News

Jan 2009 8

The Swain County Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission Calls For A DAY OF SERVICE

"Everybody can be great because anybody can serve. You don't have to have a college degree to serve. You don't have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love." Martin Luther King, Jr.

To honor Dr. King's legacy, the Swain County MLK, Jr. Commission is calling for a day of service to take place on Monday, January 19th, the Federal holiday for the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday.

Read more » « Close

Local citizens have volunteered to share their time and the gift of music with residents at Mountain View Manor Nursing Center and Tsali Care. Students from Western Carolina University and the Center for Service Learning will spend the day with at-risk youth in our county.

Service projects come in all shapes and sizes. The Swain MLK commission is appealing to the community at large for special items needed at Sweet Thoughts Respite Care Center on Bryson Avenue. This facility provides a meal and day care twice a week for those suffering from memory loss. An 8 ft. baseboard heater is not putting out any heat in the main activity room. The screen door to the back porch is rotten and needs to be replaced. A counter height work surface in the kitchen would provide additional space to prepare and serve food to the day residents. If you are interested in donating funds, materials or handyman services for these projects - please contact Denise Tyson at 488-3878.

For those who want to make a difference in the environment, there are numerous roads in the county that need a litter pick-up (weather permitting). Imagine how clean and green our roadways would be if Adopt-A-Highway volunteers and other volunteer citizens came together for the day of service. For supplies - contact Mark Tyson at 488-3878 or email info@swainMLK.com

Each and everyday we all see numerous ways to serve in our own neighborhoods and communities. Here are some suggestions: provide a meal for someone recovering from an illness, do a chore for an elderly or housebound person, spruce up a community center or cemetery, collect canned goods for the local food pantry.....the opportunities to serve are limitless.

Let us know what you are doing to help others on January 19th, 2009 by emailing info@swainMLK.com or call 488-3878. With your permission, we would like to recognize your service project on our Swain County Martin Luther King, Jr. website www.SwainMLK.com

« Close
Dec 2008 15

MLK Youth Art and Essay Contest

The Office of Multicultural Affairs of Western Carolina University is sponsoring an essay and art contest for students in conjunction with its annual Martin Luther King, Jr., Day Celebration. The art contest is open to all school-aged students (grade 4 - 12). Awards will be offered in the categories of: elementary, middle school and high school. Public, charter and home schooled students who reside in Jackson, Macon, Swain and Haywood Counties are eligible to participate.

Read more » « Close

The essay contest is open to middle school and high school students in the same areas. In addition to a monetary award, the prize winners are guests at one of our evening festivities, where they will be honored and asked to read their essay.

This year the theme is "A Day to Dream, A Lifetime to Act". Toward the end of his life, Martin Luther King, Jr., offered a broader vision for social justice, civil rights, and human rights, than we often remember. He argued for economic equality, planned a Poor People's Campaign; spoke out against the Vietnam War and against poverty worldwide. In both the art and essay, we are looking for expressions of dreams for our world and an evaluation of the multiple dreams that emerged from King's writings.

Submissions are due on Tuesday, January 13, 2009. They should include a brief biological sketch of the creator (name, grade, age, school, and home phone number or email contact).

Essays should be between 500-750 words. For the Art Contest, entries must be original artwork (no coloring book images accepted). However, media is not restricted to drawings. Artwork can include collage materials, digital images, photographs, small sculpture, etc. Entries are not limited to portraits of Martin Luther King, Jr.

All students are encouraged to participate in this contest. Please submit essays and art entries to Western Carolina University, Office of Multicultural Affairs, 330 Hinds University Center, Cullowhee, NC 28723.

For additional information, please contact Tanisha Jenkins, Director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs at 828-227-2276 « Close

Sept 2008 8

Non-Partisan Voter Registration Training

The Swain County Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission in conjunction with the Swain County Board of Elections is hosting a Nonpartisan Voter Registrar Workshop for anyone interested in learning how to register citizens to vote. Citizens attending will learn the proper way to help others fill out a registration form, who is eligible to register to vote, etc.


