SITE DIRECTORY
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Little Davy Cemetery
LITTLE DAVY CEMETERY
FOUNDED: 1880
ADDITONAL NAMES: Trinity Cemetery #2
AFFILIATION(S): N/A
HISTORY:
The Little Davy Cemetery is located in the area previously known as Little Davy. This area had a thriving black community. In 1880, the Freedman's Bureau built a school across the street from the cemetery. The first burial, that we know of, was in 1889 and the last burial was in 2012.
BCN Contact Information:
Kendra Lyons
klyons@randolphlibrary.org
Ferree's Chapel Cemetery
FERREE’S CHAPEL CEMETERY
FOUNDED: Early 1900’s
ADDITONAL NAMES: N/A
AFFILIATION(S):
Randolph County Library’s Randolph Room
HISTORY:
Ferree’s Chapel Cemetery is located in Randleman, North Carolina. It is behind what is now the Academy Street Baptist Church. It was sold to them in 1959 after the death of Tamer Allred. The administrator of her will had a commissioner appointed and the land was sold. We have not been able to find any records of where the land originally came from. Tamer was a Quaker, and we believe she inherited the land from her father. There are no records indicating that there was a church called Ferree’s Chapel in this spot. There is a Ferree’s Chapel in Randleman, but it is across town. The Baptist church and its forbearers do not have a cemetery with this church.
BCN Contact Information:
Kendra Lyons
Genealogist, Randolph Room
Randolph County Public Library
Strieby congregational United Church of Christ cemetery
STRIEBY CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST CEMETERY
FOUNDED: 1880
ADDITONAL NAMES: N/A
AFFILIATION(S): N/A
HISTORY:
Strieby was founded by the Rev Islay Walden, who was visually impaired, grew up enslaved in the community. After emancipation, he received his teaching degree from Howard University in 1876, during which time he wrote his fist book of poems, “Miscellaneous Poems, Which the Author Desires to Dedicate to the Cause of Education and Humanity” and founded a Sabbath School. Subsequently he attended and graduated from the New Brunswick Theological Seminary, where he wrote a second book of poems, “Walden’s Sacred Poems with a Sketch of His Life,” and established another school called the Student Mission. He was ordained in 1879 and returned to Randolph County, NC, under the auspices of the American Missionary Association. He purchased 6 acres in southwestern Randolph on which he built both a church and a school and the cemetery, first called Promised Land Church and Academy. The school and church became important centers of African American life. In 1883, Walden petitioned for and was appointed postmaster of a community post office, named Strieby. The church, school, and cemetery were subsequently renamed Strieby. The school continued until the late 1920s when it was merged with another county African American school. A new church building was built in 1972 after the original was condemned. Descendants of the founders continue to bury family members in the cemetery. Rev. Islay Walden died in 1884 and is buried in the cemetery. Vella Lassiter, a community member, graduate of the school, teacher, and trustee, who won a landmark civil rights case in 1937 and affirmed by the state Supreme Court in 1939, is also buried in the cemetery.
In 2014, the site was named a Randolph County Cultural Heritage Site, by the county Historic Preservation and Landmark Commission. In 2021, the site was named a Literary Landmark by United for Libraries, in honor of the the Rev. Islay Walden, “Blind Poet of North Carolina.”
BCN Contact Information:
Margo Lee Williams
margolw@gmail.com
Allen’s Temple AME Church
ALLEN’S TEMPLE AME CEMETERY
FOUNDED: 1895
ADDITONAL NAMES: None
AFFILIATION(S): None
HISTORY:
According to land records the land was originally purchased on 5 November 1895 by the trustees of Allen Temple AME Church. According to the corner stone, the wooden church structure was Dedicated 27 September 1947. The church property was sold 9 April 1970. The cemetery was not included in this sale and as far as I can tell is still owned by the AME Church. There are many unmarked graves, and I am sure there are some we don’t know about and except for one or two upright stones, this cemetery appears to be an abandoned lot.
When they built the 220 bypass in the 1960’s, it split the local neighborhood. That meant that if you didn’t have a car, it was very hard to get to the church. That along with some threats to fire bomb the church, during the civil rights movement, meant that fewer and fewer people attended. It seems that the church was not closed so much as just slowly died. Genealogies, land records, newspaper articles and maps can be found in the Randolph Room in the Randolph County North Carolina Library.
BCN Contact Information:
Kendra Lyons
klyons@randolphlibrary.org