SAM LOWRY
W. V. Barry
May 22, 1936
Progress
Our Editor Makes Another Trip
[Mr. Barry and sister Mrs. G.T. Ray go to her home in Humboldt, and while
walking around town, Mr. Barry meets a former resident of Henderson
County.]
One of the most interesting characters I met while taking a walk in the more
elevated section of the town, much of which is occupied by colored people, who
have comfortable homes, was Sam Lowry, a colored man, aged 76, who left this
county, between Sardis and Scotts Hill, more than forty years ago. Sam seemed
to remember all the older citizens of Lexington, Sardis, Decaturville and
Saltillo, and his memory was clear on happenings of fifty years ago. He told me
that the late Sam Howard, when trustee of Henderson County, paid him for
teaching school. Sam is one of the tribe of Negroes brought from South Carolina
by old Doctor Lowry, who was never married and left many Negroes on his lands,
titles to which were partly conveyed in a bill filed on pauper's oath by an old
man of Mt. Pleasant, Tennessee. I was told that Sam had a good name in
Humboldt.