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Carolinian paired Calypso, Christmas to create magic

8Even the most curmudgeonly of Scrooges can’t help but tap their toes when they hear the first few notes of the modern masterpiece “Mary’s Little Boy Child.” For that, we can all thank the North Carolinian who so memorably paired calypso and Christmas — though that was not his original intention.
The joyfully named Jester Hairston was born in 1901 in the community of Belews Creek, located at the point where Forsyth, Stokes, Guilford, and Rockingham counties meet. After a tragic accident claimed his father’s life, he spent much of his childhood in the company of his grandparents, former slaves whose compelling tales and memorable songs inspired young Hairston to find ways to preserve such a rich heritage.
After completing musical studies at Tufts University and the famous Julliard conservatory, Hairston joined Harlem’s Hall Johnson Choir in the late 1920s and performed in a number of Broadway shows. When a movie adaptation of one of the shows brought Hairston to Hollywood, he met a Russian émigré named Dimitri Tiomkin, then working as a film composer and pianist.
Tiomkin liked what he heard. The two began a longtime partnership, with Hairston collecting and arranging songs that Tiomkin used for film and stage scores. While Tiomkin went on to write scores for such classic films as Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, It’s a Wonderful Life, and High Noon, Hairston supplemented his earnings from music by acting in some 30 motion pictures of his own, ranging from Tarzan adventures to The Alamo, To Kill a Mockingbird, St. Louis Blues, and In the Heat of the Night.
Indeed, you may know Jester Hairston more as an actor than as a musician. Ever see the 1980s sitcom Amen? He played character of Rolly Forbes. As it happens, Hairston also helped to popularize the traditional gospel song “Amen” by arranging it for the Sidney Portier film Lilies of the Field.
But let’s get back to Hairston’s contribution to Christmas lore. Earlier in his career, he had a roommate who decided to throw a birthday party. The man asked Hairston to write a song for the occasion. Because most of the attendees would be from the West Indies, he chose a calypso beat for the tune, entitled “He Pone and Chocolate Tea.”
Later, another composer named Walter Schumann (he wrote the iconic Dragnet TV theme, for example) asked Hairston to write a Christmas song for his Hollywood choir. Hairston reworked his earlier calypso tune and added suitable lyrics. When Harry Belafonte heard the choir perform “Mary’s Little Boy Child,” he asked permission to record it, first in 1956 and then in longer form the following year.
Belafonte made the song a hit. Subsequent performances and cover versions by the likes of Mahalia Jackson, Andy Williams, the Bee Gees, and Harry Connick, Jr. have made “Mary’s Little Boy Child” a seasonal standard. It isn’t just the calypso syncopation that makes the song so memorable. Hairston’s use of dialect and idiom lent the lyrics a charming distinctiveness. The first verse goes like this:

Long time ago in Bethlehem,
So the Holy Bible say,
Mary’s boy child, Jesus Christ,
Was born on Christmas day.
Hark, now hear the angels sing,
A new King born today.
And man will live forevermore
Because of Christmas day.
Trumpets sound and angels sing,
Listen what they say:
That Man will live forevermore
Because of Christmas day.

Jester Hairston spent the next 40 years embodying the Christmas spirit: touring America and the world as a goodwill ambassador, collecting traditional folk songs and composing new spirituals, nurturing new generations of performers and arrangers, and acting in such films as Finian’s Rainbow, Lady Sings the Blues, and the 1999 picture Being John Malkovich, his last role.
Hairston died in Los Angeles the following year, at the age of 98. For his contributions to American song and entertainment, this self-styled “song catcher” from North Carolina deserves our praise. For his contribution to Christmastime, he deserves a hearty “amen.”

Editor’s Note: John Hood is a John Locke Foundation board member. His books Mountain Folk, Forest Folk, and Water Folk combine epic fantasy with American history (FolkloreCycle.com).

(Photo: Jester Hairston, a native North Carolinian, had a long career as an actor and a composer. Image courtesy of jesterhairston.com)

Going back in time: Taking a look at 1925

6Howdy Buckaroos and Buckarettes, it’s time to climb into Mr. Peabody’s Way Back Machine for the annual January celebration of a year that is just turning 100.
Today’s birthday boy is 1925. Stick around to learn about the wild and wacky things that made 1925 the lovable special kind of year it was.
Unfortunately, 1925 was also a big year for emerging dictators with both Mussolini and Hitler becoming upwardly mobile. Let the show begin.

