Where we worked: Contentnea Guano Company.

Contentnea Guano opened about 1909 between the railroad tracks and Oakland Cemetery southeast of downtown Wilson. Over the course of more than fifty years, hundreds of African-American men labored in caustic conditions to produce the fertilizer cotton and tobacco farmers needed to replenish their worn-out soil. Among them:

  • Tobe Bellamy, laborer, 1909
  • William Clark, mechanical helper, 1950
  • Alfred Cook, laborer, 1910
  • Georgie Crutchfield, helper, 1930
  • Silas Edwards, laborer, 1918
  • Augustus Ellis, employee, 1917
  • Samuel Hargett, laborer, 1918
  • Dave Harris, laborer, 1930
  • Lonnie Hopkins, laborer, 1910
  • Moses Hoskins, laborer, 1917
  • James Johnson, laborer, 1920
  • James T. Jones, laborer, 1945
  • Wesley Jones, laborer, 1917
  • Daner Marshall, laborer, 1917
  • John McCoy, laborer, 1930
  • Robert McNair, laborer, 1920
  • Charlie Morris, laborer, 1917
  • Lee Palmer, laborer, 1930
  • Coney Rodgers, laborer, 1930
  • Millard Smith, laborer, 1917
  • Ellis Suggs, laborer, 1930
  • John H. Swinson, laborer, 1940
  • Ed Sykes, laborer [killed in factory accident], 1921
  • Basil B. Tyler, laborer [killed during construction of factory], 1909
  • George Vinson, sack sewer, 1917
  • Roosevelt Weaver, laborer, 1940
  • Wilson Webb, laborer, 1930
  • William White, wagoner, 1920
  • Henry Williams, laborer, 1918
  • Garfield Williams, making guano, 1918, 1920
  • Junius Woodard, carpenter [died as a result of injuries during construction], 1909
  • Charlie Younger, laborer, 1930

Wilson Times, 24 October 1911.

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