A new book examines the
lives of African-American Tucsonans between 1860 and
1900
|
|
Daron Shade |
| Bernard
Wilson |
|
After
moving to Tucson 15 years ago, Bernard Wilson
was looking for a hobby. He'd completed his
mother's family history and would eventually
finish his father's, so Wilson turned his
attention to the African Americans who lived in
town during the 19th century.
"I wondered what black people
did here," Wilson says of these early settlers.
"What I found was a lot of them came to Tucson
for a better way of life. They came with a drive
to be independent by owning their own business
or land."
One of those pioneers was
Samuel Bostick, a native of Alabama who was in
Tucson before 1870.
Bostick was involved with both
Pima County and Pinal County real estate and
operated a barber shop in Tucson. In the
collection of the Arizona Historical Society,
Wilson even discovered an 1872 photograph of
Bostick standing in the doorway of a Florence,
Ariz., cantina.
Wilson says he found that
there were about two dozen African Americans in
Tucson as early as 1864, and a total of 426
lived here and were recorded by the Census
between 1860 and 1900. He has highlighted more
than 50 of these people in his recently
published The Black Residents of Tucson and
Their Achievements, 1860-1900, A Reference Guide,
available at www.
arizonablackpioneers.com
for $25.
Wilson used data from the U.S.
Census, the county recorder's office and other
sources, and he was surprised by the amount of
historic material available.
"I found more information than
I thought I would," he says, "including photos,
newspaper ads and cemetery headstones. I was
impressed."
Wilson says he organized the
material "like an encyclopedia: Here are the
facts. I'm not a writer," he explains of his
format.
Based on his research, Wilson
thinks the early black residents of Tucson faced
many of the same challenges that everyone else
did. "Everybody out here had to get along," he
observes. "They weren't that big on race."
But Tucson's early black
citizens did have some special obstacles,
including finding homes to rent.
"I don't believe they would
have had a place to stay if Germans hadn't
rented to them," Wilson says. "The Germans in
Tucson saw a need and saw there was money to be
made."
While some of Tucson's initial
black residents became wealthy, Wilson estimates
90 percent of them were employed in the service
industry. "They were bellhops, did laundry or
were porters," he says. "They were needed."
James Anderson was one of
these people. He came to Tucson before the
railroad arrived in 1880 and worked as a
household steward, a shoe shiner and later as a
bellhop at the Santa Rita Hotel.
Anderson also purchased
property in both Pima County and Pinal County.
He additionally held an interest in a local mine
which he bought in 1893.
Another African American who
prospered in Tucson was Anna Box Neal (See
"Portraits From the Past," Currents, Feb. 20,
2003). Of all the people Wilson researched, she
is his favorite.
"She was a fun person," Wilson
says of Neal. After she and her husband,
William, began building a resort hotel in
Oracle, Wilson says, "She took over the project.
... She also set up a shooting range and other
events for women."
According to Wilson's
research, Annie's father, Wiley Box, may have
been in Tucson shortly after the Gadsden
Purchase of 1854. Wilson writes of Box and his
wife, Hannah, "(They) purchased some mines and
did some prospecting in Arizona. Mining was a
financial risky adventure to undertake."
Box's son-in-law, William
Neal, was also involved with mining. But Wilson
comments about him: "He started out in mining
but realized there was nothing to be made from
it. So he got into supplying mines."
While William and Anna Neal
established a successful business in Oracle, her
father met with an unfortunate fate in Tucson.
In his book, Wilson includes a copy of a June
1913 Arizona Daily Star article which
summarizes the tragic event.
According to the story, the
76-year-old man was apparently living in an
adobe structure downtown. While lying on a cot
in the building, his legs were wrapped in
gasoline-soaked cloth and set afire by two men
as a "practical joke." The burns Box received
led to his death.
"One of those responsible,"
Wilson says, "was fined while the other was
released. The fine was very insignificant."
Wilson has also used 1920
information to compile a map showing where the
community's African-American population lived at
that time.
When he first began working on
his mother's family history many years ago,
Wilson says, he quickly learned an important
lesson about genealogical research: "Write to
companies," he states simply.
Wilson says he wrote Chevron
about a piece of Louisiana land his
great-grandfather leased to the company. "He put
his 'X' on the agreement in 1900," Wilson
recalls of his ancestor.
A few months after his request
was sent, Wilson says, the giant oil company
responded. They provided a great deal of
information about his family tree, which they
had compiled because of that original agreement.
For his next project, Wilson
is looking at Tucson's black population between
1910 and 1930.
"Whether I'll do it as a CD,
DVD or as a book, I just don't know," he says of
this future addition to local historic research.