Wall Center Ceremony Honors a Family That Helped Build a Community
Wall Family, Walltown residents join Duke in dedication ceremony
Turner was among the nearly 100 Wall family descendants who attended the dedication ceremony.
A gathering in the lobby before the ceremony in the Wall Center dining room took on the atmosphere of a family reunion, where the Wall family, along with former and current residents of the Walltown community, admired the permanent lobby exhibition, read the early history of the Wall family, and posed for photos in front of the portraits.
鈥淥h, I鈥檓 happy, so, so happy,鈥 Annie Vample said.
鈥淭his is long overdue,鈥 said Duke alumnus and board of trustees chair Adam Silver, who offered closing remarks at the ceremony. 鈥淚t comes at a great time with the Centennial, and it鈥檚 a turning point in Duke鈥檚 relationship with the community for the next century and continuing to build a great relationship.鈥
Earlier in the week, Wall family member Joel Brown, a reporter with WTVD, talked with Duke President Vincent Price about his family鈥檚 legacy. Joel鈥檚 father, John Brown, a retired history teacher, attended the dedication ceremony. 鈥淚 love it,鈥 said John Brown. 聽鈥淗ere鈥檚 the deal. I鈥檓 a Carolina fan. This might make me become a Duke fan.鈥
George Wall was born into slavery in 1861 and later worked on the Trinity College campus in Randolph County. After the college moved to Durham, George and Hattie Wall also moved to Durham and he continued to work for Trinity, even as it became 老牛影视 in 1924.
George鈥檚 oldest son, George-Frank Wall was born in 1887, helped his father on campus as a child and later worked as a janitor at Duke, where he was well known to the students.
George-Frank Wall left a $100 bequest to Duke in his will that was written more than a decade before the university admitted Black students. He died in 1953.
The renaming of the Wall Center not only honors the father and son, it also recognizes the contributions of their family and other African American workers who have enhanced Duke with their labors and helped to build community both on campus and in Durham.
Previously the East Campus Union, the building is home to the Marketplace and the Trinity Caf茅 and serves as the main dining hall for first-year students.
In opening the ceremony, Price said the university鈥檚 Board of Trustees voted unanimously in February to approve the renaming of the Wall Center.
Price highlighted the work of the staff of the Wall Center for Student Life, 鈥渨hose work to prepare and serve thousands of meals each day nourishes our students and enriches our academic community,鈥 he said.
Stephanie Joy Tisdale, George Wall鈥檚 great-great-great-granddaughter, began her remarks speaking the West African Yoruba language:
鈥淎 ar谩 gb脿hun d脿?
A ar谩 gb脿hun d脿?
To ba 峁
峁 p谩 ee ku o
A ar谩 gb脿hun d脿?鈥
Where are the ancestors?
Where are the ancestors?
If it is a fact that we never die
Where are the ancestors?
鈥淕eorge Wall is one of millions,鈥 Tisdale said. 鈥淗e represents one of the millions of human beings of African descent born in captivity, forced to labor against their will, navigating the world as best as possible: all variables considered.
鈥淭he land that he procured adjacent to Duke鈥檚 campus later became a home to many people who鈥搇ike him鈥搘ere attempting to navigate the contradictions of America. The fact that this land continues to be called Walltown almost 120 years later speaks to an aspect of George Wall鈥檚 existence that I want to know more about.鈥
Vanessa Wall Smart, George Wall鈥檚 great-great-great granddaughter, recalled the people and places in Walltown that created a tight-knit, self-sufficient community, 鈥渇or the sake of history, and for the record.鈥
鈥淚n Walltown there was a network, a sense of belonging, love and a safe space for its residents. Whether related by blood or by the boundaries of Club Boulevard to Green Street and Lancaster to Sedgefield [streets], Walltown was family and a reflection of their life鈥檚 work,鈥 said Smart, who spent her formative years on the same street where George and Hattie Wall built their home.
鈥淲hen my parents moved us a few miles north of here, we were always back in Walltown several times a week,鈥 Smart added. 鈥淲hether it was social engagements, church services, meal delivery, or just to stop by someone鈥檚 house to say hello, Walltown was home.鈥
A third family member, Durham resident and entrepreneur Talib Graves-Manns, continues the family legacy by being active in the local community, including partnering with Duke鈥檚 Office of Durham and Community Affairs.
On his customary walks through Walltown and around East Campus, Graves-Manns said he recalls the commitment the Wall family made to build the community.
鈥淚n honor of George Wall and our family鈥檚 legacy, we too are committed to building stronger, healthier communities,鈥 he said. 鈥業 challenge each of you to ask yourself: 鈥楢m I doing all I can to leave this community better than I found it?鈥
鈥淟et this be a reminder that your contribution, no matter how big or small, has the power to change lives. What will your legacy be? What is your $100, and where will you invest it?鈥