FREE • June 17 - June 23, 2018
“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Vol. 23, Issue 22
The David McBride, Sr. Story
Find out about the Episcopal Inaugural Banquet honoring Bishop Johnny Tates, pg. 6
Dr. Linda Wilson, founder of Want It Foundation and Attorney Facheryl Dixon, panelists for the Legal Discussion for Non-Custodial Parents’ forum, pg. 9
David McBride, Sr. at his 100th birthday celebration. By Rebecca S. Jones Photo Credits: Gerald Davis and Rebecca S. Jones
Readers show love for the paper in Blazin’ Through the City, pg. 8
Cicely Tyson once said, “Age is just a number. Life and aging are the greatest gifts that we could possibly ever have.” No one can attest to this thought more than Mr. David McBride, Sr. At the ripe age of 100, he still possesses a mind sharper than a whip, a keen sense of humor and a smile that lights up the room. As the patriarch of five generations, McBride is the head of a loving and supportive family
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which cherishes his wisdom, wit and longevity. Recently, that extension of love was exemplified at the White Oak Conference Center surrounded by a multitude of family, friends and Houston’s own, Mayor Sylvester Turner. Mayor Turner joined to celebrate and pay homage to the Acres Homes’ resident by personally presenting him with a proclamation. African-American News & Issues has chosen to highlight the story of one of the “4-4”’s oldest living mem-
bers in our Juneteenth edition. During a recent interview, McBride took me down a century-old journey in the presence of his grandson, Gerald Davis and daughter, Sylvia. The Beginning of a Century Untold Just before the break of noon on June 3, 1918, David McBride became the ninth child birthed to Joseph and Ida Toines-McBride in Cooks Point. Within a few years, three more children were added to the McBride family. Unfortunately, at the age of six
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young David experienced the loss of his father to an illness. His mother continued raising the family in the nurture and admonition of Christ at Shiloh Baptist Church in Burleson County. As a child, he enjoyed swimming and fishing – hobbies that once cost him the whipping of his life. McBride said, “My mama was strict, I couldn’t do what the other children did. I caught a whipping for going to the lake, diving down to catch a fish. My Continued on Page 4
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