Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 22 January 1944.
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Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 21 May 1949.
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Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 6 September 1947.
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Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 6 May 1933.
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Image courtesy of Veterans of World War II Wilson County, spiral-bound volume, Wilson County Public Library.
Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 12 August 1944.
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In the 1920 census of Stantonsburg township, Wilson County: on Wilson & Moyeton Road, tenant farmer Elijah Ward, 34; wife Florance, 26; Hillary Wooten, 26, and Robert Speight, 35, servants; brother James Ward, 19, and Sarah Ward, 16.
In the 1940 census of Bullhead township, Greene County, N.C.: farmer Elijah Ward, 48; wife Geneva, 42; children Emma M., 19, Elijah, 18, William J., 16, Ida M., 14, Calvin, 13, and Teaser, 12; and grandchildren Archy L., 3, and Lillian, 1.
Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 13 August 1938.
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Though I will always be of Wilson, I have lived in Atlanta nearly all of my adult life. It is very much “home” for me, too, and is a bottomless well of African-American culture and history that often informs the way I process research and work related to Black Wide-Awake and Lane Street Project.
I’ve begun visiting metro Atlanta’s historic African-American burial grounds. How have they weathered exploding population growth, shifting demographics, outmigration, land loss, and other pressures? The sixth in a series — Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church Cemetery in Decatur, Georgia.
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Founded in 1870 as Rocky Knoll, Mount Zion is one of the oldest A.M.E. churches in DeKalb County. Shortly before the turn of the century, the church moved from its original Lawrenceville Highway location to this site on Lavista Road in Decatur. Its cemetery, which is still active, was established shortly after.
A few hundred graves shelter on terraces in a shady grove adjacent to the church. Several family plots are marked by low brick or stone walls, and the grave markers range from fieldstones to Eldren Bailey-made funeral home markers to modern, machine-cut granite headstones. Though many of the older markers are sunken or toppled, the cemetery is beautifully maintained in a semi-natural state.






Photos by Lisa Y. Henderson, April 2026.
We’re so pleased to share that we’ve formed a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, FRIENDS OF LANE STREET PROJECT, to enable us to better research, improve, and protect the cemeteries we champion. FoLSP’s primary focus will be Odd Fellows — increasing public awareness, amplifying clean-up efforts, and furthering efforts to identify who and how many people are buried there.
Thanks for all you’ve done to support LSP as a community collective. As we shift to a more organized entity, we’ll be rolling out fundraising initiatives and hope you will help us reach our goals. Tune in for more about our plans in upcoming weeks.