Negro Construction Camp, Wilmore, KY
In 1930, there was a Negro Construction Camp located in Wilmore, KY, with 48 men, most from Alabama, with a few from Tennessee, Georgia, Texas, North Carolina, and Florida. The men are all listed as laborers in the 1930 U.S. Federal Census. The camp was located in the Lee Magistorial District No. 2. The census data for the camp was collected on April 14, 1930, Sheet 13A, by Robert W. Thompson. None of the men were veterans. Only 17 of the men could read and write. To date, there is still the search for data to help answer the questions as to what agency, organization or business brought the men to Wilmore, and what were the men constructing. During this time period, there were groups of African American men from Alabama who were recruited up-north to work in the coal mines in eastern Kentucky. But, there were no coal mines in Wilmore. The 48 men in the Negro Construction Camp were only recorded as being in Wilmore at the time of the 1930 U.S. Census; they were not in the 1920 or the 1940 census. The men made up more than half the total Negro population of Wilmore in 1930. Below are the camp workers' names, home states, and ages. Any additional information about the men, the camp, and the construction project, would be greatly appreciated.
1. Benson, Walter - 30 - single - from Alabama
2. Bram, Joe - 40 - single - from Alabama
3. Brazil, Levy - 35 - single - from Tennessee
4. Brown, Bill - 50 - married - from Alabama
5. Bryston, Gus - 38 - married - from Alabama
6. Cantrel, Lee - 24 - single - from Georgia
7. Coleman, Hosie - 30 - single - from Alabama
8. Common, Moses - 40 - single - from Tennessee
9. Conner, Hearbert - 25 - single - from Alabama
10. Cook, Ernest - 23 - single - from Tennessee
11. Dirgle, Arthur - 25 - single - from Tennessee
12. Edmondson, John - 22 - single - from Alabama
13. Ester, William - 23 - single - from Alabama
14. Frazier, James - 28 - married - from Alabama
15. Gimble, John - 46 - single - from Alabama
16. Godwin, John - 23 - single - from Alabama
17. Head, Louis - 25 - single - from Alabama
18. Huit, Dave - 45 - single - from Alabama
19. Jenkins, George - 22 - single - from Alabama
20. Jones, Frank - 55 - married - from Alabama
21. Jones, Jonnie - 30 - single - from Texas
22. Jones, Virginia - 23 - single - from Alabama [male]
23. Kennedy, Robert - 21 - single - from Alabama
24. Kikes, Bud - 30 - single - from Tennessee
25. King, Tom - 50 - married - from Alabama
26. Lane, Albert - 39 - single - from Alabama
27. Lee, Albert - 35 - single - from Alabama
28. Lewis, Ben - 50 - married - from Alabama
29. Lewis, Phillip - 25 - single - from Alabama
30. Lipscomb, John - 23- single - from Georgia
31. Love, Isaac - 25 - single - from Tennessee
32. Nicholson, Orange - 27 - single - from Alabama
33. Porter, William - 28 - single - from Alabama
34. Radford, Steven - 20 - single - from Georgia
35. Reynolds, Bill - 30 - married - from North Carolina
36. Rucker, Howard - 23 - single - from Georgia
37. Sanders, Bozrie - 22 - single - from Alabama
38. Shephard, Frank - 40 - single - from Alabama
39. Shephard, Leon - 23 - single - from Alabama
40. Smith, Charlie - 24 - single - from Tennessee
41. Smith, John - 51 - single - from Alabama
42. Smith, Sylvester - 40 - married - from Tennessee
43. Teasley, John - 20 - single - from Alabama
44. Thrasher, Robert - 27 - single - from Alabama
45. Ward, George - 30 - single - from Florida
46. White, Henry - 35 - single - from Alabama
47. Williams, Charles - 23 - single - from Tennessee
48. Williams, Ralph - 26 - single - from Tennessee
*Additional information provided by Ken Rickard, Curator of the Wilmore Railside Museum: These men [in the Negro Construction Camp] were probably railroad laborers. The DG Beers map of 1877 identifies southwest Jessamine County as Precinct 2. The current Magisterial District 2 includes the High Bridge area. That left me confident that the workers were in the area where the railroad work was underway. In 1930 and 1931 the Southern Railroad Company completed a "double tracking" project, which included abandoning some of the original 1854 - 1877 right of way and building new lower grade (more level) and straighter routes. According to E.M. Bell, Trains Magazine, December 2013, pg. 26, and Southern Ties Magazine, August, 1963, the original route was abandoned in 1930. The Lexington Leader newspaper has an article about the completion of a double track project, April 4, 1931, pg.1, cols. 2-3. About five miles between Wilmore and High Bridge was abandoned, including a 500 foot tunnel, and the new, currently in use right of way was built, which includes a deep cut over which High Bridge Road (KY 29) now crosses. I believe the Lee Magisterial District No. 2 is the same as the current district no 2, which includes all the area between Wilmore and High Bridge. This would place the men's camp in the area of the work. While I cannot specifically prove these men were here for the purpose, it is most likely the case that they either worked for the railroad or for a contractor hired by the railroad to do this work.
Ken Rickard works as a volunteer under the supervision of the Wilmore Community Development Board. The Wilmore Railside Museum is housed in a 1950's era Southern Railway bay window caboose. There is a collection of railroad and local history artifacts, exhibits, photos and literature which tell the story of the Wilmore-High Bridge area.
Wilmore Railside Museum
335 E. Main Street
Wilmore, KY 40390
(859) 858-4411