Haynes Family: a slice of Rox. History

By Jawu Miller
The Bay State Banner, August 29, 2019, Page 1
The Roxbury in which Michael (in photo) and Roy Haynes were born in the late 1920s disappeared long ago, leveled by the urban renewal wrecking ball in the 1960s. Their family’s three-story frame house, were it still standing, would be next to the 20-yard line of the football field that now lies behind the John D. O’Bryant School of Mathematics and Science.
“The whole neighborhood is gone,” says Michael, 92. “Our house was in the middle of it.”
A drawing of the house hangs on the wall of Michael’s home, and memories of the home feature prominently in the recollections of the brothers, the last two of four sons born to Barbadian immigrant parents.
Roy, now 94, became one of the most influential drummers of the 20th century, joining the seminal Charlie Parker quintet, touring Europe with Sarah Vaughan, recording and performing as a member of the John Coltrane quartet and helming his own bands. He has recorded 34 records under his own name and appeared on dozens more between 1949 and 2011.
Michael rose to prominence as a civil rights leader in Boston’s black community, most notably as pastor of the 12th Baptist Church in Roxbury and representing Roxbury in the Legislature during the late 1960s.
In a recent interview with the Banner at Michael’s Clifford Street home, the brothers recalled their formative years in Roxbury, giving insight into the culture of the community that shaped their lives.
“Haskins Street was our favorite place,” Roy recalls. “We lived across the street from a synagogue.”
“Do you recall working in the synagogue?” Michael interjects.
“Of course! I remember getting my little bit of money,” his brother returns.
Roy wears a beige polo shirt and beige camouflage pants with an embossed black leather cowboy belt. He reclines in an easy chair. Michael, wearing a UMass Boston T-shirt and blue shorts, sits up straight, leaning slightly forward on a couch. The brothers maintain an easy rapport, with Michael, whose memory remains sharp, from time to time gently prompting his older brother’s memory.
Near their childhood Haskins Street home was a driveway leading to a large Salvation Army facility, where goods were stored and sold.
“It was almost next to our house,” Michael recalls. From there, Roy got his first drum kit. A driver for the Salvation Army who was friendly with the boys — Michael recalls his nickname as being “Lock the Gate” made sure the Haynes family had first dibs on quality goods coming into the facility.
The Haynes brothers’ father, Gus, worked as a garbage collector by day. Evenings and weekends, the classically-trained musician enjoyed playing the organ — both the one in their local church and the one he had at home. Their older brother Douglas played trumpet.
“Usually, I played drums for him,” Roy recalls. “He was too hip.”
Roy also dipped into his older brother’s record collection.
“My parents didn’t have too many records,” he recalls.
Other musical influences included the St. Cyprians Bugle and Drum Corps and school bands at the Timilty middle school and Roxbury Memorial high school.
“In those days, schools had bands,” Michael notes.
Michael also cites the Robert Gould Shaw House, a Lower Roxbury settlement center founded in 1908, as a major influence in his development.
“It gave me the opportunity to learn leadership skills,” he says.
Both Haynes brothers recalled with some fondness their time at Breezy Meadows, the summer camp the Shaw House ran in Holliston.
“It was one of the blessings for the black community,” Michael says of the camp, which accommodated 80 children. “I can see Mrs. [Melnea] Cass sitting on the front porch with my mother and Ken Guscott’s mother. That’s where a lot of the women who became leaders in the black community went during the summer.”
While Michael worked with younger campers, Roy was given a job in the kitchen.
“Everyone complained because all you did was bang on the pots,” Michael recalls. “They fired you.”
“For that?” Roy says. “Mr. Shelbourne fired you.” The incident simply underscored his proclivity for beating out rhythms, according to Roy. “I was a natural drummer,” he says.
“He was known for his style and his drumming,” Michael agrees.
In addition, all the Haynes men were known as sharp dressers.
Roy Haynes left Roxbury Memorial to play with the Sabby Lewis Big Band. But he was drawn to the burgeoning be-bop scene on New York’s 52nd Street, and eventually landed a gig with tenor great Lester “Pres” Young. His four-year gig with Charlie Parker put him at the center of the avant-garde.
Michael recalls with great fondness Roy’s time with Sarah Vaughan, the be-bop virtuoso singer who one night gave him a ride back to his hotel after he listened in on a gig. At the time, in the early 1950s, Michael Haynes was in New York attending Shelton College.
“She said, ‘So you’re going to be a preacher,’” Michael recalls. “She said, ‘So that’s why Roy is such a good boy.’ I remember that ride.”
Michael also recalls an early job he had as writer for the Boston Chronicle, a newspaper published by a West Indian family in Boston from 1915 to 1966. He wrote a column covering sports, before passing the gig on to his older brother, Vincent, a World War II veteran and accomplished photographer.
“He loved to write,” Michael recalls of his late brother. “We took notes on everything. He had more Roxbury in him than anyone I know.”
Like their old Madison Park neighborhood, much of the Boston of the Haynes brothers’ childhood is long gone — the Chronicle, Breezy Meadows, the majestic English High building on Warren Avenue in the South End.
The legacy of these brothers and the institutions that supported them lives on. The Haynes House, a seven-story apartment complex on Shawmut Avenue, was named for Vincent Haynes, in recognition for his advocacy to preserve housing in the Madison Park neighborhood. The Haynes Early Education Center in Roxbury was named for Michael. The Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary, where Haynes serves as a trustee, has endowed a scholarship in his name. Former Robert Gould Shaw House director John Shelburne’s name now adorns a Washington Park-area recreation center.
For Michael, the Shaw House remains central to his memories of Roxbury. He recalls when Martin Luther King Jr. came to Boston in 1965 to lead a march for school desegregation. Haynes, who knew King from the latter’s days as a graduate theology student here, was instrumental in putting together the march.
“It was his last time in Boston,” Haynes recalls. “When I went to meet him, he was standing in the door of the Shaw House.”
JazzBoston note: This unique interview was published in the Banner exactly 2 weeks before the death of Rev. Haynes. It is being published here the day before his funeral service at the Twelfth Baptist Church, where he served as Senior Minister for 40 years until his retirement in 2004.