Roper Post Office to be named after E.V. Wilkins


August 10, 2010 

Release No. 107-10  



E.V. WilkinsROPER, NC — Congressman G. K. Butterfield will honor E. V. Wilkins with an event to mark naming the U.S. Post Office in his honor on Monday, August 16, 2010 at Roper Post Office, 101 West Highway 64 Bypass, beginning at 9:30 am.

In June, President Obama signed legislation offered by Butterfield naming the Post Office in honor of the former mayor and State Board of Education member.

“E.V. Wilkins left an indelible legacy,” Congressman G. K. Butterfield said. “This fitting honor recognizes his deep dedication to the community and his tireless work to increase tolerance, civic responsibility and academic achievement. He was an important and well-known political voice for eastern North Carolina.”

The legislation names the Post Office at 101 West Highway 64 Bypass as the “E.V. Wilkins Post Office.” Currently, the Post Office does not have a name. The legislation, approved by the House in January and by the Senate in May, was co-sponsored by North Carolina’s entire House delegation.

After graduating from North Carolina Central University in the 1930s, Elmer Vanray (“E.V.”) Wilkins returned to Roper to teach math at J.J. Clemmons High School. Butterfield said he soon became principal and led the school, its students and community to aspire to greatness.

Butterfield said Wilkins started that effort with by seeking a school bus in 1946. While the white children had a bus, the black students did not. After soliciting small donations from whites and blacks, and even accepting bushels of potatoes that could be sold as part of the growing fund, Wilkins spearheaded the successful effort to provide the needed bus.

In the mid-1950s, Wilkins took up the fight against white county leaders refusal to allow blacks to vote. Butterfield explained that Wilkins insisted that everyone must enjoy the same right to vote and led a lawsuit with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on behalf of the county’s black residents. They won a court order enforcing their right to vote, and Wilkins’ father was able to vote for the first time in his life in 1956.

“He committed his life to the powerful idea that all people deserve equal rights,” Butterfield said.

Wilkins was elected as Roper’s first black mayor in 1975 – a position held for 20 years until his retirement – and he was previously the first black to be elected to the Roper Town Council since Reconstruction in 1967.

A lifelong resident of Roper, Wilkins was born on July 4, 1911 and died on June 2, 2002 at the age of 90. His daughters, Bunny Sanders and Joy Price, son-in-law, Ralph Price, and two grandchildren, survive him. Sanders currently serves as Roper’s mayor.

Wilkins served as a member of numerous boards, including the State Board of Education, State Economic Development Commission, North Carolina Secondary Road Council, North Carolina Railroad Board of Directors and the North Carolina State Ports Authority. He also served as a member of the Board of Trustees of the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, the Advisory Board for the Rural Education Institution at East Carolina University, and of the Elizabeth City State University Board of Trustees.

During his life, Wilkins received numerous honors and awards, including the North Carolina Distinguished Citizen Award, the Order of the Long Leaf Pine Award, the Service Award by the North Carolina Leadership Caucus, the North Carolina Distinguished Service Award, and the North Carolina Human Relations Commission's Libby D. Koontz Award in recognition of his dedication and leadership in the areas of education, civil rights, and human rights.

He was also was honored by Elizabeth City State University when the University's computer center was renamed the E.V. Wilkins Academic Computing Center in 1992; and, honored by the establishment of the E.V. Wilkins Endowed Chair in the Elizabeth City State University School of Education and Psychology in 1996.

This event is free and open to the public.

# # #

Please Note: For broadcast quality video and audio, photo stills and other media resources, visit the USPS Newsroom at www.usps.com/communications/newsroom/welcome.htm.

A self-supporting government enterprise, the U.S. Postal Service is the only delivery service that reaches every address in the nation, 150 million residences, businesses and Post Office Boxes. The Postal Service receives no direct support from taxpayers. With 36,000 retail locations and the most frequently visited website in the federal government, the Postal Service relies on the sale of postage, products and services to pay for operating expenses. Named the Most Trusted Government Agency five consecutive years and the sixth Most Trusted Business in the nation by the Ponemon Institute, the Postal Service has annual revenue of more than $68 billion and delivers nearly half the world’s mail. If it were a private sector company, the U.S. Postal Service would rank 28th in the 2009 Fortune 500.

Postal News
 

Media Contacts