Baldwin's and Free Press Kinston, North Carolina city directory [1936], Part 1

Author: Baldwin Directory Company.
Publication date: 1936
Publisher: Baldwin Directory Co.
Number of Pages: 272


USA > North Carolina > Lenoir County > Kinston > Baldwin's and Free Press Kinston, North Carolina city directory [1936] > Part 1


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KINSTON


North Carolina


CITY DIRECTORY 1936


Kinston Free Press Company, Inc. AND Baldwin Directory Co., Inc.


The Library of the niversity of orth Carolina


RSITAT


CAROL .


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CIBERTAS


SEPT


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LN


llection of forth Caroliniana


Endomed by


John Sprunt Dill


of the Class of 1889 C971.54 X56b


1936


This book must no be taken from th Library building.


LUNC-15M F.38


١


BALDWIN'S AND FREE PRESS


Kinston


NORTH CAROLINA


City Directory MASTER EDITION VOLUME 1 ABCD No. 21 1936


QUALITY DIRECTORIES


PROMPT


ACCURATE


CONSERVATIVE BALDWIN


CONTAINING AN ALPHABETICAL DIRECTORY OF ALL RESIDENTS SIXTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER, WITH DETAILED INFORMATION CONCERNING EACH; . A NUMERICAL HOUSEHOLDER'S DIRECTORY AND STREET GUIDE, A CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORY; A MISCELLANEOUS DI- RECTORY, CONTAINING INFORMATION ABOUT BOTH LOCAL AND NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS; A RURAL ROUTE DIRECTORY, A NUMERICAL TELE- PHONE DIRECTORY


AND


A Complete Buyers' Guide and Civic Section


Issued with a special supplement edition for presentation to a select- ed group of private homes, Chambers of Commerce, Boards of Trade, Merchants' Associations, Selling Agents, Buyers, Government Officials and Newspapers throughout the United States.


This directory remains the property of the Baldwin Directory Company, Inc., and is leased to the subscriber for a period of two years, or until the next edition of the directory is published. This directory is leased for use of only one sub- scriber unless different arrangements are made with publisher. Directory must be returned to publisher at the expiration of lease.


Compiled and Published By Baldwin Directory Company INCORPORATED AND Kinston Free Press Co., Inc.


Home Office: 125 MEETING STREET, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA


COPYRIGHT 1936 BY BALDWIN DIRECTORY COMPANY, INC. Charleston, S. C.


Independent and Progressive


Baldwin Directory Company, Inc., publisher of this city directory and the world's largest independent publisher of city directories, is in no way connect- ed with any national association, combination or directory "trust". Its poli- cies are laid down with a view to serving the individual directory subscriber and the general public. It is a progressive company, constantly on the alert to improve its service.


The ABCD type of city directory was originated by the Baldwin Directory Company, Inc. While many publishers have been content to rest on their laurels, issuing the same type of directory used thirty years ago, the Baldwin organization has led the way to the production of a modern city directory to meet modern selling and credit conditions.


Newspapers, chambers of commerce, merchants' associations and individual business concerns are invited to write for particulars concerning this type of directory service. In the future, as in the past, Baldwin directories will stand for the highest ideals in public service.


BALDWIN DIRECTORY COMPANY, INC.


QUALITY DIRECTORIES


PROMPT


ACCURATE


by CONSERVATIVE


BALDWIN


1936 Population


FOR


GREATER KINSTON INCLUDING ADJACENT TERRITORY


14,068


This population secured by an actual count of persons residing in the territory covered by a House-to-House Canvass under Baldwin's ABCD plan.


General Index


Page


Page


Abbreviations


42


Advertisers' Index


4


Advertising Section


33


Alphabetical Directory


41


Alphabetical Telephone


Directory


195


Business Directory


229


Buyers' Guide


33


Cabinet (U. S.)


18


· Civic Section


33


Classified Business Directory


229


Counties (N. C.)


25


County Seats (N. C.)