January 3: Benito Mussolini dissolved the Italian Parliament declaring himself the dictator of Italy. He remained in that position until he found himself hanging around upside down near the end of World War II.

January 6: Leon Trotsky got booted out of the Russian government by Stalin after losing the contest to replace Lenin. Leon was later axed a question he could not answer by Stalin’s assassins at Frida Kahlo’s house in Mexico.

February 2: The origin of the Iditarod Dog race was born when relay teams of dog sleds took a vaccine from Anchorage to Nome to fight a diphtheria outbreak. If RFK, Jr. takes over Health and Human Services, smuggling vaccines by dog sleds may come back into style. Buy Kibbles.

February 21: The first issue of New Yorker magazine appears setting the stage for countless cartoons that may or may not be funny.

March 4: Silent Calvin Coolidge is inaugurated as President. His most famous Zen quote was: “The chief business of the American people is business.” People are still puzzled by what this koan means.

March 13: Tennessee passes a law making it illegal to teach evolution. This resulted in the famous Monkey Trial which convicted John Scopes in July of teaching evolution.
This also allowed Spencer Tracy and Fredric March to star in the very sweaty movie “Inherit the Wind” about the trial.

April 10: F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby is published, making it one of the most famous novels people have heard about but seldom, if ever, read.

April 25: Paul von Hindenburg is elected President of Germany, thus becoming the first President anywhere to be named for a blimp. It also led to Blimpy in the Popeye cartoons to invent credit purchases by promising “I will gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.”

June 1: NY Yankee player Lou Gehrig gets his first hit in his streak of playing in 2,130 games in a row until 30 April 1939.

July 10: Avatar Meher Baba begins 44 years of not speaking which lasts until he died in 1969. Many husbands secretly wish their wives would follow Mr. Baba’s example.

October 1: The idea of carving Mount Rushmore is announced leading to the establishment of 4 giant Presidential Heads and a lovely gift shoppe in the Black Hills of South Dakota
October 16: Not to be outdone by Tennessee, the Texas State School Board bans the teaching of evolution in schools.

October 27: Water skis are patented by Fred Waller making possible 1978’s sequel movie “Jaws 2” in which a beautiful lady person water skier is chased and eaten by an angry shark.

November 9: In keeping with 1925’s Festival of Bad Dictators, Hitler’s Nazi Party forms its SS paramilitary wing. No one seems to notice the ugly pattern that is forming.

November 9: Meanwhile in Madison, Wisconsin, Robert Millikan speaks to the National Academy of Sciences announcing that cosmic rays from outer space bombard the Earth. This allows for the creation of multiple Sci-Fi horror movies.
The worst movie ever made- “Plan 9 From Outer Space” features aliens using Cosmic Rays to re-animate corpses to take over the world.

November 28: The Grand Ole Opry’s first live broadcast on radio is heard as the WSM Barn Dance. Goo Goo Clusters candy bar (a chocolate treat consisting of marshmallow nougat, caramel, and peanuts) was a proud sponsor of the Grand Ole Opry from 1966 until 2006.

December 12: Arthur Heineman creates the term “Motel” by combining the words Motor and Hotel when he opens the Motel Inn in San Luis Obispo.
This leads to Frank Zappa’s immortal movie “200 Motels” about the lives of rock stars in 1971.
Now you know all about the Year of Our Lord 1925. You are now free to roam about the country. If you still write checks, remember to use 2025 from now on. Happy New Year.

(Illustration by Pitt Dickey)

