Parsons first started working as acting head of music at Lincoln University in Missouri.[citation needed] He met Nathaniel Dett, a former teacher at Lincoln, who had returned for a guest performance. Dett subsequently offered Parsons a job at Bennett College, a historically black college in Greensboro, North Carolina, where he was director of music. He wanted Parsons to re-score some of Dett's chorales.[3] By 1939, Parsons had become director of instrumental music for Greensboro's Negro public schools, as the state had a segregated public school system.[citation needed] Under his direction, the band at James B. Dudley High School became known throughout the state for its expert musicianship and precision marching.[citation needed]
World War II military service
During World War II, Parsons enlisted in the United States Naval Reserve in May 1942.[2] Serving as a Musician MUS1, he directed the U.S. Navy B-1 Fleet Band.[citation needed] The band was organized from a core of members of the bands at Dudley High School and North Carolina A&T State University.[citation needed] B-1 was composed of the first African Americans to serve in the modern Navy at a rank higher than messman.[citation needed] It was one of more than 100 bands of African Americans organized by the Navy during the war; the other bands all trained at Camp Robert Smalls.[citation needed] B-1 trained at Norfolk and was stationed at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where it was attached to the Navy's pre-flight school on the University of North Carolina campus.[citation needed]
In May 1944 the band was transferred to the United States Naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, where it was stationed at Manana Barracks.[citation needed] This held the largest posting of African-American servicemen in the world.[citation needed] While there, Parsons was selected for a panel of judges that was convened by the Navy to investigate the 1944 riot in Guam among Marines.[citation needed] This experience furthered his interest in studying law.[citation needed] Throughout his service, Parsons directed B-1, but he mustered out of the Navy in 1945 as a Musician 1st class, never having made the officer's grade. He and his men believed that he had earned that.[4]
^Parsons, James B. "The Unfinished Oral History of District Judge James Benton Parsons." Collins T. Fitzpatrick, ed. Typescript. Chicago: U of Chicago, DeAngelo Law Library Law School. May 1996.OCLC35320772
^Albright, Alex. The Forgotten First: B-1 and the Integration of the Modern Navy, Fountain, NC: R.A. Fountain, 2013