25


Criss Cross Telephone


Directory


195


Federal Government


17


Federal Judges


18


History of Kinston


9


Honor Roll


1


House of Representatives (N.C.)_ 24 House of Representatives (U.S.)_ 19


Householders' Directory


195


Index to Display Advertisements_


4


Introduction


6


Miscellaneous Directory


17


Nationally-Advertised Brands


229


N. C. House of Representatives


24


N. C. State Government


23


N. C. State Senate


23


N. C. Supreme Court


23


Numerical Telephone Directory __ 249


Officials (N. C.)


23


Officials (U. S.)


18


Population of Kinston


2 and


8


Population of Counties


25


Preface


9


Resident Directory


41


Resident Telephone Directory


195


Rural Route Directory


257


Senate (N. C.)


23


Senate (U. S.)


18


State Government


23


Street Guide


195


Street and Telephone Guide


195


Supreme Court (N. C.)


23


Supreme Court (U. S.)


18


Telephone Directory, Numerical_249


Title Page


1


Trade-Marked Merchandise


Brands


229


U. S. Cabinet


18


U. S. House of Representatives


19


U. S. Senate


18


U. S. Supreme Court


18


246233


Honor Roll -and-


Index to Display Space


Page


B & P Sales Co. Battle, McKinley


Becton, E. J. Belk-Tyler Co. Boney, O. T. Mrs., Dining Room,


39


Right Top Lines


Branch Banking & Trust Co.,


Front Supplement Cover


Butler Furniture Co.


Carey, J. W.


Carolina Telephone & Telegraph Co.


City of Kinston


37


Colonial Oil Co.


Card BD


Creech's Tea Room


Card BD


Dawson, Joseph


Denmark's Florist


Left Top Lines


Dixon, D. V. & Son,


Front Supplement Cover and Left Top Lines


Dudley, W. M. Mrs., Florist _Card BD Efird's Department Store Left Top Lines First Baptist Church 35


First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co.,


Back Supplement Cover


Fitts, Fairfax Dr. Foxman's Foy, R. L. Dr.


General Sales Co .__ Back Supplement Cover Goodman, J. L .___ Back Supplement Cover Grady & Hartsfield Left Top Lines Hardy, Ira M. Dr. Card BD


Harvey, L. & Son Co. Left Top Lines Harvey Motor Co.


Heilig & Meyers Card BD


Herbert's Bakery Right Top Lines Hines Bros. Lumber Co. Hines Ice Cream Co. 39


Hines, Harvey C. Co. 34


Home Building & Loan Assn. .. -Card BD Hood, J. E. & Co .-- Front Supplement Cover Hotel Kinston Jackson Mattress Co. Jarman, Tolson Jenkins, J. M. Kinston Auto Parts Co.,


Back Supplement Cover


Kinston Fertilizer Co.


Kinston Free Press Co., Inc. 40


Page


Kinston Mutual Insurance Agency


Kinston Office Supply Co.


Kinston Plumbing & Heating Co.,


Front Supplement Cover and


39


Larkins, C. H., Clothing Store


Lenoir Beauty Shoppe 34


Lenoir County


38


Lenoir County Sheriff


Lenoir Oil & Ice Co., Front Supplement


Cover and Right Top Lines


Lenoir Tire Co. Mallard, Liston L., Back Supplement


McCoy, H. H. Co.


Right Top Lines


Metropolitan Cafe


.Card BD


Mobley, J. A. (Gulf Products)


Moore, W. A. & Co.


Left Top Lines


Mutual Building & Loan Assn.,


Inside Front Supplement Cover


New York Life Insurance Co.


Oettinger Bros.


Right Top Lines


Oettinger, C., Inc., Inside Front Supplement Cover


Parrott, J. F., Jr., Front Supplement Cover and Right Top Lines


Powers & Elliott


Quinn & Miller Co.,


Front Supplement Cover


Rouse & Rouse


St. Mary's Episcopal Church


36


Sanitary Dry Cleaners-Laundry,


Spence Motor Co.


Card BD


Spencer Furniture Co. Stanley, B. E. Sutton, W. C., Coal Co. Left Top Lines


Tide Water Power Co.


