Fatcow Icon
Eugenics survivor remembers: You won’t have ‘bread-eaters’
by Abbi Overfelt
Staff writer
Virginia Brooks, a victim of North Carolina's sterilization program, hopes she will one day receive the compensation she feels is due to her. Abbi Overfelt | The Robesonian
Virginia Brooks, a victim of North Carolina's sterilization program, hopes she will one day receive the compensation she feels is due to her. Abbi Overfelt | The Robesonian
slideshow

MAXTON — Eighty-three-year-old Virginia Brooks remembers when she learned she would never give birth to a child.

She was American Indian, 14, and it was the spring of 1943. She was in pain and lying in a hospital bed, recovering from a procedure that she thought had been performed to remove her appendix.

When a nurse’s aide read her chart and blurted out that Brooks would never have “bread-eaters,” Brooks learned the truth — the surgery was a state-ordered tubal ligation, which had robbed her of her ability to create life.

For Brooks and others sterilized by force or coercion, news that the North Carolina Senate had blocked a House measure to provide compensation for the 146 verified victims of the state’s sterilization program came as yet another blow.

“I don’t think it’s right. We deserve something for our lives being murdered for no reason at all,” she said. “They should have to give me something and they should give it to me now, not wait until I’m dead and gone.”

Brooks is one of the estimated 7,600 people — mostly women — who were sterilized under North Carolina’s eugenics program from 1929 to the mid-1970s. An estimated 1,800 victims are still living — but their numbers are decreasing with each year.

If the $11 million provision had been included in the budget approved Friday, it would have meant $50,000 in compensation for each victim.

“Nothing can compensate for what she went through,” said Brooks’ adopted daughter, Carol Chavis. “But maybe it will make the last years of her life more comfortable.”

Brooks says that “no one but the Lord” can understand what she has been through. The sterilization denied her the chance to have her own children, cost her a husband — and has shadowed the 69 years since, shattering her sense of self-worth.

Born into poverty in 1928, Brooks made it to the fifth grade at Union Chapel before her “foster” family no longer had the means to send her to school. The ramshackle wooden home where Brooks grew up, in an area between Lumberton and Pembroke that Brooks calls Maynor Center, was owned by Moslyn and Virginia Graham, an older couple Brooks calls “mama and daddy.” The house was home to the Grahams, Brooks, Brooks’ five siblings, and her mother, Maddie Hunt.

“It was just a miserable life,” she said. “I did have that much sense, to know that others had things that I couldn’t have.”

Eventually, Maddie Hunt married and moved out, taking the youngest child with her. Moslyn died, and Virginia was forced to move into another home.

“She was a real old woman and we really had no one to take care of us,” she said. “We lived the best way we could live.”

Brooks continued to visit her mother, who lived nearby. It was during a three-day stay at the age of 12, for which she had been called to watch Maddie and her husband’s six children, when “the law” arrived to take her away.

“He was a policeman, and he asked me to go with him,” she said. “He said there was someone in Lumberton who wanted to talk to me. ‘It ain’t no problem’, he said, ‘they ain’t gonna bother you. Just wants to talk to you’. But nobody there ain’t talked to me yet. They just took me down and locked me up.”

Brooks was not forced to go; she wasn’t handcuffed, and she didn’t resist.

“See, when you’re that young, you don’t know nothing,” she said. “When you ain’t been teached nothing and ain’t got no education, you don’t know what’s going on.”

Her incarceration in the Lumberton jail, which lasted 10 days, would lead to a stay of nearly two years in Samarcand Manor at Eagle Springs, also known as the State Home and Industrial School for Girls. Although Brooks said that while it may have been considered a school, as “white ladies” taught domestic skills to hundreds of white and Indian girls, she thinks of it as a prison.

“They kept a watch on you, they wanted to know what you were saying,” she said. “A lot of them would get together and slip away when they got a chance if they could. They’d run away, but they’d catch them and bring ‘em back, and lock ‘em up.”

Samarcand Manor was one of four institutions in North Carolina where sterilizations were performed, according to a report by the now-defunct Eugenics Board of North Carolina. The board reported 300 sterilizations performed on white and Indian girls to the state.