Government official encounters disinformation after Helene

6Just a day after Helene passed in late September, I found myself restless to do something to help.
An event with that scale of destruction often highlights the skills we lack. But I knew that folks were without water, and bringing them water was something I could do. I threw on my Town Council name tag.
I knew I didn’t yet have the answers to pressing questions, but I wanted to show that someone from the often maligned “government” did care and wanted to take action.
In the days after, I spent a lot of time getting the answers to the questions I heard. I worked with federal, state and local officials to plot our recovery.
At this point, few, if anyone, in our town had reliable access to the internet or news. Unknown to me was what was being said about Hurricane Helene or its aftermath, about my town, about my state, about the FEMA response.
I spent hours in meetings with federal employees, parents living out of a hotel room, thousands of miles away from home, here to help. They were dedicated and experienced. Beyond them, the National Guard, state emergency officials, local government employees, and our state House representative, were actively looking to solve problems and help those they shared these mountains with.
We were all so focused on the work and tired that I don’t remember one of us mentioning or even considering the rumors that were swirling all around us.
I didn’t yet know that there was already a rumor taking hold of an active plot to deny people relief, that the government generally didn’t care or had given all the money away to undocumented immigrants.
I thought back to what I had seen in the hours after the storm, when I was just out there to help with water.
After several conversations and supply drops, I came across an older man standing in his truck door outside his mobile home, using his seat as a table.
I asked if he needed anything, knowing it was almost a bad joke to ask. As the man turned to me, I was struck by how familiar he seemed. We’d not met, but the lines on his face, a permanent grin in his eyes – even in the face of this disaster – he reminded me of my own long line of wiry and weary folks; rode-hard and put-up wet, as the old saying goes.
He offered me a slice of pizza, promising it was fresh. In spite of everything – the nauseating scene of destruction all around us, the sheer scale of the loss – he provided hospitality to me.
He spoke of how he felt let down– a hard worker and a taxpayer, now uncertain if he’d get any help. He told me he thought he’d be deemed unworthy, ineligible for help.
He expects nothing because his life had been a history of stumbles with no safety nets. He had bumper stickers all over his truck, expressing the popular political enthusiasm for “Making America Great Again.”
When I finally had the means to view news, my head spun.
Candidates who feed into this hatred of FEMA, spread or fail to correct the rumor that only $750 will be offered to victims, or, even worse, claim that Helene was an artificial storm, manufactured by liberal political operatives to disable rural Republicans and take their land — the damage from those lies transcends political party and rural/urban identity. If that narrative sticks it will only hurt people.
If even one person in need refuses help because of what he’s heard, the harm becomes unforgivable.
I worry regularly for that man who offered me pizza in the trailer park, his neighbors, and their community. And I hope that in spite of the rumors online, they’ve applied for the assistance they need to begin to rebuild.
I believe we have a long way to go and that the response hasn’t been perfect, but the only thing any person holding office, as I currently do, or seeking office regardless of party should be saying:
Apply for all the aid you need to rebuild and to care for you and your family. I will fight like hell to make sure you get it.

Editor's note: Dalton George, 25, serves as the Mayor Pro-Tem of the Town of Boone and is one of the youngest officeholders in the state. He has spent the better part of the past decade organizing in rural North Carolina around housing, environmental issues, and voting rights. This column is syndicated by Beacon Media, please contact info@beaconmedianc.org with thoughts or feedback.

