Wilbon Community "Piney Wood"
WILBON COMMUNITY “PINEY WOOD”
Holly Springs/Fuquay, North Carolina
Image description: Standing in front of the barn (left to right) Dewar Bunch, Pages’ nephew: sister Annie Blanche Bunch, niece Lula, and Herbert: Cora Mae
(Norris) Lassiter was also raised by her great-aunt Lula and great-uncle Herbert on this farm along
with her cousins Dewar and Annie.

WILBON COMMUNITY “PINEY WOOD”
Holly Springs/Fuquay, North Carolina
Image description: Standing in front of the barn (left to right) Dewar Bunch, Pages’ nephew: sister Annie Blanche Bunch, niece Lula, and Herbert: Cora Mae
(Norris) Lassiter was also raised by her great-aunt Lula and great-uncle Herbert on this farm along
with her cousins Dewar and Annie.
Picture & narrative: Cora Lassiter
Source: Book, Images of America Holly Springs
--
HOLLY SPRINGS — North Carolina is dotted with towns which were once predominantly African American.
Fuquay Springs was White. Varina was Black.
Now it's just Fuquay-Varina, and who would ever know?
Add Holly Springs, and you have a perfect example of Black history in the making.
Parish Womble fondly remembers his early childhood in Holly Springs. In its beginnings, it was a tiny hamlet of Black farmers. They worked hard all week then would gather for church on Sunday.
What used to be the First Baptist Church is now the United Church of Christ.
Following Sunday service, everyone would gather at the Grigsby's home to socialize. The house and the hitching post for horses still stands.
"They'd have a little feast or festivities here," Womble recalls, "and it was always an enjoyable place."
Seventy-three-year-old John McNeil has witnessed many changes in Holly Springs. He remembers sitting in the "pack house" in the winter grading tobacco.
In recent years Holly Springs has experienced explosive growth. Urban sprawl has spurred rapid development of new homes. The influx of people moving into Holly Springs know very little about the fact that it was once a predominantly Black community.
Parish Womble says he wants to keep that history from his forefathers alive, and he'll work very hard to see that it remains.
--
The Former Holly Springs Elementary School
The historical marker for the former Holly Springs Elementary School was unveiled in November 2020 after a months-long collaboration between the Town, former students, and community representatives. The school for Black children stood on the site of what is now the Town-owned Hunt Recreation Center.
The original plank structure was built around 1924 with donations from Black citizens, county school funds, and a grant from the Rosenwald Foundation. Classrooms were heated with coal burning stoves. The school lacked indoor plumbing.
Despite the disparities of a segregated system, former students recall dedicated teachers who pushed them to do their best and reach their potential. For Holly Springs’ Black residents, the school was a source of community pride.
The original plank structure was replaced by a brick classroom building in the early 1950s.
--
William Bernice Lassiter and James Norris
Lassiter and Norris were elected as the Town’s first Black commissioners during the 1970s. Norris became the first Black mayor of Holly Springs when he resigned as commissioner in 1980 to fill the vacated mayoral seat. Pictured, above left, are William Bernice and Cora Mae (Norris) Lassiter, who was appointed to the town council in 1981 to fill a vacated seat.
--
Parrish “Ham” Womble
Womble served nearly three decades as a Holly Springs town board member and for a year as mayor.
Holly Springs was a community of a few hundred residents when Womble joined the town Board of Commissioners in 1981. He served for the next 20 years. In January 2001, the board appointed him as mayor when Gerald Holleman resigned. Womble lost the mayoral election that November but returned as a board member two years afterward and served until 2011.
By 1997, Holly Springs was beginning to build a town parks system, almost from scratch. What is now Hunt Recreation Center was then a former school building serving as a Town Hall annex. Across from the Hunt Center were tobacco fields that appeared slated for subdivision expansion. Womble advocated for buying the 46-acre tract for park land instead. What today is Parrish Womble Park has ball fields, tennis courts, synthetic turf soccer and lacrosse fields, a volleyball court, picnic shelter, and more.
Womble also was instrumental in securing land for Holly Ridge Middle and Elementary schools.
In his professional life, Womble served with the Wake County Sheriff’s Department. He retired with the rank of major in November 1997.
--
Nancy Womble
Womble was the first Black female to be elected to serve on the Holly Springs Board of Commissioners. She served from 1975-1977.
--
Otis Byrd
In addition to serving on the Holly Springs Board of Commissioners, Byrd was a Board of Adjustment member. He pastored the First Baptist Church of Holly Springs for more than 24 years and also has served as assistant precinct judge during elections.
--
William Earl Hunt
Hunt was a teacher and principal at a school for Black children that stood on the site of the Town recreation center that bears his name. Holly Springs Elementary School opened around 1924. The original plank structure was a Rosenwald School.
Hunt was named principal in 1945 and served for 14 years in the plank structure and in the brick classroom building that replaced it in the 1950s.
Hunt was beloved and respected for his commitment to students and to the community. For a time, he rented a room nearby during the week and commuted home to Raleigh on weekends.
Hunt demanded much of his students and held them to high standards. He established the first Boy Scout troop in Holly Springs and started the 4-H Club, according to newspaper accounts.
After the Town purchased the former school for use as a community center in the mid-1990s, community members asked Town leaders to name the center for the beloved former principal and community leader.
--
Dessie Mae Womble
In January, 1981, Jet magazine featured Dessie Mae Womble as the first Black female police chief in North Carolina.
From Jet Magazine:
“Womble beat out 25 other applicants for the position, making her the only Black and full-time employee of the small town (approx. 969) and the highest paid at $10,000 yearly.
“‘It feels wonderful, just great,’ says Womble, even though the job is pressure-packed. ‘I really wanted the job and I was qualified.’”
--
Freed Men
Following the Civil War, about 50 freed men pooled their money to buy land for a church where First Baptist Church stands today on Grigsby Avenue. The Black men and women who helped build the town before the Civil War stayed and kept the town alive after emancipation.
The half-acre plot of land purchased for the church held a log cabin. A new church building was constructed in the late 1860s and replaced after it burned in a fire. The building then was renovated in 1935 and again in 1952 with added brick veneer and modern amenities.
--
Source: https://www.wral.com/news/local/story/123425/
Source: https://www.hollyspringsnc.us/1661/Black-History-Month
The Hawley Museum is passionately committed to uncovering and sharing the fascinating family stories that have influenced our state's and nation's history. We believe that every family has a unique story to tell, one that adds depth to the rich tapestry of North Carolina and U.S. History.
We encourage you to reflect on your own family narrative—did your ancestors play a pivotal role in these historical events? We invite you to become a part of our family curator team by sharing your family's history, whether it be through photos, videos, articles, or documents.
Let’s work together and weave a more comprehensive narrative that honors the roles families have played in our collective past to inspire future museum visitors.
The Hawley Museum is passionately committed to uncovering and sharing the fascinating family stories that have influenced our state's and nation's history. We believe that every family has a unique story to tell, one that adds depth to the rich tapestry of North Carolina and U.S. History.
We encourage you to reflect on your own family narrative—did your ancestors play a pivotal role in these historical events? We invite you to become a part of our family curator team by sharing your family's history, whether it be through photos, videos, articles, or documents.
Let’s work together and weave a more comprehensive narrative that honors the roles families have played in our collective past to inspire future museum visitors.