Turner's Cleaners & Hatters,


Front Supplement Cover


U. S. Post Office Wallace & White West Construction Co., of North Carolina Western Union Telegraph Co. Whitaker, R. A. White's Wood & Coal Yard,


Right Top Lines


Wood Funeral Service,


Right Top Lines


Colonial Ice Co.


Cover and Left Top Lines


Southern Printing & Pub. Co.


ALBERT ORTH, Prop.


125 Meeting Street


Charleston, S. C.


1368


1368


Publications-Catalogues-Journals COLLEGE ANNUALS


Book and Job Printing


Southera Printing & Pub. Co.


ALL KINDS OF JOB PRINTING


Mercantile-Social-Official


MODERN EQUIPMENT LATEST MACHINERY UP-TO-DATE WORKMANSHIP


ATTRACTIVE PRICES ON JOB PRINTING


INTRODUCTION -


Baldwin Directory Company, Inc., publisher of your city directory, takes pleasure in presenting the 1936 edition to the general public. A large force of trained enumerators and solicitors worked diligently in the preparation of this volume and we are confident that the result is an authentic and useful city directory.


We have faith in the continued growth of your city and we believe that our directory will take its place as one of the vital instruments for the CHARLESTON South Carolina advancement of the community. Sub- sequent editions will be issued promptly and regularly.


CITY DIRECTORY


1936


This volume is an example of the ABCD type of city directory as originated and developed by the Baldwin Directory Company, Inc. In the modern business world with its greatly changed sales and credit systems, the old type of directory has become com- pletely obsolete. In adapting the direc- tory to modern conditions the Baldwin organization is the pioneer. The excellent city directory which your city now has is the result of the pro- gressive spirit of this company and its accurate interpretation of modern busi- ness requirements.


SEVEN DIVISIONS OF THE BOOK


The principal parts of the Baldwin Directory are as follows:


1. The Miscellaneous Directory contains a great deal of useful infor- mation concerning the national, state and local governments. In it are listed the names of members of congress and the state legislature, city and county officials.


2. The Buyers' Guide, Civic Section and Professional Blue Book is made up of the advertisements of the leading business firms of the city, announcements of churches, clubs, lodges, associations and schools, and professional card of public-spirited lawyers, physicians and dentists The display spaces have been carefully grouped and indexed under headings which are descriptive of the business engaged in by each firm. The Buyers' Guide, when properly arranged and distributed, is of tremendous value in the building of business in the community.


INTRODUCTION


3. The Resident Directory contains most of the data concerning the individual. The wife's name is given in parentheses, and the number of dependents under 16 is shown as well as the ownership of homes. This is followed by position, place of employment and home address.


.4. The Householders' Directory contains a complete directory of streets and avenues, properly located, gives the names of all householders arranged as they come upon the streets and avenues, indicates ownership of property.


5. The Business Directory and List of Nationally Advertised Brands contains the names of all business firms, professional people and non-profit organizations, properly classified. In this division are also listed the names of nationally advertised brands of merchandise, with the name of the local agents and distributors.


6. The Numerical Telephone Directory contains telephone numbers arranged in numerical sequence.


SPECIAL ABCD FEATURES


The following valuable information which appears in the ABCD type of directory is not to be found in the old-style city directory.


Number of dependents under 16;


Designation of home ownership.


Telephone Numbers on Street Guide.


Numerical Telephone Directory.


Nationally Advertised Brands.


In addition to these valuable features, the ABCD type of directory is more conservatively styled, printed on better paper and more beautifully bound arranged for more convenient use and contains a much more complete civic section. Directory stands are maintained in the business district for the use of the general public.


THE HOUSEHOLDERS' SUPPLEMENT


After including every conceivable feature which would tend to make the directory as useful and attractive as possible, the originators of the ABCD type of directory made one more bold stroke - they established a guaranteed home circulation for all advertising matter by issuing the Householders' Supplement and delivering it to the homes of the com- munity. Every advertisement which appears in a Baldwin directory also appears in the Householders' Supplement, making the Baldwin Directory "America's greatest dollar-for-dollar advertising medium" today.


BALDWIN DIRECTORY CO., Inc.