The workshop will be held on Monday, September 8th , 2008 at 7:00 p.m. in the auditorium of the Marianna Black Library in Bryson City.

Read more » « Close

Ms. Joan Weeks, Director for the Swain County Board of Elections, will facilitate as the trainer for the workshop and be available for any questions concerning the Do's and Don'ts of registering voters. This workshop will also provide insight to the overall process and help volunteers see how their part in a registration drive plays into the bigger picture.


This workshop is free and open to the public. Everyone who is interested in learning about the voter registration process is welcome to attend. Registration is not required, but requested by simply calling 828-488-3878.


For more information contact Denise Tyson at (828) 488-3878 or Janice Inabinett (828) 777-4683, or email info@swainMLK.com « Close

Apr 2008 24

Swain MLK Jr. Commission is going 'clean and green'

By Denise Tyson - Swain MLK Commission

To the editor: Along with other community volunteers, members of the Swain MLK Jr. Commission are excited to participate in the first-ever Clean & Green Litter Sweep in Swain County on Saturday, April 26th from 2:00 - 5:00 p.m. Let's all do our part to help the local Chamber of Commerce, the Tourism Development Authority and The Green Women host a successful and well attended event.

Read more » « Close

What does a group of citizens who work together as the Swain County Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission have to do with a community wide effort to Go Clean & Green? Actually, we have much in common with a service activity that helps make our community a beautiful and healthy environment in which to live, work and play. The initial proof that a small town is well loved in anywhere USA is when its appearance is clean, green and well maintained. Visitors call it curb appeal and local residents call it community pride.

Our commission recently adopted Veterans Blvd. and Exit 67 under the North Carolina Dept. of Transportation Adopt-A-Highway program. We are pleased to see that other citizens have adopted 2 mile sections of roadway all along Highway 74 from the Jackson County line into the Nantahala Gorge. Anyone (individuals, families, churches, youth groups of eligible age, businesses, civic and non-profit organizations) can become a volunteer in this program. Adopt-A-Highway is an excellent way for all of us to make a difference from the ground up when it comes to keeping our region beautiful and litter free.

On April 4th, our nation memorialized the 40th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King's assassination. Dr. King was in Memphis at the time of his death supporting the city's sanitation workers' strike. By pitching in to help clean up our own community, we feel that we are honoring Dr. King's legacy in a small and meaningful way. A clean community and environment helps support our local tourism industry, which lifts all of us up economically.

We, the founders of the Swain County MLK, Jr. Commission, believe in dreaming big. Wouldn't it be wonderful if every mile of roadway in Swain County was designated under the Adopt-A-Highway program! Of the 258.5 miles of highway in Swain County, 64 miles are currently under adoption. You can help make the dream a reality by adopting 2 miles of the remaining 194.5 miles.

Your local DOT coordinator is Randy Estep, 488-3683, Monday - Friday 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., located at 345 Toot Hollow Rd., Bryson City, NC 28713

Last, but not least, a very special Thank You to all the Adopt-A-Highway Volunteers in Swain County and others who work tirelessly to keep our roadways clean. You are unsung heroes of our community.

Denise Tyson

Founding Member

Swain County MLK Jr. Commission

« Close
Feb 2008 7

Why an MLK Day observance in Swain?

By Clay Wilson - Publisher

Better late than never, I suppose.

For the past couple of weeks, I've remained silent (editorially, anyway) about the first official observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day in Swain County. It's not that I didn't have anything to say on the subject; it's just that over the last two weeks I found it expedient to write on another topic.

But now here goes:

Read more » « Close

I'll admit that, when I first heard about an effort to organize an MLK event in Swain County, my reaction was, "Why would anyone want to do that here?" After all, according to U.S. Census 2000 figures, Swain County's African-American population was less than two percent of the total population.

Denise Tyson, who spearheaded the organizing effort and became the chair of the county's first MLK Commission, indicated I wasn't the only one to have this reaction.

