
"negro dog" "red light" house 4-H Club 10th Cavalry Regiment 50th anniversary 60th anniversary 100th anniversary 135th Regiment 500 block 1619 A.M.E. Lane Street Project:… on Lane Street Project: Bones fou… Lane Street Project:… on Lane Street Project: a closer… The family would not… on Wilson’s only Green Book… The shoe shine conte… on New community center. The family would not take him Darden sold the body to Wake Forest.Posted in 1930s, agriculture, City of Wilson, Newspapers, Oral History, Slavery, tobacco, Work Life and tagged freedman, Holman, Person County NC, tobacco culture on Septemby Lisa Y. Per his death certificate, he was born in 1856 was a widower lived in Wilson County and had worked as a laborer. George Holman died 9 January 1940 at the State Hospital in Goldsboro, Wayne County, N.C. In the 1928 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Holmon Geo lab h 601 Wiggins In the 1928 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Holmon Geo (c Hattie) lab Watson Whse h 601 Wiggins

In the 1920 census of Wilson, Wilson County: widow Belle Holeman, 40, private cook son John, 21, oil mill laborer and daughter-in-law Thelma, 2o, In the 1910 census of Wilson, Wilson County: George Holden, 57 wife Isabella, 35 and children Arthur, 11, and Thelma, 8. In the 19o0 census of Wilson, Wilson County: day laborer George Holdman, 46 wife Isibeller, 27, cooking and sons Nathanial, 5, and Arther, 1. Noell, of Person County, in Roxboro, North Carolina. On 6 September 1892, George Holman, 24, son of West and Nancy Jane Holman, of Person County, N.C., married Bell Noell, 18, daughter of Chas. In the 1870 census of Bushy Fork township, Person County, N.C., George Holeman, 22, is a farm laborer in the household of white farmer Thomas H.



Holman recalled about his early days in Wilson was disinterring Confederates from the old white Wilson cemetery for reburial in Maplewood.
