I was contacted recently by library at UNC Chapel Hill concerning a question they had received from Joyce Busenbark of Statesville. Mrs. Busenbark had discovered a 1935 patient discharge paper from the old Davis Hospital on West End Avenue. The names of the patient had been blacked out, meaning it had been discarded at some point, but she noticed something curious. Under the heading of “Discharged” were the words “To Daisy’s.” Not knowing what Daisy’s meant she had contacted the library at UNC. When I first heard that a patient had been discharged to Daisy’s I drew a blank as well. I mean was some smart aleck saying this person had died and was now “pushing up daisies.”
One clue was the fact that the patient was listed as colored. After some research I discovered that the patient had actually been discharged to the care and home of Daisy Conner Robinson. Daisy’s husband, Thomas Robinson, was deceased and she was known locally in Statesville by her maiden name of Daisy Conner. In the 1930 Statesville City Directory she is shown living at 249 Garfield Street right at the Green Street intersection. The entry for 249 also says “Colored Branch Davis Hospital” and below the listing for Davis Hospital is another entry that reads, “Davis Hospital, colored branch, 249 Garfield, Daisy Robinson nurse.” Some of the older members of the Black community in Statesville explained what was going on.
Davis Hospital was opened in Dec. 1925. Please note that I am referring to the old Davis Hospital listed at 709 West End Avenue in 1930 and not the modern one on Old Mocksville Road. During those early years Davis Hospital treated black patients in what locals called the “basement” separate from the white patients. Black patients were not allowed to stay overnight in the hospital and if they were seriously ill or injured and needed to be hospitalized they were discharged to “Daisy’s and sent to her home on Garfield. Daisy was a black nurse and who was born Dec. 4, 1892 in Catawba County. She cared for the black patients from the mid-20s until the early forties. The unknown patient had received an appendectomy in 1935 and the discharge paper said “Going to Daisy’s tonight.”
Daisy’s address at 249 Garfield placed her close to Dr. Robert S. Holliday at 241 Garfield. Dr. Holliday was a black physician in Statesville and could have helped with the patients under Daisy’s care. Dr. Holliday’s wife was Mary Charlton Holliday who was over the black schools in Iredell County from 1915 to 1956. Daisy died on Jan. 6, 1947 at 54, from tuberculosis probably caught from a patient she cared for. Her funeral was held at First Baptist Church on Green Street. She is listed as being buried in the “colored cemetery,” now known as the Green Street Cemetery, but there appears to be no headstone. The house is gone now and we have been unable to find a photograph of either Daisy or the house. Her daughter Pheonia R. Smith lived at 528 Falls St. with her husband John R. Smith until her death on June 11, 1965.
By Joel Reese, Local History Librarian, Iredell County Public Library. Article was published in the Statesville Record & Landmark newspaper on March 11, 2014 as “Finding Statesville’s nurse Daisy”