Tyson may, in fact, have expected such questions. Still, she said she had to take action when she discovered after moving here full time two years ago that the closest official events for the MLK holiday were in Jackson County.

She said the 1960s, particularly the Civil Rights Movement, had a profound impact on her. And she feels that the struggles and accomplishments of that era should be commemorated.

Tyson gathered a group of like-minded individuals, and the Swain County MLK Commission was born. The group worked for more than a year to bring the first countywide MLK celebration to fruition.

The results seem to have surpassed their expectations. At a wrap-up meeting held Jan. 27, MLK Commission members discussed the fears they had before the Jan. 21 event that not many people would show.

They needn't have worried, though. On the 21st, about 150 people packed the downtown Bryson City inn where the event was held.

I dropped in for a bit myself. While I was there, I noticed people of numerous races and ethnicity. I saw blacks, whites and Native Americans. The program included a Spanish speaker and a Filipino.

Tyson had indicated to me weeks before the event, in explaining her reasoning in organizing it, that this is just how she wanted the day to go.

When I asked her the question I raised before, of why there should be an MLK celebration in a county with such a low black population, she explained:

"Our mission is to hopefully inspire people to realize that the MLK holiday is a holiday for all people."

This makes sense to me. I agree with Swain County High School senior Thomas Goodson, who told a Times reporter that Dr. King's message of love and tolerance even for those different from us is still applicable today.

I commend Denise Tyson and all the members of Swain's first MLK Commission for their hard work in organizing the commission and the event. I encourage them to keep working to honor Dr. King in Swain County and to bring his dream to pass here, too.

The commission is currently working on its plans for the upcoming year. Anyone interested in its work can contact Tyson, 488-3878, or visit the website at www.swainMLK.com.

- Clay Wilson, Publisher

email:cwilson@thesmokymountaintimes.com « Close

Jan 2008 30

More than 150 attend Swain's historic first MLK celebration

More than 150 people traveled from all over Western North Carolina to attend the first official Martin Luther King Jr. celebration at Bryson City's Historic Calhoun House on Jan. 21.

The turnout greatly exceeded what organizers had expected. The attendance was so large that the Historic Calhoun House in Bryson City was packed to capacity. Some guests had difficulty squeezing in to hear the presentation.

Read more » « Close

"It is important to note that a Martin Luther King Jr. event is not just about the number of participants, or who came out for the occasion," said MLK Commission member Denise Tyson. "It is also about the interaction between members of our community and the unity and goodwill that results because of this interaction."

The keynote address was given by Rev. George Allison, director of the North Carolina Martin Luther King Jr. Commission. Allison spoke about Dr. King's legacy and the urgent need for continued advocacy for society's disadvantaged members.

"We don't need to just tolerate one another, we need to love each other," said Allison.

A highlight of the celebration was a segment called "International Messages of Hope," which featured Swain County residents reciting Martin Luther King quotes translated into other languages. Marie Junaluska, an Eastern Band of Cherokee Tribal Council member, started the segment with a Cherokee translation and discussion of the MLK quote, "We have learned to fly the air like birds." Other quotes were given by Spanish teacher Kathy de Cano and Swain teacher John Mitchell. Rufina and Clucero Rasonabe, natives of the Philippines, quoted Dr. King and sang "We Are One" in their native dialect.

Participation wasn't limited to Swain County residents. Rep Phil Haire, D-Sylva, and Sen. John Snow, D-Murphy, as well as Sylva Mayor Brenda Oliver all spoke at the event. Bridging Jackson Communities, a Sylva-based organization, also contributed significantly to the success of the event.

"Our goal was to emulate and build upon what Bridging Jackson Communities has accomplished in Jackson County," said Tyson. "We've received a lot of support and guidance from our surrounding communities - Sylva, Cherokee, Asheville, Andrews and Waynesville. It's inspirational to see neighboring communities come together like this to support a first time event in Bryson City. It is this type of cooperation that I believe Rev. Martin Luther King was talking about when he described his vision of 'The Beloved Community.'"

