October 22: Happy Birthday! Claude Reuben “Pop” Joyner
Claude Reuben “Pop” Joyner was born on this day in 1896, in Yadkin County, to Samuel H. and Syniscal Sprinkle Joyner. When he was old enough, he farmed a little, but decided that he...
Claude Reuben “Pop” Joyner was born on this day in 1896, in Yadkin County, to Samuel H. and Syniscal Sprinkle Joyner. When he was old enough, he farmed a little, but decided that he...
Hitchcock-Trotter was a new store in town when it made the announcement that it planned to open a soda fountain. The announcement was made in the newspaper on this day in 1907. The store...
Robert Sidney Haltiwanger was born on this day in 1893, in South Carolina, to Daniel Sidney and Jennie Gordon Haltiwanger. He attended Davidson College and planned to study medicine, but decided that he liked...
The new jail was dedicated on this day in 1953. The new jail was located at Church and First Street, behind City Hall. The jail moved from its previous location on the corner at...
Annie Becker Hege was born on this day in 1906, in South Carolina, to August Ferdinand and Catherine Handrich Becker. She moved to Winston-Salem in 1922 and attended business school. She worked in the...
The opening of a new building on West Fourth Street was announced on this day in 1957. The announcement in the Winston-Salem Journal proclaimed the opening during the previous week at 114 and 116 West...
James “Jim” Francis Malcolm was born on this day in 1917, in Mooresville, to William Franklin and Lottie Gant Malcolm. Jim spend his childhood and youth at the Children’s Home. He graduated from R....
Most of the 218 club members gathered this evening in 1971, for the first official buffet dinner and the election of officers at the new Bermuda Run Country Club. Bermuda Run was constructed on...
Amelia Adelaide Van Vleck was born on this day in 1834, in Pennsylvania, to Carl Anton and Christiana Susan Kramsch Van Vleck. Her father was a Moravian minister in Pennsylvania when she was born....
The Winston Theatre opened on West Fourth Street in 1949, designed by well-known theatre architect Earle Stillwell of Hendersonville. The modern theatre seated 1,000 people and featured the latest look in carpeting and lighting....