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Thomas Hobbs was a resident of Chowan County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.

William Hobbs was a resident in colonial North Carolina. Around 1763, he joined others in signing a letter of petition to royal governor Arthur Dobbs on behalf of William Strother, who had been accused of horse stealing.

Robert Hobdy was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.

Herbert Derosette Hocutt was born on August 4, 1881. Hocutt served as a surveyor and later as a district maintenance supervisor for the North Carolina state highway commission. He died in Statesville (Iredell County) on May 22, 1922.

William Hodder (d. after 1790) was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence… Read More

George Hodge served as a captain in the Orange County Regiment of the North Carolina Militia from 1778 to 1781. From late 1780 to 1781, he led a group of men from Orange County in a unit of the North Carolina Light Horse Regiment. He died in… Read More

John Hodge was a resident of Pitt County. In 1777 he took several oaths of secrecy and became a member of the Gourd Patch Conspiracy. Despite… Read More

Charles Grey Hodges was born in Watauga County, North Carolina, on March 4, 1876. Hodges was a farmer and public school teacher in Boone, North Carolina. He died in Boone on January 11, 1960.

John Hodgson (d. 1774) was a resident of Edenton. Together with other residents, he wrote a petition to Arthur Dobbs requesting that the colony reduce its duties on exporting wine and other alcohol from North Carolina.

Shadhrick Hodgson was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence. 

Clyde Roark Hoey was born on December 11, 1877, in Shelby, North Carolina. Hoey was an attorney, a state legislator, Assistant United States Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina (1913-1919), and governor of North Carolina (1937-… Read More

Ernest Linwood Hoffler was born in Hertford (Perquimans County), North Carolina on February 1, 1883. Hoffler was a physician in Elizabeth City (Pasquotank County). He died there on April 15, 1963.

Thomas Hoffler (d. 1817) was a resident of Chowan and later Gates County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's… Read More

Benjamin Harrison Hogans was born on June 15, 1865, in Orange County, North Carolina. Hogans was a kind of renaissance man. He began professionally as a teacher in Goldsboro but later segued into the mercantile… Read More

James Hogans was born in December 1862 in Hillsborough, North Carolina. Relocating to Goldsboro, Hogans engaged as a grocery merchant and mail carrier. He died on July 15, 1932.

Sarah Lee Haywood Hogg was born in Raleigh, Wake County, North Carolina on February 15, 1799. She married John Gray Blount (1785-1828) and later Gavin Hogg (1788-1835), and remained a widow for the remainder of her life. She involved herself in… Read More

Thomas Holbaron was a resident of colonial Johnston County. In an undated petition, he joined others in asking royal governor Arthur Dobbs to appoint another justice to serve their section of the county.

John Holbrook was a planter in Chowan Precinct, North Carolina. In 1721 he was part of the grand jury that indicted John Cope, an American Indian man, with burglary and trespassing. He later served as a justice of the peace for Bertie County,… Read More

Charles Collier Holden was born in Wake County on August 25,1859. Charles was the son of Governor William Woods Holden, and Louise Virginia Holden. A teen during his father's political career, he later worked in academia. He died in Wake County… Read More

Joseph William Holden was born in Raleigh on September 30, 1844. The son of Governor William Woods Holden, and William Woods Holden's first wife Ann Augusta Young, he served in the Confederate military during the Civil War. After the war, Joseph… Read More

Louisa Virginia Holden was born in 1830, and was the second wife to Governor William Woods Holden. Together they had three children. She died in Wake County, North Carolina in 1900. 

William Woods Holden was born near Hillsborough, North Carolina on November 24, 1818. Holden held many positions in his life, most notably a newspaper printer & editor, politician, and most famously Governor of North Carolina. William was the… Read More

Thomas Holder was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.

George Allen Holderness was born on June 15, 1867, in Caswell County, North Carolina. A prominent businessman and banker, Holderness was twice elected to the state senate, winning his seat in 1916 and 1918. He died in Tarboro, North Carolina on… Read More

Luke Holevy was a resident of Chowan County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.

Murray M. Holladay, Sr. was born on July 20, 1878, in Clarendon County, South Carolina. Holladay was a carpenter, watchman, and gate operator at Tallassee Power Company's Narrows Dam at Badin, North Carolina. He died in Clarendon County, South… Read More

Joel Holland was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.

Samuel Beauregard Hollaway was born on May 15, 1861, in Suffolk, Virginia. Hollaway was a businessman in Enfield who served as secretary of the Halifax County Exemption Board during World War I. He died in Enfield on January 12, 1924.