The event proved to be a watershed moment for Asheville resident Julius McDowell, who returned to his native Bryson City for the first time in 50 years to attend the celebration. In 1957, McDowell and four other African-American students attempted to integrate Swain County High School. McDowell and the others were turned away by Principal L.H. Ballard and forced to ride a bus to Sylva to attend a segregated high school.

"You have to forgive," said McDowell. "It is the only way we can grow."

The Jan. 21 MLK event can been seen on the Internet by visiting the "Voices" section of the Swain MLK Commission's Web site at: www.swainMLK.com.

« Close
Jan 2008 24

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy honored with local celebration

By Justin Brimer - Staff Writer

Residents spoke, cheered, sang and some even wept Monday during Swain County's first-ever official Martin Luther King Jr. celebration. More than 150 people attended the festivities that included speeches from civil rights, religious, school and business leaders.

Read more » « Close

Rev. George Allison spoke about Dr, King's non-violent way of ending social injustices like segregation of pubic facilities.

He said it is not enough to simply tolerate a different culture or race. People should try to understand and love each other.

"We have to learn to live together," he said.

Members of other county Martin Luther King Jr. Commissions spoke about their efforts to honor Dr. King.

Swain County High School Spanish teacher Kathy deCano read a portion of a speech by Dr. King in Spanish and English. Swain County High School guidance counselor Rufina Rasonabe sang "We are One" in English and her native Filipino.

Marley Cunningham, who graduated from Swain County High School in 2007, spoke about diversity in high school and the changes she saw when she entered Western Carolina University.

Swain County High School senior and aspiring chef Thomas Goodson presented an eight-tier cake he made for the day's remembrance of Dr. King.

He said the civil rights leader's legacy of love and acceptance can still be applied today in Swain County.

MLK Commission chair Denise Tyson said "it was a very meaningful tribute to Dr. King."

She also noted the "wonderful"" turnout by community leaders and students from area schools.

« Close
Jan 2008 24

You have to forgive. It is the only way we can grow."

Julius McDowell Jr.

By Justin Brimer - Staff Writer

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said "Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle." On the first day at Swain County High School in 1957, Rev. Julius McDowell and five black high school students began that struggle by attempting to enroll for school.

Read more » « Close

Then principal L.H. Ballard turned the group away, meaning they would have to ride a bus 20 miles to attend a segregated high school in Sylva.

More than 50 years later, one of those students, Julius McDowell Jr., returned to Swain County for a Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration. "I forgive them all," McDowell said of the school officials who would not allow him to go to the only high school in Swain County. "You have to forgive," he said "It is the only way we can grow." McDowell Jr. did not speak at the festivities but did talk to a few Swain County residents outside.

As he was telling about the bravery of his father on that first day of school and the distance he had to travel to attend class, a former friend who remembered that day said hello.

Luke Hyde said he grabbed the town drunk and pulled him away from the line of black students walking toward the school. "He was sauced at 8:30 in the morning and was going to kick a young man in line," Hyde said. A sheriff's deputy took the man away from the school building.

McDowell laughed and said he didn't really expect to get into school that day, but someone had to try.

"I thought they would let them into the school," Hyde said later. "I played ball with them (black students). We went to church together sometimes. For the life of me I couldn't understand why they had to travel so far to go to class."

McDowell gave a few words of advice to 16-year-old Cherokee Central High School student Josh Queen who was standing nearby. "Stay in school," McDowell said. "That is the most important thing you can do."

"Keep working hard," he went on. "I found out a long time ago you can get what you need if you keep working for it." McDowell, who owns a lawn maintenance business in Buncombe County, had one more piece of advice for those listening.

"(Racism) starts when you're a kid. You wouldn't know anything about black or white if you weren't taught."

« Close
Jan 2008 16

Remembering a great leader

First MLK commission established in Swain County

By Julia Merchant - Staff Writer

When Denise Tyson realized she would have to trek to another county to take part in celebrating Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, she did just what the famous civil rights leader would have done - she took a stand.