1


:


1


335


1,371


971


716


237


492


620


1,381


77


715


388


566


1,138


134 174


794


35


555


1,342


709


15


57


1,228


2


16


14,068


-OF-


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POPULATION JULY 1, 1936


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KINSTON


NORTH CAROLINA "City Progressive"


By O. L. WILSON, JR. Secretary, Kinston Chamber of Commerce


.


In 1740 William Heritage, a well-to-do planter and jurist, located on Neuse River at the site which afterward became Kinston. About 1750 Richard Caswell, a native of Maryland, settled here; he afterward became the first Governor of North Carolina under the constitution. About these two leading spirits this community developed. The establishment of the town was authorized by the Royal Governor, Arthur Dobbs, in 1762, and the town was named "Kingston"; but shortly after the Revolution the ob- noxious "g" was dropped and the name became "Kinston". Kinston was incorporated in January, 1849. It is situated in the fertile valley of the navigable river Neuse. It is the county seat of Lenoir County, which is a part of the North Coastal Plain of the State. It is the geographical center of Eastern Carolina and is fast developing as the logical distributing point in this wide section of Carolina.


FFE


THE CASWEL


VIEW OF BUSINESS DISTRICT, KINSTON, N. C.


10


KINSTON, NORTH CAROLINA


ACCESSIBILITY


Kinston is served by the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad and At- lantic Coast Line Railroad. By rail it is thirteen hours from Washington, D. C., four hours from Wilmington, three hours from Raleigh, nine hours from Richmond, Va. The railroad connections and excellent system of nine main paved highways make her easily accessible in all directions. Kinston is served by fourteen busses a day, making connections for all points north, south, east and west. These busses are owned and operated by the Seashore Transportation Company, Southerland Brothers, and the Queen City Coach Company. Departure of busses ranges from 7:20 A. M. to 9:20 P. M. The city is located on U. S. Highway No. 70, and N. C. Highway No. 10, the main highway through North Carolina from east to west, running from the coast to the Tennessee line, and connecting there with the paved highways extending to the Pacific coast.


POPULATION


Ninety-nine per cent American by U. S. Census. City population, 1936, including suburbs, 14,068; U. S. Census, 1930, 11,362; 1920, 9,771; 1910, 6,995 ; 1900, 4,106; 1890, 1,726.


CLIMATE, ALTITUDE AND HEALTH


The average mean temperature covering a period of twenty-five years is 62.4 degrees, while the average annual rainfall is 43.73 inches. Health conditions are excellent with practically no malaria present, the Rocke- feller Foundation, in 1921, having to abandon their laboratory here due to the fact that not enough malaria existed for laboratory study. As to the climate, this section is highly favored and almost any crop grown in the Temperate Zone will prosper here. Cattle may graze practically the year around. The altitude is 47 feet.


STREETS AND ROADS


Kinston was among the first cities in North Carolina to enter into a large program of building improved streets. She has thirteen and one- half miles of concrete-asphalt streets. Kinston has thirty miles of paved sidewalks. Lenoir County has ninety miles of concrete-asphalt roads, all sixteen to twenty feet wide, nine roads, all leading from Kinston to the county lines, costing $4,000,000.


WATER


Kinston is supplied entirely from artesian wells. Monthly analyses proving the water supply to be as pure as any east of the Rocky Mountains. The water is delightful to the taste, soft, cool, and is used for all purposes. Its temperature is 64 degrees. For factory uses it is unexcelled, and the supply is sufficient for a city three times the size of Kinston. Kinston has never advertised her water on as large a scale as she should have. It is the most wonderful asset that any city could have and Kinston has as pure, as delightful and as health-giving and health-maintaining water as any place in America.


ELECTRICITY


Municipally-owned plant worth three-quarters of a million dollars, provides ample current for the needs of a city three times the size of Kinston. In cooperation with the Rural Electrification Program the city has recently extended its power lines to all parts of the county, 105 miles having been completed in the past year at a cost of $73,500.


VALUATION AND TAXATION


The total assessed valuation 1935-36, city $7,974,967; county $18,089- 588; real estate and personal property assessed actual value. County and


11


"CITY PROGRESSIVE"


School District tax rate 1936-37, $1.73; City (all specials included) one dollar ; total $2.73 per $100. The Mutual Building and Loan Association and the Home Building and Loan Association furnish the means of con- struction of many residences.


