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VOL. 71, No. 41
October 13 - 19, 2022
www.tsdmemphis.com
LEGACY: Dr. William Young Sr. Champion of mental health and suicide prevention by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Pastor Dianne Young posted a photo of her husband, Dr. William Young Sr., smiling broadly on her Facebook page early Monday (Oct. 10) morning. For those who knew him, the pleasant, entreating smile was a familiar sight. The post that accompanied the photo inspired a flood tributes, expressions of sympathy, and personal accounts of how Dr. Young helped in Bishop William a time of need. M. Young Sr. Pastor Young wrote, in part: “My husband and I have been partners in life and ministry for over 46 years. At 12:35 a.m., my incredible husband took the journey we have preached and stand in faith about, and transitioned from his earthly house to his heavenly home…” Dr. Young was bishop and founder of The Healing Center Full Gospel Church. He was the father of four adult children —
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Greenwood C.M.E. Pastor Willie Boyd Jr. dies in car crash by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
For those who knew the Rev. Willie Boyd Jr., pastor of Greenwood Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, his death in a single-car crash leaves a soul-touching void. Friends and family are remembering the beloved pastor and youth advocate who died from injuries suffered in a one-vehicle accident Saturday (Oct.8). Shelby County Sheriff’s investigators responded to a vehicle crash in unincorporated Eads in East Shelby County. Investigators said Boyd’s car slammed into a tree about 7 p.m. on North Reid Hooker Road. Boyd, 44, was pronounced dead at the scene. The investigation is on-going. Rev. Willie Boyd Jr. “We feel the loss very deeply here in Orange Mound,” said Orange Mound Collaborative Group Chair LaTonia Blankenship. “Pastor Boyd was well-known in this community because he was concerned about what was going on. He was involved and very caring.
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In Orange Mound, joy looked like this at the groundbreaking ceremony for a new Melrose High School. (Photos: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)
‘Day of our dreams’ dawns for Historic Melrose High project
by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
A great shout of joy resounded in Orange Mound last week as Memphis-Shelby County Schools and City of Memphis leaders staged the long-awaited groundbreaking of a “reimagined” Melrose High School building. “That great shout of joy was a war cry of victory,” said LaTonia Blankenship, chair of the Orange Mound Collaborative Group and City Council candidate for District 4. “We have fought for so long to save our school. This is the day of our dreams.” The event unfolded last Friday afternoon (Oct. 7). Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland told the crowd that “every community deserves investment in its people and its space.” The project’s investment is $13 million — $10 million from the city. U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen secured $3 million in federal community development funding for the project. Melrose was built in 1938 as a federal Great Depression Work Project Administration effort. From the day it closed in 1981, former students and teachers had envisioned a second-chapter reopening building.
Mary Mitchell, lifelong Orange Mound resident and historian, addresses the groundbreaking-ceremony crowd with Mayor Jim Strickland looking on. In 2001, a grassroots community effort resulted in the original Melrose High School officially declared “historic” and entered on the “National Register of Historic Places.
The final push to Oct. 7 and a jubilant groundbreaking started in 2017 when a wide-eyed, eager Jevonte Porter came to
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