Dr. Stephen Pearson, co-owner and operator of Sadie’s Coffee Corner and champion of downtown revitalization in Henderson, has died. He was 57. Friends and colleagues remembered Pearson Friday as an entrepreneur dedicated to making Henderson a better place for the community to enjoy.
Funeral arrangements will be announced later.
Pearson chaired the Henderson-Vance Downtown Development Commission for almost a year. “He brought his business development expertise and background to our downtown development efforts, invested in our community and led our DDC with passion and determination,” said City Council member Gary Daeke.
Pearson and his wife, Amanda, opened Sadie’s Coffee Corner in fall 2019, and quickly got involved in the community. “Stephen and Amanda Pearson chose us for their business location out of every other town and that made him special to me and our Chamber of Commerce from the very beginning,” said Chamber President Michele Burgess.
“He had a vision for revitalizing downtown Henderson and he was willing to put in the work and the investment to make it happen. Stephen used to love to use the hashtag #whynothenderson. He saw potential here, where others see dilapidation. His enthusiasm and energy and his positive attitude will be greatly missed,” Burgess said Friday.
City Manager Terrell Blackmon remembered Pearson as a champion for downtown Henderson. He said Pearson “described himself as a disruptor, because he wanted to change the way that we do things in our community for the better… His passion for downtown Henderson was unmatched and he will truly be missed by the Henderson community.”
Pearson brought experience as well as enthusiasm to downtown development; he had a doctorate in Business Administration with a specialization in global business organization leadership and was an adjunct professor at UNC-CH and Utica College in New York, in addition to being chief operating officer to Sadie’s Coffee Corner.
Dennis Jarvis, former director of the Henderson Economic Development Commission, said Pearson “wanted to change the world, so he thought ‘I’ll change one block of Henderson first.’ He succeeded.” Jarvis added that Pearson was “an innovator, an educator, a veteran, an animal lover and larger than life. He was a bright light and inspiration to me personally and professionally.”
Henderson Mayor Eddie Ellington remembered Pearson as someone who truly wanted Henderson, and the downtown area especially, to succeed. “No one is ever ready to receive such sorrowful news,” Ellington told WIZS News Friday, “and with much sadness the City of Henderson mourns the loss of a man that will be remembered as big in stature, but most importantly big at heart.”
In an April 22, 2020 interview on Town Talk, Pearson said Sadie’s supportive customers and community partners, combined with his belief that downtown is the “epicenter of the growth in Henderson,” would help ensure the coffee shop’s continued success.
Joe Hedrick, a regular patron at Sadie’s said “Steve Pearson had a great vision for our community and a determination to make downtown Henderson a better place for all of us.”
Pearson revealed in that Town Talk interview from 2020 that he and his wife believed so strongly in the downtown’s potential that they would be developing another downtown location that would include a business incubator, a business accelerator and will include a classical pizza, cheese and wine tasting shop.
Mayor Ellington said the Pearsons were active, positive members of the community who “continue to impact downtown in ways we haven’t seen in years.” More development in the Garnett Street area is a way to carry on Pearson’s mission of a vibrant Main Street, Ellington said.
Brian Boyd, a friend of Pearson as well as a coffee shop patron and board member of the Chamber and Henderson-Oxford Airport Authority, had this to say:
“God blesses us with giants in life that have large presence, vision, compassion and care. Giants do not always get the most time to be here, but they make the most of their time and leave a legacy that can continue through everyone they touched. I will miss my friend Steve and I am sad by his passing but still motivated by his vision for the growth and continued betterment of our Henderson community, kindness and care for all people and determination to progress in all things.”
Boyd said he and Pearson had talked about Henderson and its potential for continued growth and development. “Henderson was a place where he wanted to leave a legacy of hope and change for the good,” Boyd said of his friend. “He loved his time here.”