BANKING FACILITIES


Kinston is served by the Branch Banking and Trust Company and the First-Citizens Bank and Trust Company. The excellent reputation of these institutions is long standing and well-known. They render all ser- vices consistent with sound banking. The combined resources of the two banks total $32,688,278.43.


TOBACCO AND COTTON MARKET


Kinston is in the center of the new bright leaf belt. It has a larger territory naturally tributary to it as a market, and especially as a tobacco and cotton market, than any city in Eastern Carolina. Look at the great territory on the map reaching from Morehead City to Wilmington. and from Selma to the ocean, in which Kinston has no comparable rival as a market. The total sales on the Kinston tobacco market in 1935 were 48,635,448 pounds, bringing in a total of $9,668,727.06. Eleven ware- houses and six stemming and redrying plants furnish excellent facilities for marketing and handling tobacco and the Kinston market has grown rapidly in the past three years. The excellence of the cotton market is also well-known. As a shopping center, Kinston draws trade from the territory above mentioned because of the progressive character of our merchants, the variety, quality, and size of the stocks of merchandise car- ried, and the city-like mercantile establishments that line our business dis- trict. Lenoir County as a whole is one of the most fertile counties in the State. The equable climate and soil permit the growing of any crop adapt. ed to the Temperate Climate. Tobacco production is followed by cotton,


COMPOSITE PHOTOGRAPH OF (Left to Right) CONGRESSMAN JOHN H. KERR, GOVERNOR J. C. B. EHRINGHAUS, AND COMMISSIONER OF AGRI- CULTURE W. A. GRAHAM, SPEAKING AT NATIONAL BROADCASTING COMPANY FARM AND HOME HOUR BROADCAST OF TABACCO AUC- TION SALE AT KINSTON, SEP- TEMBER, 1935


1


12


KINSTON, NORTH CAROLINA


corn, potatoes, live stock, small grains and hay, which are prduced abun- dantly at low cost. Truck and other crops are well adapted to the soil and climate. Progress in agriculture has been most marked.


HOTELS


Adequate facilities are furnished tourists and the traveling public by Hotel Kinston, The Caswell, and other small hostelries. Hotel Kinston, a modern 12-story fire-proof hotel, costing three hundred fifty thousand


·


HOTEL KINSTON, KINSTON, N. C.


dollars, was opened early in 1928. It is one of the handsomest and best appointed hotels in the State and represents a cooperative undertaking of which Kinston is justly proud. It has won a state-wide reputation, and . the Caswell Hotel, with its home-like atmosphere, has a host of friends.


CHURCHES


Nearly all religions denominations are represented with handsome temples of worship. There are fourteen churches for white people and eleven for colored, ministering to the needs of the citizens of Kinston.


HOSPITALS


Kinston is fortunate in having the Memorial General Hospital and Parrott Memorial Hospital; strictly modern in all appointments and amply able to provide for the care of the citizens. Their corps of doctors, assist- ants and nurses are the best to be secured.


SCHOOLS


Kinston and Lenoir County have always been pioneers in good schools. Today there are no schools in the State in a town the size of Kinston that surpass in equipment, buildings, furnishings, conveniences, and ne- cessities the schools of Kinston; and none has taken more just pride in the personnel of their teaching force and school management in city and


13


"CITY PROGRESSIVE"


SALE IN PROGRESS AT TOBACCO AUCTION WAREHOUSE, KINSTON, N. C.


county. Additional advantages are being rapidly advanced. Eighty-nine well-trained teachers instruct 3,725 boys and girls in well-equipped build- ings. Additional buildings costing over a half million dollars were com- pleted during 1926, giving the city a most adequate and modern school system. The Lenoir County School System, consisting of seven consolidat- ed school for white pupils and twenty-nine smaller schools for colored, has an enrollment of 7,363. Sixty-five busses are used to transport a large number of the 4,191 white pupils to consolidated schools. The County is justly proud of its modern buildings and equipment which are valued at $400,000.00. The Caswell Training School, State Institution for Feeble- Minded, is located two miles from Kinston. The buildings are entirely modern in every respect and represent an investment of $2,000,000. The State Farm Colony, State Correctional Institution for Women, is located near Kinston. The staff comprises outstanding workers in this field, and their results have received much favorable comment in the State press in recent years.


