He Made His Mark: Linwood John Henry Newman

It was a cloudy day with rain threatening when the 81-year-old Linwood John Henry Newman died at the Alexandria Hospital on September 9, 1962. Six months before his death, he was diagnosed with bladder cancer. Reflecting on Linwood’s life, he survived the odds and gave his family and grandchildren a middle-class life.

Linwood John Henry Newman on Pendleton Street – 1930s or 1940s

Linwood was a son of a former slave. He was a farmer, a self-employed mason, and a carpenter. He married his first wife, Nannie Daniels, in 1913. They settled on his property in Burke, Virginia, off Braddock Road. He and Nannie had four children: Julius, Elease, Julian, and Grace. By 1919, the couple had divorced. In 1921, Linwood married his second wife, Elizabeth Daniels. They had eight children: Alberta, Lillian, Justine, Marion, Kolan, Herman, Laverne, and Winona.

Linwood was concerned about his children’s education because there were no colored schools nearby. He prepared to move his family to Alexandria around 1926.  He moved his family temporarily to 601 North Pitt Street. He built 510 Pendleton Street and purchased an additional home at 512 Pendleton Street. Linwood used the property at 601 North Pitt Street as his business address. In Alexandria, he found work as a mason, carpenter, and builder. His grandson, Linwood Smith, remembers his grandfather walking to his contract jobs. Some of the jobs he walked to were in Manassas, Virginia. He walked from Pendleton Street to Manassas with a family member pulling a wagon with his tools. Linwood faced hardship during the Depression. He lost his houses at 510 and 512 Pendleton Street. He moved his family to his property on North Pitt Street. After the depression, he was able to buy back his two properties on Pendleton Street. He learned to survive from his father, who was a hard-working man. His father, John Henry Newman, achieved homeownership in 1886 when he purchased nine acres of land on the property where he worked as a slave for Richard Fitzhugh.

Linwood John Henry Newman was born in 1880 on the Ravensworth’s tract in Fairfax, VA. His parents were John Henry Newman and Lillie Nelson Gatewood.

Two of Linwood’s grandchildren, Jesurena and Linwood Smith, live in Old Town, Alexandria. They have fond memories of their grandfather. He left his mark in Alexandria and made his grandchildren proud of his achievements.

(c) 2024 – Char McCargo Bah

1939 Parker-Gray High School Students

Senior Students of PG
1939 Parker-Gray High School Graduating Students

Parker-Gray High School had 14 students that graduated in 1939.  There are 15 people in this 1939 picture taken on the front steps of Parker-Gray High School.

Aldrich Adkins

Willie Mae Askew (Griffin)

Daniel Batts

Paul Carter

Louise Euille (Hernandez)

Gladys Howard (Davis)

Marie Johnson

Theola Luckett (Johnson)

John Majors

Lillian Norton (Winslow)

Carlton Tyler

Gladys Wair

William Willis

Eleanor Yeager

 

Welcome

I developed this site because of the love I have for African American (Black) History of Alexandria, Virginia.   I learned very little Black history when I was growing up in the late 1950s and the early 1970s.  The history I remember about Alexandria is about our first President, George Washington and his connection to the City of Alexandria.

Mr. Roger Anderson, a City employee, sponsored a Black History tour of Old Town Alexandria in 1985.  I was amazed by the rich history Mr. Anderson shared with us.  I wanted to know why Alexandria’s Black history was not included in the public school curriculum when I was growing up.  Mr. Anderson said that many of the teachers and the Black community did not know about the contributions African Americans made in Alexandria.

I have had many job opportunities since my first Black History tour in Alexandria.  I have been a volunteer genealogist with the Alexandria Black History Museum for more than 20 years.  I served as a board member on “The Friends of Freedmen’s Cemetery,” from 1997 – 2002.  Then in 2008, I was given a rare opportunity that many genealogists and historians would relish.  The City of Alexandria Archaeology Department asked me to locate descendants of a civil war era Freedmen Cemetery where 1200 people were buried between 1863 to 1868.

This web site blog is an outgrowth of my genealogical research projects in Alexandria that cover the period from 1860 to 1965.  If you are a native Alexandrian, a tourist or a lover of history, visit my web site regularly, and I am sure you will find quite a bit on African American history in Alexandria that you were not aware of.  The site includes a Home page, an About Us page, a Black People of Alexandria page, and other pages like Churches, Education, Businesses, Neighborhoods, Cemeteries and Lectures.  Better still, visit Alexandria, Virginia, walk the Streets that George Washington walked on, and check out “The Other Alexandria” that the African Americans left behind.