In January 1929, Wilkins’ peanut roaster was destroyed by fire. Locals took up a collection to buy him a new one.
In November, 1932, Wilmington city commissioners approved a permit for Wilkins to operate a “huckster’s truck” downtown. (A partner, news stories emphasized, would do the actual driving.)
In 1934, with support from an editorial campaign by both the Morning Star and the afternoon News, a number of Wilmington residents — including a large group of Atlantic Coast Line employees — chipped in to pay for Wilkins to travel to the Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia for surgery that was hoped would restore his sight in at least one eye. Wilkins boarded a northbound train on Sept. 24, 1936, but returned home two days later “disappointed” — surgery could not help — but expressing thanks to his benefactors.
Sometime around 1936, Wilkins left Wilmington and apparently tried farming in the Dixon community of Onslow County. Those efforts failed, however, and Wilmington residents chipped in again to give him a start-up loan to launch a firewood business. In 1937, Wilmington city commissioners again approved a permit allowing Wilkins to reopen his stand at Front and Princess, assuming there were no public objections. (Apparently, they weren’t any.)
Wilkins was married to Molly Sellers and had a family. On Nov. 25, 1926, their four-month-old daughter Ovida died of pneumonia. Local papers gave heart-rending accounts of the funeral, describing how Wilkins last touched the hand of the child he had never seen.
Bio provided by Tom Reece
In January 1929, Wilkins’ peanut roaster was destroyed by fire. Locals took up a collection to buy him a new one.
In November, 1932, Wilmington city commissioners approved a permit for Wilkins to operate a “huckster’s truck” downtown. (A partner, news stories emphasized, would do the actual driving.)
In 1934, with support from an editorial campaign by both the Morning Star and the afternoon News, a number of Wilmington residents — including a large group of Atlantic Coast Line employees — chipped in to pay for Wilkins to travel to the Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia for surgery that was hoped would restore his sight in at least one eye. Wilkins boarded a northbound train on Sept. 24, 1936, but returned home two days later “disappointed” — surgery could not help — but expressing thanks to his benefactors.
Sometime around 1936, Wilkins left Wilmington and apparently tried farming in the Dixon community of Onslow County. Those efforts failed, however, and Wilmington residents chipped in again to give him a start-up loan to launch a firewood business. In 1937, Wilmington city commissioners again approved a permit allowing Wilkins to reopen his stand at Front and Princess, assuming there were no public objections. (Apparently, they weren’t any.)
Wilkins was married to Molly Sellers and had a family. On Nov. 25, 1926, their four-month-old daughter Ovida died of pneumonia. Local papers gave heart-rending accounts of the funeral, describing how Wilkins last touched the hand of the child he had never seen.
Bio provided by Tom Reece
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