Read more » « Close

Tyson had recently moved to Swain County from Atlanta, where MLK Day celebrations and ceremonies were prominent. But "last year in January with the King holiday rolling around, I couldn't find anything posted in the local community that there was any type of event," Tyson recounts. "It seemed bizarre to me to find myself living in a community that took the holiday off, but there wasn't an event to honor the holiday or the essence of the holiday. I personally felt stunned by that."

Tyson traveled to neighboring Jackson County to take part in a celebration, but she came back wondering - is there any reason Swain County couldn't have an event honoring MLK Day?

"When I sort of started asking myself and other folks that question, the answer that came back to me is that if you want something done in the community, you have to get it together," Tyson remembers.

Janice Inabinett, another Swain County resident, is one of the people that encouraged Tyson when she called to ask for advice.

"I kind of challenged her and said, if you don't want to be making the same call a year from now, you better do something about it," Inabinett said.

So Tyson began her quest to establish a celebration in recognition of Martin Luther King, Jr. in Swain County. After months of work, the county's first-ever Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission will hold a ceremony on Jan. 21 honoring the life and legacy of the civil rights leader, who was assassinated in 1968.

"We made the decision, instead of continuing to sit and sort of bat the idea around, we decided to put some of those ideas into action and move forward and announce ourselves to the community," Tyson said.

The commission was officially recognized by both Swain County commissioners and the town of Bryson City last month.

The holiday

The path to establish a Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday was a long one. Efforts began after King's death in 1968, but the holiday didn't come to fruition until then-president Ronald Reagan signed it into law in 1986. The 15-year struggle to establish the holiday was marked by controversy and resistance, according to Western Carolina University history professor Elizabeth McRae - partly because King himself was a controversial leader.

"The way we celebrate him today is non-controversial. I think we tend to forget that King was an incredibly controversial figure," McRae says.

King's radical economic message, opposition to the Vietnam War, and alleged ties to communism made him a lightning rod for detractors. But his message of social justice, anti-poverty and tolerance eventually usurped all else, and the holiday was successfully passed in Congress.

Today, 95 percent of the counties in North Carolina have a MLK Commission, estimates George Allison, director of the state's official MLK Commission, which makes Swain County among the last to establish one.

Why is it important for communities to celebrate the holiday and honor the life of its namesake? The answer is different depending on who is asked.

Inabinett admits she knew relatively little about Martin Luther King, Jr. before she became involved with the commission.

"I began to study who he was and his background, and I think I kind of fell in love with the speech he gave in 1964 when he received the Nobel Peace Prize. He basically talked about the fact that we had three challenges to address - racial injustice, war, and poverty. And I started thinking today, are we addressing racial injustice? Are we addressing war? Are we addressing poverty?" Inabinett says.

The purpose of honoring King's life, Inabinett says, is to also honor his message - and make sure the community is doing all it can to work toward it.

Tyson also says it goes beyond just honoring the life of King.

"I feel like when we are honoring his life, we are also honoring the people who made great sacrifices and the courage it took for them to change the world and to change our country,” she says.

Additionally, King's message reaches all people, says Allison.

"The reason of the importance of the holiday itself is the issues that he addressed - philosophical, political, you name it, it was for the benefit of all mankind. It was for the good of the total population of America and even beyond," Allison said.

Time was right

Both Tyson and Inabinett say the commission has so far been well-received.

"Every day I talk to people in this community that tell me their own personal experiences of Dr. King and what his life meant to them," Tyson said.

"I am seeing Swain County really be supportive of taking a look at how we can be in the 21st century. I see us as very progressive and very forward-thinking. People have stopped me on the street to say how happy they are about (the commission)," Inabinett agreed.

She added that the commission will encourage a dialogue within the community.

"I'm sure that there are plenty of people here in Swain County that think the same way that (King) does about social injustices, about war, and about poverty. I would think it would give us an opportunity to get those kinds of dialogue and discourse going," Inabinett said.

