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FRIENDS OF WILKESBORO
BOARD MEMBERS

Last updated on  07/23/2025

Town Council
Commissions
Member   Appointment       End Term    
Nellie Archibald  Sam Call (Chair) April 2024  April 2027
Allison Phillips April 2023   April 2026 
Halee Ratcliff April 2023 April 2026
Thomas Salley April 2023 April 2026
James Smoak April 2023 April 2026
Claude Faw April 2024 April 2027
Mike Inscore, ex-officio May 2024 May 2027
Ken Noland, Town Manager ----- -----

  

   

    
home > town government > wilkesboro's history > history links
 
  

WILKES COUNTY HISTORY LINKS

  

HISTORICAL PLACES

Wilkes Heritage Museum   ~   Old Wilkes Jail Museum   ~   Robert Cleveland Log Home

Tory Oak

Going Home for History - Wilkes County

New River Notes

Overmountain Victory Trail

NCpedia - Wilkes County

Tharpe's Mill Restoration

Old North Wilkesboro Speedway

MerleFest - Official website

Wilkes County Public Library has a Genealogy Room  Wilkes Genealogy Society

    

  

   

     

NOTABLE PEOPLE FROM WILKES COUNTY  

A
L

Richard Allen Sr.

Sallie Chapman Gordon Law

B

General William Lenoir 

Bobby G. Billings

William B. Lenoir - eldest son

Rhoda Billings

Collett Leventhorpe

Daniel Boone

Charles Fred Lovette

William H. Bower

Charles Odell Lovette

Carl R Brantley as Former Pro-Wrestler Vladimir Koloff

Lowes Foods and James Lucius Lowe

John Brown

M

Chang & Eng Bunker - The Siamese Twins

Graham Lunsford "Doc" Mathis

Robert Byrd

Issac Clinton Miller

C
N

Gaither Carlton

William Vance Nichols

Captain Benjamin Cleveland

O

Dean Combs

Allen Ferdinand Owen

William L. Couch

P
D

Jimmy Pardue 

Tom Dula aka Tom Dooley

Benny Parsons

E

Harry Hall Pearson Jr 

John Patton Erwin

James Larkin Pearson 

F
R

Percy Wright Foote

Waylon Reavis 

G      

Shirrel Rhoades 

Zach Galifianakis

S

Roger Gambill

Ralph Seagraves 

George A. Gilreath

Morgan Shepherd

Christopher Gist

Montfort Stokes - father 

James B. Gordon

Montfort Sidney Stokes - son

Deneen Graham

John Swofford

Gladys Gunzer

William Oliver Swofford

T

Richard N. Hackett  

Irene Triplett 

Jim "Cracker" Hamby

W

Roger Hamby

R. Tracy Walker

I

Doc Watson 

Elijah Isaacs

Merle Watson & MerleFest

Otto Wood: The Bandit Play & The Man

Junior Johnson

Y

      

  

Tyre York  

POULTRY FARMS
in Wilkesboro and Wilkes County, N.C.

1944 - Lovette Poultry Co., Inc. was formed by the Charles Odell Lovette (1900-1978) family.
1953 - Charles Fred Lovette and wife, Margaret, grew the company to be one of the world’s largest poultry producers.
1961 - Lovette's family and 16 other business owners and leaders integrated and formed Holly Farms Poultry Industries Inc.
1968 - Holly Farms merged with The Federal Company of Memphis, Tennessee in 1968.
1989 - Holly Farms was acquired by Tyson Foods, which is operated until today in Wilkesboro and in Wilkes County and surrounding counties.

   

 

   

home > i want to > lookup > minutes and agendas
  

ALL BOARDS, COMMITTEES & COMMISSIONS 
MEETING AGENDAS AND MINUTES

  

We use outside software to house our Agendas and Minutes called Document Mountain.
Please print this page for the instructions that are listed below. 
  

An image is listed below with login information and this login information must be entered to grant access.

Login Information:

Document Mountain Login Screen

 

 

https://login.documentmountain.com
Enter the following credentials:

Entity: Wilkesboro
Company: Wilkesboro
User Name: Public
Password: Public

Click "Login" button.

   

On the main website page, you will be presented with a list of folders on the left side of the window, under the “Town of Wilkesboro” heading.

Document Mountain - Town's Page

Click on any of the folder names to view all documents within a folder.

Viewing Documents

Select the folder on the left. You will be presented with all files within that folder.

To view a document, click on the “Date” field.

The document will open in a separate window.


Searching for Documents

There are 2 types of searches available on the website:  General Search and Advanced Search.

