News

Tombstone Tales: A simple twist of fate saved Leon Love’s life

Tombstone Tales: A simple twist of fate saved Leon Love’s life

The headstone of World War I veteran Leon Love stands near the summit of Dix Hill Cemetery. Photo: Contributed/Shannon Ballard


Editor’s Note: Western North Carolina is rich with untold stories—many resting quietly in local cemeteries. In this Tombstone Tales series, we explore the lives of people from our region’s past whose legacies, whether widely known or nearly forgotten, helped shape the place we call home.

WAYNESVILLE, N.C. — On the steep hillside above Waynesville’s Pigeon Street neighborhood, a marble headstone catches the morning light. It bears a name, a war, and a quiet story about fate.

Leon Love was born in Waynesville on Feb. 22, 1896, a young Black man coming of age in a segregated South. He learned a trade from his father, Henry, becoming a plasterer whose hands built and mended the walls of other people’s homes.

The entrance sign for Dix Hill Cemetery in Waynesville’s historic Pigeon Street neighborhood. The hillside burial ground has served the town’s Black community since the 1800s. Photo contributed by Shannon Ballard.

When the United States entered World War I, the call for soldiers reached the mountains. At twenty-two, Love was drafted and inducted into the segregated Army on April 29, 1918. His papers described him as tall and slender, unmarried, with a tenth-grade education. He was sent first to the 156th Depot Brigade, a unit where African American recruits were often assigned to train and organize others rather than fight themselves.

That summer, Love transferred from Fort Jackson, South Carolina, to Fort Meade, Maryland. There, he joined the 167th Field Artillery Brigade, the first African American artillery brigade ever formed, part of the 92nd Infantry Division known as the Buffalo Soldiers. The men of the 92nd would soon face brutal combat in Europe. For reasons no known record explains, Leon Love remained with the brigade for only nine days before it shipped out for the front.

That decision, or chance of timing, likely saved his life. The 92nd suffered devastating losses in the Italian theater, with one in four soldiers killed or wounded. Love instead spent the rest of the war stateside at Camp Upton in New York, serving with the 152nd Depot Company.

A marble veteran’s headstone marks the grave of World War I soldier Leon Love at Dix Hill Cemetery in Waynesville. Photo contributed by Shannon Ballard.

When the war ended, Love returned to the Blue Ridge. The 1940 census notes Love was working as a plasterer.

He died in 1970 and was laid to rest on Dix Hill, the historic African American cemetery overlooking Jones Temple AME Zion Church. Fewer than 250 headstones remain visible there, though hundreds more lie beneath the earth.

Weathered stones line the hill at Dix Hill Cemetery, where hundreds of Waynesville’s Black residents, including veterans like Leon Love, are buried. Photo contributed by Shannon Ballard.

Among those who rest on the hill, Leon Love’s story lingers. His grave is simple, his life ordinary only on paper. A young man from the mountains answered his country’s call, stood at the edge of war, and stepped away from the fate that claimed so many. The path he followed back home to Waynesville became its own quiet victory.


Recent Headlines

11 hours ago in Entertainment

Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons make the case for the wild ride that is ‘Bugonia’

"Bugonia" arrives in select theaters this weekend on a wave of good buzz and reviews after premiering at the Venice Film Festival. But it's also coming into a theatrical marketplace that has been, at best, tough on art films and awards hopefuls, no matter how starry or well-reviewed.

13 hours ago in Arts & Culture, Community, Entertainment, Food & Drink, Lifestyle, Local, On The Town, Outdoors

Things to do in Asheville & WNC: Oct. 24-26

Need weekend plans? Look no further than our weekend guide to Asheville and Western North Carolina, complete with everything from monster mask workshops to all day Halloween festivals.

16 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Taylor Swift, LL Cool J, Kenny Loggins and David Byrne are among Songwriters Hall of Fame nominees

Taylor Swift, Kenny Loggins, LL Cool J, Pink, Sarah McLachlan and Talking Heads' David Byrne are among the impressive list of nominees for the 2026 Songwriters Hall of Fame class, an eclectic mix of pop, hip-hop, folk and rock innovators.

16 hours ago in Entertainment

A new Harry Potter, Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley want to tell you a story

The legacy of Harry Potter might have been clouded by headlines surrounding Rowling's comments on gender and opposition to trans rights, but it hasn't stopped production on new projects set in the wizarding universe.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show is not being reconsidered, NFL commissioner says

The NFL is not considering dropping Bad Bunny as its Super Bowl halftime headline performer, Commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday, reaffirming a decision to put the Grammy-winning Puerto Rican artist on the league's biggest stage that led to criticism from U.S. President Donald Trump and some of his supporters.