William J. Hadden

William J. Hadden

The Reverend William James Hadden, Junior, 1921–1995
Personal details
Born William James Hadden, Jr.
(1921-06-02)June 2, 1921
Maple Shade, New Jersey
Died June 14, 1995(1995-06-14) (aged 74)
Greenville, North Carolina
Nationality American
Spouse(s) Margaret Shumate Hadden
Alma mater Lynchburg College ,
Religion Episcopal

The Reverend William James Hadden, Jr. (June 2, 1921 – June 14, 1995) was a Protestant minister of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and a priest of the Episcopal Church (United States) He was also at different times both a military chaplain (both in the US Navy and the US Army), and a university Chaplain. He also served as a politician and community leader in Pitt County, North Carolina, and worked for the Desegregation of Greenville, North Carolina.

Early life

William "Bill" Hadden was born in Maple Shade, New Jersey on June 2, 1921. His parents were William James Hadden, Sr., and Elizabeth Derr Hadden. As a young man, he was very active in the Boy Scouts of America and was a Sea Scout. He married Margaret Shumate (daughter of Whitney Shumate and Jessamine Shumate) on August 28, 1944, and they had four children: Elizabeth Hadden Lunney; William James Hadden, III; Whitney W. Hadden (also known as Whit Haydn) and Robert Lee Hadden.

Education

William Hadden received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Philosophy at Lynchburg College in Lynchburg, Virginia in 1944. He was a member of both the Kappa Delta Phi, Eta Rho Chapter, and the Alpha Phi Omega fraternities. He received his Master of Divinity degree from the Graduate School of Education at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, as part of the V-12 Navy College Training Program, in 1946. He was awarded a second Master's degree from Austin Peay State University in 1957.

A firm believer in continuing education, he also completed special studies at the University of Edinburgh, the Graduate School of Theology at the University of the South,[1] and participated in the Religious Education Program at New York University and other studies at Peabody College and East Carolina University.

Churches

William Hadden was ordained as a "Minister of the Gospel" by the Disciples of Christ Church on May 29, 1944, at the Euclid Avenue Christian Church (now Euclid Christian Church), Lynchburg, Virginia.

The Rev. William J. Hadden, Jr., on the set for his television program, "Lessons for Learning," on WNCT-TV from 1961–1966.

William Hadden was ordained in the Episcopal Church by Tom Wright (Bishop of East Carolina) and Bishop Hunley A. Elebash, at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Greenville, North Carolina, on August 24, 1968.

Military

William Hadden served as a stateside military chaplain in the US Navy as a Lieutenant (junior grade) during World War II, from June 1944 until December 1949. Awarded the American Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal (United States).

He then transferred to the Tennessee National Guard and also served as a chaplain serving as a Captain in the United States Army Reserve during the Korean War, from December 1949 until July 1954.

Civil Life

William Hadden was the chairman of Greenville's "Good Neighbor Council"[7] formed of black and white citizens united to fight segregation. The Good Neighbor Council was formed by Terry Sanford, governor of North Carolina from 1961–1965, and this was the forerunner of the state's Human Relations Council, now the North Carolina Human Relations Commission. Terry Sanford encouraged local Good Neighbor Councils to consider, promote and adjudicate in questions of programs of racial nature. This eight person, biracial commission was the first group to promote the legislation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in eastern North Carolina. The Greenville Good Neighbor Council was cited by the city, county and state officials as the most significant agency in assisting the community in weathering a most traumatic period. William Hadden was its chairman for six years.

Bill Hadden was elected six times to the City Council of Greenville, North Carolina, and served for twelve years, from 1975–1977 and again from 1979–1989.[8]

While a city council member, he also participated in the Greenville Transit Commission, the Greenville Housing Authority, and the Community Bicycle Safety Program.[9] He was also instrumental in the formation of "Evergreen" a downtown revitalization program for Greenville.

He also served as mayor pro tem of Greenville, North Carolina from 1985–1987. In 1986 he was awarded the North Carolina chapter of the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce's "Outstanding Elected Official for the State."

For a number of years he was active in different community groups. He was on the board of directors when the group was formed in 1978, and was elected president of the Friends of Libraries group for East Carolina University in 1981.[10] William Hadden was also the president of the Friends of the Sheppard Memorial Library.[11] He also served on the board of directors for the Pitt County Mental Health Board and the United Fund.

Tour Guide

Bill Hadden traveled to Scotland and Israel during the 1950s on a study grant from the Disciples of Christ Church. He later found that a travel company in Nashville, Tennessee, would pay his way if he led a tour of ten people to Europe, and so he found twenty people and was able to take his wife along for free. They were able to get tickets to the Oberammergau Passion Play in 1960. He would also lead several other tours to Europe and the Holy Lands throughout the later 1960s, and later took another study tour of Anglican university chaplains in England for the Episcopal Church in 1983. "Taking tour groups to Europe is the hobby of the Rev. Bill Hadden, Episcopal Chaplain at East Carolina University and until five years ago an ordained minister in the Christian Church. Hadden has extensive experience in writing as he served as writer of Sunday School material for the Christian Board of Publication, contributed a weekly column for seven years in The Tennessean of Nashville, and has been published in The Christian[12] and The Pulpit Digest.[13]"[14]

William Hadden acted as a Summer Tour Director for Brownell Travel Company in Birmingham, Alabama, and led five tours to the Middle East and Europe.

Death

After a series of three strokes, he died on June 14, 1995 and is buried in Pinewood Memorial Cemetery, in Greenville, North Carolina.[15]

References

  1. Annual Catalog. Bulletin of the University of the South. Summer 1964. Page 192.
  2. Hadden, Margaret Shumate. My Memoirs. Sterling, Va. (sic): E. Lunney, 2006. Page 44.
  3. "Retro: North Carolina Sunday, February 20, 1966."
  4. Journal of the Annual Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of East Carolina, 1956–60. Page 99.
  5. "Bill Hadden Counsels a Student." East Carolina University (1976), Greenville, NC.
  6. Hadden, Margaret Shumate. My Memoirs. Sterling, Va. (sic): E. Lunney, 2006. Page 116.
  7. Waynick, Capus M. 1964. North Carolina and the Negro. North Carolina Mayors' Co-operating Committee. Page 297.
  8. "Historical List of Elected Officials."
  9. Beverly T. Orr and Elizabeth C. Leggett. 1978. Community Bicycle Safety Program Organization. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Highway Safety Research Center. Page 81.
  10. Lennon, Donald R. "A Friend of the Library: William J. Hadden." Library Notes. Spring 1981. Page 1.
  11. "William J. Hadden Oral History Interview." (#OH0259), East Carolina Manuscript Collection, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA. Abstract: Oral history interview (ca. 1991) with president-elect of Friends of Joyner Library, who was also Episcopal Chaplain of ECU, pastor of First Christian Church, Clarksville, TN, 1949–1959, and of First Christian Church, Greenville, NC, 1959–1969, member of Greenville City Council, president of Friends of Sheppard Memorial Library, relating to his early life, education, denominational affiliations, interest in libraries, and role as chaplain, 1949–1991. Notes: 1 item. 1 tape. (Side A) 0.75 hr. Interviewer: Donald R. Lennon. Transcript available: None. Interview date: ca. 1991. Agreement date: 6/11/2005
  12. "The Christian".
  13. "Pulpit Digest."
  14. "Mission Herald." Episcopal Diocese of East Carolina Volume 87, No. 5, December, 1973.
  15. "William J. Hadden, Jr.
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