completion - dear to their virtues
and memory, a noble monument - bequeath to our children and posterity a
precious legacy, and reap for ourselves a glorious reward.’ |
“At the meeting in July 1855, he reported that of the three locomotives
ordered by the company, two of them, viz. the “Gov. Bragg,” and “Charles
F. Fisher” had been delivered, and that the third, the “John Becter”
should be ready as soon as required. He described them as first class
engines and proudly reported that the “Gov. Bragg”‘was put in motion on
the road at New Bern, on March 15, 1855, and a few days later delivered
to Mr. Stanly, one of the contractors with a train of platform cars, and
had since that time run about 2,000 miles without a screw having been
loosed, or one cent laid for repairs, except for slight damage received
by the accidental falling of a shell. |
“These locomotives would be curious things now. They had no cover for
the boiler and when it was wet and chilled by rain the steam went down
and the train came to a standstill; wood was burned as fuel and the
strong draft threw great sparks out through the balloon shaped stacks
and passengers wore linen dusters to protect their clothing from dirt,
soot and live cinders. The regulations provided that the greatest care
must at all times be taken to avoid the scattering of sparks, cinders or
fire in any shape from the engine chimneys; that steam must be shut off
and the damper closed before the engine reached bridges which must be
crossed in no case faster than six miles per hour and care must be taken
not to slide the wheels except in case of imminent danger. The railroad
tickets read; ‘Kinston to Goldsboro’ or other points, and bore in
addition what would now be significant, the words ‘One Seat’. |
“A year later, 16 July 1857, President Whitford stated to the stock
holders that Miss Sarah B. Metts was the only lady who had taken stock
in the A. & N. C. road; he therefore moved that she be allowed a free
ticket for life, on the entire line. The motion carried unanimously and
by acclamation. |
“Miss Metts afterwards married Mr. T.J. Mitchell, long a prominent
business man of this city, and is the mother of Messrs. T.J. Mitchell
and J.G. Mitchell. She enjoyed the pass to the end of her life. |
“On the 1 January, 1857 the track having been laid to Core Creek, a
second class passenger car was placed on the road and run with the
construction train, for the accommodation of passengers in connection
with the New Bern, Kinston and Goldsboro line of stages. By this time
another locomotive, the “John Stanly” had been acquired and the company
had other elaborate equipment consisting of one second class passenger
car, four house cars, twenty platform cars, sixteen gravel cars, and two
hand cars, and the president was trying to get a contract with the
United States to carry the mails. |
“8 January 1858, the train passed over Neuse River and ran through to
Kinston; on the 29 April the road was opened to Goldsboro; on the 19
February, 1858, Trent River was spanned with a bridge and the first
crossing of the locomotive was announced with the roar of cannon and
huzzas of many hundred people, who had assembled to witness this feat.
The 31 May brought the tracks of Gov. Morehead and Yr. Wood,
contractors, together, and on the 7 June, the first train ran through
from Goldsboro to the ocean. President Whitford describing this says; ‘A
most singular and happy coincident, without any preconcerted arrangement
or knowledge of what each other were doing, at the very moment, when
thousands of fair daughters and distinguished sons of the good old North
State, had assembled in the west, around the base of a column, eager and
breath-less to catch the eloquent words that fell from the lips of a
patriotic citizen, in praise of him to whom it was erected, we were then
engaged in the east completing a monument, to the great projector of
railroads, more lasting than stone and more durable than adamant- the
cherished scheme of his life, uniting the east and the west in iron
bonds and perpetual brotherhood. But when they all have crumbled to dust
and shall have passed from the memory of man, then will the practical
wisdom and sound forecast, the spotless names and glorious deeds of a
Caldwell and a Gaston stand bright upon the pages of their country’s
history, and shine and continue to shine, and illuminate the pathway of
generations yet unborn.’ |
“In these arid days of war regulations, Reed amendments and
Constitutional provisions, for fear of violating prohibition laws and
regulations, I must refrain from describing in detail the Celebration
held at New Bern to chronicle the first arrival of a train with
passengers and freight by rail from the west. The invitation of the
inhabitants of the town was extended and met with generous response.