2024 in review: The unprecedented year

52024 was an “unprecedented” year because almost every news article used the word “unprecedented.” Americans navigated a year marked by intense media scrutiny, social media targeting, and political division. News outlets and social media platforms played pivotal roles, sparking debates about their influence on public opinion and the fine line between fact-checking and censorship. Families and friendships faced challenges, and “unfriend” became a verb dividing long-time relationships.
Since the beginning of the election cycle, news outlets have been tripling down on fear of Trump winning. Here is what didn’t happen. The economy did not collapse. There has been no global destabilization. There has not been a mass exodus of people despite the numerous celebrities who promised to go but did not, and no real civil unrest erupted.
What did happen in 2024? Starting in January, many believed the US was on the verge of Civil War II after the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Biden Administration’s efforts to remove concertina wire at Eagle Pass, Texas. It is estimated that three million illegal/undocumented people entered the US. This includes an estimated 375,000 who now call NC home.
On June 6, Joe Biden publicly stated that he would not pardon his son Hunter Biden if convicted on gun and federal tax-related charges.
On June 27, the Trump-Biden debate took place. Despite Biden’s insistence that his memory was fine, he performed poorly during the debate, which brought into question his mental and physical fitness.
On July 13, America watched 20-year-old Thomas Crooks fire eight shots at Trump, hitting him in the head and killing two others. Moments after a sniper killed Crooks, Trump stood up in defiance, raised his hand, and yelled, “Fight, fight, fight!”. A few days later, Trump accepted the Republican nomination.
On July 21, President Biden announced that he was officially withdrawing from the Presidential election and endorsed his Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee.
On September 27, Hurricane Helene moved Western North Carolina from 2024 to 1914 in hours by knocking out power and cell service the size of the state of Massachusetts. Helene caused the worst flooding in state history. The storm brought 30 inches of rain, compounded by earlier heavy rainfall that saturated the ground and swelled rivers. The disaster claimed 103 lives, with others still missing, and caused $53.6 billion in damages. Over 16,000 miles of roads were washed away, and 2,000 landslides were reported. At its peak, the Nolichucky Dam in Tennessee saw water flows twice that of Niagara Falls. Relief efforts continue as Americans rally to support the region's recovery.
On November 5, Donald Trump swept the election over VP Harris. He won the Popular Vote and Electoral College. Republicans secured control of the Senate and House, while the NC gubernatorial election was an exception, with Democrat Josh Stein winning by a 14.8% margin. This will undoubtedly help democrats later, showing what a political roller coaster ride North Carolinians enjoy.
On December 13, Trump reached a settlement with ABC News for defamation by anchor George Stephanopoulos for $15 million and an apology. According to news reports, Trump has more lawsuits on the way.
Despite his promise, on December 1, President Biden issued a full and unconditional pardon to his son Hunter for “ANY” federal crimes that Hunter Biden may have committed between January 1, 2014, and December 1, 2024. Why 2014, and not just for his convictions? In 2014, Hunter Biden joined the board of Burisma Holdings, a Ukrainian energy company. While some Americans think Biden is slipping, he covered his bases in case Hunter comes up with any crimes or undiscovered offshore accounts. As of this writing, the United States has obligated $130 Billion and paid out $86.7 billion to Ukraine in its defense against Russia.
As we step into 2025, the future brings hope and challenges. A new administration promises significant policy shifts, focusing on self-reliance, immigration reform, and economic deregulation. Advances in artificial intelligence will continue reshaping the job market, opening doors for some while closing them for others. In Western North Carolina, rebuilding efforts offer opportunities for growth and renewal but also serve as a reminder of the resilience and strength of those most affected.
If I had one prayer for the new year, it would be for the country to remember the people of the mountains. Many still struggle to rebuild homes and livelihoods despite the harsh winter.
For many there, 2024 is still 1914.

New School Board member says "Thank you"

Greetings Members of the Community, Friends and Supporters:
It is with profound gratitude that I greet you as your newly elected Cumberland County School Board member in District 1. I sincerely “thank you” for your invaluable support during my campaign. As a new member of the Board, I am committed to serving our community as we make decisions collectively that will equip and empower students to truly become contributing and productive members of our community and society. Please know that I am community-focused, compassionate and will communicate and collaborate with all stakeholders in an effective manner to accomplish goals.
I am dedicated to ensuring school safety, to advocating for better pay for all school employees and strongly advocating for students to stay in school and earn their diplomas. My belief is that together we can elevate our good school system into a great one by prioritizing where funding goes, which means truly investing in educators and all children.
As a retired school administrator, my desire is to ultimately observe a significant increase in academic achievement, especially for those students with socio-economic disadvantages. We must utilize effective and appropriate strategies that are paramount for successful outcomes, address both academic and non-academic barriers to learning and continue to link students and families to school resources and community organizations. In addition, our children and educators deserve to learn and work in environments that are conducive for optimal learning which means school repairs must also be completed for many of our schools.
I implore you to talk with your community members/neighbors so all will be involved in the decisions that are made for your children, grandchildren, nieces and nephews. It really does take a village to raise, collaborate with and be concerned for all children.
I am unwavering in my commitment to excellence and vow to utilize all the knowledge and wisdom I learned in the classroom and as an administrator to make the best decisions to increase the opportunity for success for “All Students, Faculty and Staff”. I hope you will agree with me when I say “All Children” deserve a quality and equitable education!
Again, thank you for your support and I look forward to working with you.

—Dr. Mary A. Hales
Member, Cumberland County School Board
District # One

Latest Articles

  • 2024 in review: The unprecedented year
  • Going back in time: Taking a look at 1925
  • Carolinian paired Calypso, Christmas to create magic
  • Cumberland elected official absent since spring, could be removed from office
  • CARE Clinic's Week of Care Fundraiser begins Jan. 1
  • Fashion, empowerment, friendship and impact: An Affair to Remember presents 2025 Runway Extravaganza
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