Solomon Abel Holler was born in Boone (Watauga County), North Carolina, on April 8, 1880. Holler opened a barbershop in North Wilkesboro (Wilkes County) around 1910. By 1917, he had relocated to Charlotte (Mecklenburg County), where he died on… Read More

Armit Holles was a resident of Tyrrell County. In the summer of 1777 he swore two oaths and became a member of the Gourd Patch Conspiracy. When the plot was discovered, he made a sworn deposition before the justices of the peace for Tyrrell… Read More

James Holles was a resident of Tyrrell County. In the summer of 1777 he swore two oaths and became a member of the Gourd Patch Conspiracy. When the plot was discovered, he made a sworn deposition before the justices of the peace for Tyrrell… Read More

James Holley Jr. was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.

Nathaniel Holley (d. 1784) was a resident of Bertie County. In 1777 he served as a grand juror in the fall session of the … Read More

Edward Holliman was a resident in colonial North Carolina. Around 1763, he joined others in signing a letter of petition to royal governor Arthur Dobbs on behalf of William Strother, who had been accused of horse stealing.

John Hollis was born in Fairfax County, Virginia on December 5, 1751. A resident of Craven County, later Fairfield District, South Carolina, he joined the militia service in late 1774 or early 1775 and served throughout the war. First a private… Read More

Abner Hollowell (d. 1802) was a resident of Chowan County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.

Daniel Ephraim Hollowell was born on October 6, 1857, in North Carolina. Hollowell was a farmer in Gates County, North Carolina. He died in Mintonsville (Gates County) on August 22, 1933.

Edwin Floyd Holman, a native of Moravian Falls (Wilkes County), was born on June 17, 1898. Holman studied at Wake Forest and worked as a shoe salesman for Henry-Miller Co. in North Wilkesboro. He served in the U.S. Army from 1917 to 1919. In 1923… Read More

Ann Hill Holmes was born in New Hanover County, North Carolina on December 27, 1822. She married Owen Davis Holmes, and the couple had at least eight children. She died in Wilmington, New Hanover County, North Carolina on December 4, 1891.

Archibald Holmes was a resident of colonial North Carolina, likely near Pantego in present-day Beaufort County. In 1707 Holmes told Robert Kingman that he and his English neighbors were having a dispute with the near Pamlico American Indian… Read More

John Lyon Holmes was born in Wilmington (New Hanover County), North Carolina, on November 2, 1827. Holmes was an influential attorney who served as solicitor for New Hanover County and as president of the Bank of Cape Fear. He died in Saluda (… Read More

John Simcox Holmes was born on May 31, 1868, in Ontario, Canada. Holmes was a graduate of the University of North Carolina and the Yale School of Forestry. He served as State Forester from 1915 to 1945. Holmes died in Raleigh on May 3, 1958.

Mary Carolina Holmes was born in Clinton, Sampson County on June 2, 1834. The daughter of a wealthy planter, Holmes was involved in the wealthy social scene near Wilmington in the winter of 1853-1854. She died in Duplin County on July 24, 1908.… Read More

Robert Lee Holmes was born on July 14, 1873, in Orange County, North Carolina. In addition to serving as mayor of Graham, North Carolina, in the early 1920s, Holmes was also bookkeeper for the Oneida Cotton Mills and president of the Alamance… Read More

Sallie Margaret Holmes (née London) was born in Wilmington (New Hanover County), North Carolina on June 27, 1829. She married John Lyon Holmes in February 1849. The Holmes family relocated to Jacksonville, Florida in 1882. She died in… Read More

Charles Henry Holt was born on December 28, 1864, in Johnston County, North Carolina. Holt was postmaster of Princeton, North Carolina. He died in Princeton on August 7, 1930.

George Holt was born in Johnston County, North Carolina about January 1862. He moved to Goldsboro sometime between 1880 and 1900 with his spouse Mary Deloach Holt. At Goldsboro, he worked as a driver and a farmer. He died there on April 26, 1921… Read More

John McBride Holt was born on August 21, 1860, in Alamance County, North Carolina. For more than fifty years, Holt was connected professionally with the L. Banks Holt Manufacturing company, serving as accountant and later vice president. He died… Read More

Josiah Holt was a white man to hired out the enslaved woman Ditto from… Read More

Peter Armstrong Holt was born on February 25, 1891, in Alamance County, North Carolina. In 1920, Holt provided testimony in an investigation into an attempted lynching in Graham, North Carolina. He was employed as a bookkeeper at the L. Banks… Read More

Daniel Holyfield was a soldier at Fort Johnston, a British colonial-era fort in Brunswick County, who testified to the alleged misconduct of Captain John Dalrymple in 1763.