And to Tyson, the timing couldn't be better. She points out that this year marks the 40th year since King's assassination, and this summer the new MLK memorial will open on the National Mall in Washington D.C.

"One of King's quotes is, 'the time is always right to do what is right'", Tyson said. « Close

Jan 2008 09

Swain County Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Celebration

Remember, Celebrate, Act 2008: A Celebration of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on Monday, January 21, 2008 at the Historic Calhoun House (135 Everett Street in Bryson City) from 1:00 until 4:00 PM. The public is invited.

Read more » « Close

The celebration will feature special guest speakers, including, the Reverend George Allison, Director of the State of North Carolina Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission; the Reverend Victoria Casey-McDonald, author of A Pictorial History: The African-Americans of Jackson County; and Jacquelyn Hallum, Director of Health Careers and Diversity Management at Mountain Area Health Education Center will present Be the Change as her topic for the celebration. Remarks will also be made by Denise Tyson, Founding Member of the Swain County Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission, Swain County Commissioner Steve Moon and by local business representatives Cai Chen, of Yummi Yummi Restaurant, Bridget Hines, of the Nantahala Outdoor Center, and Christine Colcord of the Bryson City Branch of the United Community Bank.

Musical performances will include the local favorite, Bean Sidhe, and interludes will be performed by the Mountain Strings Dulcimer Club. Light food and refreshments will also be served at this first ever event in Swain County.

The Swain County Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission, which was formed in March of 2007, came together with the expressed intent to begin a tradition of celebrating and promoting the ideals set forth by the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The group's mission is to promote mutual respect and celebrate diversity in our community. Those interested in joining this Commission, which will begin planning for 2009 in February, can contact Denise Tyson at 828-488-3878 or email info@wainMLK.com.

The Historic Calhoun House Hotel is located in downtown Bryson City at 135 Everett Street. For more information on this celebration 'Remember, Celebrate, Act 2008' please contact Denise Tyson at 828-488-3878 or email at info@swainMLK.com « Close

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Information

  • The King Center

    Established in 1968 by Coretta Scott King, The King Center is the official, living memorial dedicated to the advancement of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., leader of America's greatest nonviolent movement for justice, equality and peace.

  • Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Site

    The Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site includes a number of facilities that are operated in partnership with the National Park Service, Ebenezer Baptist Church and The King Center. Within these facilities the visitor can learn about Dr. King's life and and his influence on others.

  • Washington MLK National Memorial

    Herein, you will find a wealth of information that will introduce you to one of the most magnanimous projects currently underway in our nation's Capital; the building of a memorial to commemorate the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

  • Wikipedia Entry for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    Luther King, Jr. (January 15, 1929 to April 4, 1968), was one of the main leaders of the American civil rights movement. A Baptist minister by training, King became a civil rights activist early in his career, leading the Montgomery Bus Boycott and helping to found the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. His efforts led to the 1963 March on Washington, where King delivered his 'I Have a Dream' speech, raising public consciousness of the civil rights movement and establishing King as one of the greatest orators in American history. In 1964, King became the youngest person to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to end segregation and racial discrimination through civil disobedience and other non-violent means.

  • CNN Special Report - The King Papers

    Handwritten sermons from historic days. Pencil edits of statements from jail. A worn scrap of paper found the day he died. CNN has been granted exclusice access to these and thousands of other documents from the papers of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.

North Carolina Civil Rights History

  • The Woolworth Sit-In That Launched a Movement

    On Feb. 1, 1960, four students from all-black North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College walked into a Woolworth five-and-dime with the intention of ordering lunch.But the manager of the Greensboro Woolworth had intentions of his own - to maintain the lunch counter's strict whites-only policy.

  • 1955 Integration attempt at Swain County High School

    Students living in different parts of North Carolina had made history of their own in the late 1950's as the first in their cities to challenge the illegal system of segregation in public schools. Dr. Herman Thomas - VP of Academic Affairs at Shaw University, relates his experiences attempting to integrate Swain County High School in 1955.