Heavily laden trains from the Wilmington and Weldon North Carolina,
Raleigh and Gaston and Western North Carolina roads as well as the A.&
N.C. road, brought thousands and thousands of people. A Great dinner was
provided and barrels of liquor and many, many dozen cases of champagne
consumed. A vessel from New York brought the wet goods and the country
was scoured for pigs, chickens, turkeys, and everything good to eat. Our
distinguished subject reports to his stockholders; ‘Nothing occurred by
accident, or otherwise, to mar the pleasure of any, and all returned to
their homes loud in expressions for the success of our enterprise and
the welfare of our people.’ |
“From June, 1865, Mr. Whitford was not president of the A.& N.C. road.
In 1866, he was elected to the State Senate from Craven County (penciled
note says he was chairman of the committee that designed the state flag,
while in the state senate) and received a larger number of votes than
any man had been honored with up to that time for public office in the
county. In June 1866, he was again president of the railroad company and
at the stockholders’ meeting 27 June, 1867, the following resolution was
adopted; ‘Resolved that the thanks of the stockholders are eminently
due, and are hereby tendered to John D. Whitford, Esq., for his able and
efficient administration of the affairs of this company during the last
year more especially does this company owe to his untiring energy the
funding of the remainder of the debt due to the state, and thereby
rendering it possible for the stockholders to realize within a
reasonable time some return for their investments.’ |
“Several times afterwards he was re-elected president of the company. It
was a position much sought after and parents held out to their sons as a
reward for merit the possibility of being president of the A.& N.C.
Railroad Company, president of the United States or Governor of North
Carolina. |
“In his 26th year on the 15 January 1851, Mr. Whitford married Miss
Jeanie Reid of Wilmington, N.C. To them were born seven children, viz.
William Whitford (note says; University of Va. Grad), brilliant lawyer,
who died in early manhood; Miss Mary Whitford, now deceased; Capt. Reid
Whitford, Civil Engineer, who resides in Charleston, S.C.; Miss Jeanie
Reid, who married W.P. Fife; Clark Whitford, who lived in Mississippi
most of life and died there several years ago; Miss Bessie, who married
Dr. George Slover of New Bern; Miss Johnes Dalton who married Dr. C.
Williams Bailey of Georgetown, S.C.; and Orlena Sheltton, who died in
infancy. |
"Mr. Whitford was an active fireman in the volunteer department of the
town and for a long time was foreman of one of the companies. |
“He was a prominent and a most enthusiastic Mason, a member of St.
John’s Lodge for more than half a century, and was exalted to the
sublime and honorable degree of Royal Arch Mason. (Note says; Master of
the Lodge; gave oil portrait of himself to it). |
“When the New Bern Light Infantry, a local military company was
organized, he promptly became a member, and from this company he and
Jacob Brookfield were the two first volunteers for service in the Civil
War. In the Confederate service he was commissioned first as Captain,
then as Major, and just prior to the coming of peace he was promoted to
a Colonelcy. He saw service with General L.0.B. Branch, was in the
Battle of New Bern and in the fighting around Kinston and other places.
But on account of his special railroad experience, railroad men being•
scarce in those days, he was placed in charge of the transportation of
troops and munitions of war through North Carolina by the Confederate
States Government. He was also State agent for the purchase of cavalry
equipment and other war materials. His service was so useful it brought
to him a most complimentary letter from General Robert E. Lee. |
“4 July, 1859, the New Bern Light Infantry, ‘As a token of respect and
esteem’ publicly presented Mr. Whitford an elegant punch pitcher cast
from silver dollars donated by several members of the Company. |
“Before the Civil War he was director of the North Carolina railroad
company and was also a member of the State Commission for the
improvement of the Neuse River. |
“He was a member of the convention which passed the Ordinance of
Secession. |
“He was a delegate to the River and Harbor Convention held in Savannah
in 1884 and after that for a period was Superintendent of certain river
improvements in North Carolina made by the national government.
Immediately following the Civil War he was instrumental in establishing
in New Bern the firm of Whitford Dill and Company, shipping and
commission merchants, and agents for Murry, Ferris and Company, owners
of the first line of steamers successfully operated between New Bern and
New York, he was also a member of the brokerage house of John F.
