Monday, February 28, 2022

Cornelius Hunt, The First Black City Official

 

Cornelius Hunt (1919-1990)

A Brevard native, Cornelius F. Hunt was a well-known leader in Transylvania County and had a significant impact on the community. Born in 1919, his parents James & Emily died a couple of years apart when he was very young, and he was raised by relatives in Louisville, KY. He later returned to Brevard, married Jessie Mae Rosemond, and had five children in addition to a foster child. Jessie, a nurse, died of cancer at age 39, and Hunt never remarried.

Hunt worked at Transylvania Tanning and then Ecusta/Olin for 31 years before retirement. He served on numerous boards, councils, and non-profit organizations both during his employment and into retirement. Some of his notable achievements were being a Brevard City Council member for 17 years, a founding member of the Transylvania County Human Relations Council, the first president of the TCIO (Transylvania Citizens Improvement Organization), the director of United Way, the director of the Mary C. Jenkins Community Center, and a mayor pro tem. He was a Sunday school superintendent for Bethel “A” Baptist Church for 35 years and a Scout Master for the Boy Scouts of America. These are only a handful of his many accomplishments, which are almost too extensive to list.

While continuing to serve in office as a Brevard City Council member, he died unexpectedly of heart failure in 1990. In 2015, the Public Works building on Cashiers Valley Road was dedicated in his honor and bears a plaque acknowledging the honor.

Photographs and information for this column are provided by the Rowell Bosse North Carolina Room, Transylvania County Library. This article was written by Local History Librarian Laura Gardner. For more information, comments, or suggestions, contact NC Room staff at ncroom@transylvaniacounty.org or 828-884-1820.

 

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