A Concord, North Carolina, resident is working to make sure a musical legend is forever remembered for a moment of bravery that occurred in the city almost 100 years ago.

Jeff Williams was watching noted filmmaker and historian Ken Burns’ 2001 “Jazz” documentary miniseries two years ago, when something caught his attention.

“I was watching it and I’m a music fan … and I was halfway paying attention when I heard Concord, North Carolina,” Williams, who has been playing punk rock for 30 years, said about the documentary.

The third episode of the miniseries, titled “Our Language,” was focused on Bessie Smith, one of the most popular blues singers of the 1930s who was nicknamed “The Empress of the Blues.”

Bessie Smith spent an eventful night in Concord in 1927, when she stood up to several Klan members.

During one “sweltering July night in 1927,” Smith and her troupe were performing under a tent in Concord, according to the documentary, when a musician with the band spotted half a dozen members of the Ku Klux Klan walking toward them.

The band member told Smith to run away, but she stood her ground. She ran out of the tent and toward the KKK members, shaking her fist and cursing, according to the documentary.

“I’ll get the whole damn tent out here,” she shouted at the group. “You just pick up them sheets and run.”

The Klansmen, facing Smith and the tent full of her fans, quickly fled. Smith went back into the tent and resumed the performance.

Smith ultimately died in 1937 at the age of 43 in a car crash.

The encounter later became the basis for the children’s book “Bessie Smith and the Night Riders“ and was also included in the 2015 HBO TV film “Bessie,” starring Queen Latifah.

About the Historical Marker Program

That moment of defiance made an impression upon Williams, who as a Jazz fan had already known about Smith. He recently submitted an application with the North Carolina Highway Historical Marker Program to commemorate the event.

The program currently features more than 1600 markers statewide covering a broad swath of topics, according to its website.

“The markers are designed to spark interest, to encourage a deeper exploration, and to tie an observer, however briefly, to the past,” the website states. “Unlike monuments, markers do not seek to glorify or celebrate people and events. Instead, they aim to highlight objective facts of our state’s past.”

There are 21 historical markers throughout Cabarrus County highlighting all sorts of legendary figures including Jefferson Davis, who served as the first and only president of the Confederate states; Nathaniel Alexander, who served in the Revolutionary War and was later the 13th governor of North Carolina; and James Cannon, who founded the Cannon Mills Corporation.

Williams hopes that soon enough, Smith’s resistance to the KKK and to white supremacy more broadly will merit a historic marker in her name.

“On many levels, it would be a triumph if it happened,” Williams said about getting a marker erected to commemorate Smith’s bravery. “The fact that she did what she did” represented “a change in an approach to the rights of African Americans … She stood her ground.”

The moment of courage was especially noteworthy, given that the KKK was still a formidable force in the 1920s, when Jim Crow laws were still being enforced.

The second Klan formed in 1915 and during its peak in 1924-25, the organization “claimed four to five million men as members, or about fifteen percent of the nation’s eligible population,” according to “Second Ku Klux Klan and The Birth of a Nation.”

“I feel like I was robbed of that knowledge that this happened” in Concord, Williams said. “Bessie Smith is so important to American music, that she is a direct influence” to other performers, including Janis Joplin, Tina Turner and Aretha Franklin.

“The well of influence from Bessie Smith is still flowing today,” Williams added.

More on Bessie Smith’s experience with KKK

Williams has continued to research Smith and her encounter with the KKK in Concord. The moment was also mentioned in “Bessie,” Chris Albertson’s 1972 biography of the legendary singer. Williams shared several scanned excerpts describing Smith’s face-off with the Klan with the Concord Independent Tribune.

Smith, who grew up in Chattanooga, Tennessee, was aware of the Klan’s threat and spent much of her life in Klan-infested territory, according to Albertson.

“Like many Southern blacks, she did her best to ignore the hooded mongers, assuming that she would receive no more malice than she gave,” Albertson wrote. But her “complacent attitude” changed to “one of defiance” during one July night in 1927 (no specific date was given).

Albertson describes in detail the same story that was told in Burns’ documentary, including musician stepping outside, spotting the KKK members and relaying the information to Smith.

“Bessie seemed fearless as she ran towards the intruders, stopping within ten feet of them,” wrote Albertson, who derived his account of the event from two of Smith’s family members.

“I was told that she confronted the Klan with her hand on her hip, as she always did when something bothered her,” said Maud Smith, the wife of Smith’s older brother Clarence, “and that she shook her fist at them!”

Albertson wrote that the Klan members, “apparently too stunned to move, just stood there and gawked.” Smith “hurled obscenities” at them until they turned around and “disappeared quietly into the darkness.”

The encounter was also referenced in “Portraits Of The African-American Experience In Concord-Cabarrus, North Carolina 1860-2008” written by local historian and Logan resident Bernard Davis Jr.

“What Bessie Smith did while here not only made headlines around the country, but also it has to this day continued to convey to the world at large, the connection Concord, North Carolina, has with African American music and racism,” Davis Jr. wrote.

Williams hopes that if his application is approved and a marker gets erected, more residents in Cabarrus County will learn about Smith and her bravery.

“We have this beautiful, winning story right here that has just not been touched,” he said. “So much could be done with that.”

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