Pickrell & Co., 143 Broadway, New York. He was indeed a man of unusual
ability, broadminded, and always possessed the courage of his
convictions, outspoken and taking the initiative in public enterprises
and always bending his activities to the upbuilding of his home town and
the advancement of the commercial importance of New Bern. |
“In
disposition he was generous to a fault, amiable, kind, fair and just. In
manner was cordial, cheerful and most attractive. He was by nature an
instructor and builder. When I was a small child I used to play in his
yard a good part of my time with his grandson, John D. Whitford, Jr.,
for whom he built a miniature railroad, and which every child in the
neighborhood enjoyed. Like every big-brained, kind-hearted, strong man I
have ever known, he loved to see things grow, and had a large and
wonderful garden full of apple trees, peaches, pears, figs and grape
vines, to say nothing of radishes and other things children. are crazy
about. We looked forward with great eagerness to the times when the
Colonel would take us through the garden. I well recollect the first
time I ever heard of the amazing story of the scientists about the
beginning of the world and the origin of the universe. Colonel Whitford
sat on the steps of his home and graphically pictured and explained to
his grandson and myself what in later years came to know as the nebular
hypothesis. |
“Through
his long life he had treasured in his memory more facts and accounts of
by-gone days than any one in this community. He was the best authority
on local history and was distinguished as an antiquarian. He was
interesting at all times, well liked, honored and popular. In the prime
of his life it was said that no man in North Carolina knew by name and
face as Colonel Whitford except possibly Governor Zeb Vance. |
“It is difficult for us of this generation to realize the tremendous
obstacles that stood in the way of building a railroad 65 or 70 years
ago. It is an Herculean job now, but Col. Whitford and his associates
wrought in the days of human slavery, before the time of applied
electricity, automobiles, motion pictures, flying machines or wireless
telephones were known; when water was taken from the town pump; chunks
of fire borrowed from the neighbors or tediously kindled from flint and
punk; tallow candles shed their feeble light and meals were cooked in
the fire place; but then as now the minds of progressive men looked
forward. |
“He lived in the period of the greatest development the world has ever
known. In his time the United States expanded from the narrow margin of
states along the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific, and across the Pacific.
It was the beginning of the era of canals and railroads, in fact there
was no railroad when he was born and the first steamboat crossed the
Atlantic Ocean only six years before. The railroads in his early days
consisted of wooden or iron rails over which cars were drawn by horses
at a speed of 5 or 6 miles an hour. During his life the telegraph was
invented; coal was first successfully used as fuel; agricultural
implements like the reaping machines, binders, mowers, threshing
machines, and rotary printing presses and sewing machines, came into
use; India rubber was found fit for commercial purposes; revolving
pistols and improved firearms manufactured; coal oil lamps and
illuminating gas generally adopted. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
Company in 1827 was using horse drawn cars. In 1830 only 23 miles of
railroad was in operation in the United States; in 1850 when he began
the agitation for the building of the Atlantic and North Carolina
railroad from the Ocean to Goldsboro there were about 3,000 miles of
railroads in the whole country. Ten years later there were more than
30,000 miles, all due to men of indomitable courage, foresight and
ceaseless energy. Such men were the builders of the nation. |
"Probably no man has ever lived in New Bern who was more useful in
developing certain features of our commercial life. He provided
transportation by land and water. Undoubtedly the people of the east
who now enjoy the fruits of his labor owe to him a debt of gratitude,
which should never be forgotten. He lived to see the great celebration
which was held in 1910 to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the
foundation of the town. As a courtesy to him the parade was arranged to
pass his house and he was visibly affected as he witnessed from his
window the floats depicting the events in our history in which he had so
large a share. A few months later, 13 of September, 1910 he died and a
long life of honor and usefulness in the 86th year of his age. |
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{From Mr. Nunn's
Address of Friday Evening, May 16, 1919. Found at the New Bern-Craven
County Public Library, accessed January 6, 2020,
http://newbern.cpclib.org/research/whitford/nunnspeech.htm} |
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