“If Indian girls at Samarcand were sterilized, it would be a good thing — the unfit should be sterilized,” a public-school principal identified only as “Mr. Lowry” said in a report to the state, according to a series on sterilization by the Winston-Salem Journal. “The lower class and the Holiness people would fight it, but there is no teaching of the Indians as a race to oppose sterilization.”

Brooks wasn’t sterilized, however, at Samarcand Manor; after a 23-month stay, during which she received no contact from her family except for a single letter, she was driven, along with two other girls, to Lumberton’s Baker Sanatorium by a social worker. Brooks was 14.

“She told us, on our way there, ‘We’re going to take you to the hospital. Ya’lls appendixes is a-botherin’ you and we’ve got to take them out’,” Brooks said. “And we weren’t sick. We weren’t hurtin’ or nothin’. We didn’t know what was goin’ on.”

Brooks was placed in a hospital bed in a room on the second floor, at the first window next to the street, and was told not to get up. She was soon given anesthesia, and went to sleep.

“When I woke up, I was in pain,” she said. “I just kept wondering why I had to go, why they took me there. I wasn’t sick, I wasn’t hurting.”

A few days after her surgery, a nurse’s aide revealed the truth.

“My chart was on the foot of my bed,” Brooks said. “She looked at it and said ‘huh’. I asked her what was wrong and she said, ‘you won’t never have no bread-eaters.’ Just like that. I would never have no bread-eaters. That meant that I would not have no children.

“I just laid there and wondered, and cried, and wanted to go home,” she said, her eyes welling.

After an 11-day stay in the hospital, she was released to her sister, Ruby Clark, and Ruby’s father-in-law, Ward, with whom Ruby was living while her husband was overseas serving for the military. She never learned what had become of the other two girls.

“I don’t know where those other girls are but God bless ‘em wherever they’re at. I guess their life was always miserable just like mine,” she said.

Brooks never received an explanation. When she asked her mother or her sister about it, they would not talk. Brooks also said Ward Clark told her that he was required to give reports on her behavior to authorities.

When Brooks was 18, she married Ernest Chavis, and after nine years the couple adopted Carol.

“I felt good. I knowed I had me a baby and that the Lord had given her to me,” Brooks said. “Even though I didn’t have her like most mothers had children, I was proud of her, and I’m still proud of her.”

Still, Brooks’ joy was overshadowed by the fact that her husband, a musician, stayed out all hours of the night and had begun to grow distant. When Carol was 7 years old, Chavis left the two alone in the home the family had shared in Baltimore and was gone forever. Brooks blames Chavis’ departure on her inability to have children, although he had promised that didn’t matter.

“He told a lie, that’s just what he done,” she said. “He lied. He left her and me alone in the world.”

Brooks said she struggled with emotional issues that made holding down a job difficult.

“I couldn’t work that much because I was hurting; my nerves was shot,” Brooks said. “I would sit and cry, couldn’t sleep, couldn’t eat — we lived on $30 a week.”

In the late 1960s, Brooks and her daughter moved back to Robeson County, to a home near New Prospect Church. Brooks worked odd jobs, and made meals for Carol when she came home from school to eat lunch. Eventually, she remarried and moved into her home of the past 41 years, on Brooklock Road in Maxton.

“I told him the same thing I told that other man,” Brooks said of her husband, Howard. “He has never questioned me.”

These days, Brooks spends quiet days at home, caring for her aging husband and cooking for Carol and Carol’s children, Kacie, Angela, Stacey and Lawrence when they come to visit. She delights in her grandchildren and five great-grandchildren she says the Lord has blessed her with; still, painful memories continue to haunt her.

“There ain’t nobody knows what I’ve been through but the Lord,” Brooks said. “It’s been rough. My life has been rough.”

Carol said she’s glad that the state’s history, and the truth about what happened to her mother and others, has come out in the open.

“It’s helped her self-esteem,” she said. “I knew all along she didn’t have that.”