INDUSTRIES


Fifty industries, having combined pay rolls of over one million dollars, are located in Kinston. Among these are 1 cotton mill, 2 lumber plants, 6 tobacco factories, 1 oil mill, 2 ice plants, 2 ice cream plants, 2 fertilizer plants, 3 soft drink bottling plants, 1 brick mill, 2 mantle works, 1 mattress factory, 1 concrete products plant, 1 tile company, 1 marble works, 1 pool table and ice box factory, 2 shirt factories, 1 meat packing plant, 1 iron


14


KINSTON, NORTH CAROLINA


foundry, 2 machine shops, 1 tobacco truck and vehicle manufacturing plant, 1 plant for manufacturing oil burner units for curing tobacco, and numer- ous smaller industries.


TOBACCO FIELD NEAR KINSTON, N. C., AFTER MOST OF CROP HAD BEEN HOUSED 1935 "It's Not Corn. It's Tobacco"


CHAMBER OF COMMERCE


Kinston's Civic and Commercial Organization ranks with those of the most progressive cities in the State. Its membership is composed of the most progressive, intelligent and wide-awake citizens. The Chamber is at the command of all desiring worthy assistance or information concerning the welfare of the nation, state, Lenoir County, and Kinston. It will co- operate with any earnest movement for the improvement of citizenship and to promote business. The Chamber has been instrumental in securing 2 shirt factories employing 500 people, and several smaller industries, during the past three years. It is, also, cooperating in every way with the Tobacco Board of Trade in helping to build up the tobacco market, and is highly gratified to have had a part in helping the market break a record, either for pounds sold or money paid out, during each of the last three years. Incidentally, Kinston exceeded all past records by selling forty-eight and a half million pounds during the 1935 season.


WHOLESALERS AND JOBBERS


Kinston's wholesale territory covers a radius of fifty miles and is served by eight wholesale grocery and produce, two wholesale meat and


15


"CITY PROGRESSIVE"


produce establishments, 1 wholesale dry goods dealer, 1 farm machinery distributor, and 8 gasoline distributors. The territory embraces an esti- mated population of over two hundred thousand people.


RETAIL


The fertile farming section made tributary to Kinston by two rail lines and an excellent system of asphalt roads, and the city itself, have unit- ed to make excellent retail facilities. Kinston's retail district covering twenty-five blocks, offers to purchasers high-class and proper priced mer- chandise. It has more department stores, variety stores and farm supply dealers than any town east of Raleigh. According to U. S. Bureau of Census figures, per capita retail sales in Lenoir County are tied with Forsyth County in ninth place, and in this respect it leads all counties in North Carolina whose chief income is derived from agricultural prod- ucts.


CLUBS


There are thirty-seven clubs, organizations and fraternal societies in this city. Twenty-five for whites and twelve for colored people. These include the Chamber of Commerce, Country Club, American Legion, Ro- tary Club, Kiwanis Club, Kinston Baseball Club, Chapters of practically alì fraternal organizations and headquarters office of the Eastern Carolina Chamber of Commerce.


AMUSEMENTS AND RECREATIONS


The Country Club, with its 166-acre golf course, Hillcrest, Lakeside, Parrott's Lake, and Municipal Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts, con- structed in 1935-36 at a cost of $50,000.00, furnish amusements for old and young, all within easy reach of the city; the Paramount, Carolina and Oasis Theatres provide high-class motion pictures.


DEDICATION CEREMONIES OF KINSTON MUNICIPAL SWIMMING POOL June. 1935


The territory from Kinston to the coast is well-known for its abundant supply of many types of game and fish. The territory's inland streams teem with bass, perch and pike and the coast offers excellent opportunities quail and rabbit. The advantages of this country to the sportsman are for salt water angling. The upland game consists of deer, bear, squirrel, known throughout Eastern North America.




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