Comments
(2)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
love67
|
June 24, 2012
I know this lady and she is a very sweet person. I am so sorry that this happened to her.I am praying that she will be greatly rewarded. The ones that did this to her may God have mercy on there souls. I am glad that she got to adopt a child & is enjoying her grand children.
BBBD
|
June 24, 2012
The mindset used to justify this program is the same mindset used to justify abortion.
Wedding announcement for March 31
Crystal Ann Locklear of Pembroke and Timmy Bullard of Prospect were united in marriage on Dec. 2...
Apr 04, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Reunions
Family reunions: Chavis and Ledwel Family Reunion will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday at the Anti...
Apr 04, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Oxendine Two-Stepping with Two Partners
Olivia Oxendine will be two-timing during the Dancing with the Robeson County Stars event. Oxend...
Feb 27, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Riverside Christian Academy Varsity Eagles 2013 NCCAA State Champions
The 2013 North Carolina Christian Athletic Association Basketball Tournaments were hosted at Beth...
Feb 25, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend
full story

Happy 236th
Thousands of people were dazzled by the fireworks display at the annual Lumberton Family Fourth celebration at the Lumberton High School football stadium on Tuesday. Many watched the display from parking lots and sidewalks around town and from their own front yards. Before the show, attendees were treated to a performance by the Carolina Breakers, and a stunt by the Army Rangers, who parachuted onto the football field.

News
Pembroke chamber holds networking even Thursday
PEMBROKE — The Pembroke Area Chamber of Commerce will hold a Business Networking After Hours event from 5 to 7 p.m. on Thursday. The event, which will be at the Locklear Winery located at 1872 Preston Road in Maxton, is an opportunity for business professionals to network and discuss economic ...
May 20, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Florida man killed in U.S. 74 accident
LUMBERTON — A 48-year-old Florida man was killed and four people, including a 3-month-old child, were injured in a single-vehicle accident on Saturday. According to a report by Trooper B.K. Covington of the state Highway Patrol, the victim, Joseph Frank Carroll, of 16850 S. Glades Drive, Apt. ...
May 20, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More News
Sports
St. Pauls relay team wins state title; Local roundup
GREENSBORO — The St. Pauls girls track team completed a four-peat as state champions in the 4x200 relay event Friday at North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro. The Lady Bulldogs’ foursome of Gabby Currie, Alexis Roberson and sisters Tia and Tamara Glover finished the race in 1:43.19, ...
May 19, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
H1NL_Abbey_3.jpg
West Bladen's Walters named May Scholar-Athlete
DUBLIN — Abbey Walters’ softball career can be traced back to 2000 when, as a 5-year-old, she first picked up a bat, ball and glove — thereby launching a journey that has taken her talents to new h...
May 19, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Sports
Opinion
A promise to fight abuse of power
We’ve all heard the phrase that “elections have consequences.” Recent news about the IRS singling out conservative groups for extra scrutiny is a “consequence” I never hoped to see. When I first learned the IRS had targeted conservative groups during the most recent election, I was outraged by...
May 20, 2013 | 1 1 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
The danger that is straight ahead
A hundred years ago, anyone who might have predicted in 1913 the monumental, man-made catastrophes that would occur in the rest of the 20th century would have been considered warped, if not completely mentally deranged. Who would have believed that the continent of Europe, which had not had a ...
May 20, 2013 | 1 1 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Opinion
Weather
Sponsored By:

RSS Feeds
All articles feed
News feed
Sports feed
Videos feed
Obituaries feed
Opinion feed
Local Features
Reunions for May 12, 2013
Family reunions: Taylor Family Reunion will be held at the Woodman Building on Derwood Road in Lumberton on May 19. For information, call Gwen at 910-733-2327 or Tammy at 910-258-2071. J...
May 12, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
What’s Happening for May 12, 2013
Today Water safety instructor class: America Red Cross is offering a class from May 12 through May 19 to anyone who wants to become a certified instructor . Participants must be 16 years or...
May 12, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Local Features
Poll
Sponsored By:

Poll Question
May 14, 2013 | 425124 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Do you think fourth-graders should be transferred from Tanglewood and Rowland-Norment elementary schools to Carroll Middle School?

View Previous Polls
Special Sections
Living50
HMB January 2013
2012 Football
TaxGuide2012