General Search:

Browse to the folder you wish to search in.

Enter the search term in the “Search” window at the upper right of the window, then click the Search icon to the right of the Search window, or the Enter key.  This will return all documents in that folder with the search term.

Document Mountain folder view

Advanced Search:

Click on “Advanced Search” at the upper right of the window.

Location: select the folder you wish to search in.

Date: Enter the Date range you wish to search.

Full-Text Search: enter a word or phrase.  Clicking Search or the Enter key will return all documents in the specified folder that contain the word or phrase in the body of the document.

 Document Mountain Advanced Search

“Help” is available in the upper right of the window.

 

 

 

 

 

   
home > town government > wilkesboro's history menu > tory oak history

  

HISTORY OF THE TORY OAK TREE 

Tory Oak Post Card Front

For two and a half centuries the Tory Oak grew strong and stately in the center of Wilkesboro, a symbol of the revolutionary struggle that led to the founding of our county. Some leaders called this old tree the Liberty Oak, but it became famous because several enemies of the American Revolution, known as Tories, were hanged on its limbs when the tree was still young.

Revolutionary War battles raged elsewhere, but here in the hills and valleys of what was to become Wilkes County, the War for American Independence was fought mostly among colonial residents of different persuasions. One of the strongest voices for independence was that of Colonel Benjamin Cleveland, leader of the local militia. Members of the militia, sometimes known as Mountain Men, were ordinary working citizens. Tories were residents who did not side with independence and wanted to remain a British colony. Tories were ruthless in fighting the forces who favored independence. Colonel Cleveland was captured by Tories, rescued, and then captured Tories himself. Some of these Tories were brought to Wilkesborough (before it was known as Wilkesboro) and were executed by hanging from the limbs of a black oak tree. later, Colonel Cleveland led the Mountain Men to meet a part of the British regular army and helped win an important battle at Kings Mountain. Not long afterward, the British commander surrendered and the American colonies became independent. The new nation was based on the rights of citizens to a government of their own choosing.

No great Revolutionary War battles were fought in Wilkesboro. Instead of a battlefield with monuments, the Tory Oak became the proud local symbol of the successful War for American Independence and the birth of our nation. The Tory Oak reminds us of the determined patriots who did their part to win freedom and to live in a democracy. Toward the end of the aged tree's life, its image became a symbolic reminder of Wilkesboro's historic past and promising future.

Wilkesboro's Town Seal

 

 

Town of Wilkesboro, North Carolina 

Pete M. Mann, Mayor 1995 - 1999Tory Oak Tree c. 1940s

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tory Oak Tree 1914  

   

 

 

  
home > town government > government > town's budgets and audits
 
 

BUDGETS AND AUDITS

  Fiscal Year (FY) or Budget Dates are July 1 - June 30 of each year 
Audits occur during the fall of each year and are for the previous fiscal year. 

LINKS  

Financial Reports from NC LGC

Wilkesboro's Financial Software Dashboard

NC Water & Wastewater Rates Dashboard


THE BUDGET PROCESS

The budget cycle kicks off in January of each year at the department level for individual department expenses and capital improvement requests, then to the Finance Officer for revenues and expenses, and next, to the Budget Officer (which is our Town Manager).

In April of each year, budget staff reviews are held. Then, in May of each year the Budget Officer presents a proposed or estimated budget to the Town Council with an opening statement called the Budget Message that is correct at that moment in time; however, Town Council makes many changes to the budget after the Budget Message is presented through work session(s) each year. In the documents after the Budget Message, you will see the department's request, the manager's request, and the adopted budget amounts. The difference in the budget dollars is the Proposed Budget (Budget Message) versus the Actual Budget (Adopted Budget). 

The budget is adopted in June of each year with the Budget Ordinance.  By law, the budget must be in place by July 1 of each year.

FY 2025- 2026

Audit FY 25-26 -
Published in Winter 26/27

Budget in Brief FY 25-26 

Budget Document FY 25-26

Budget Ordinance FY 25-26

Budget Message FY 25-26

 

FY 2024 - 2025

Audit FY 24-25 -
Published in Winter 25/26

Budget Document FY 24-25

Budget Ordinance FY 24-25

Budget Message FY 24-25

FY 2023 - 2024

Audit FY 23 - 24

Budget Document FY 23-24

Budget Ordinance FY 23 - 24

Budget Message FY 23-24

FY 2022 - 2023

Audit FY 22-23

Budget Ordinance FY 22-23

Budget Message FY22-23

Adopted Budget FY 22-23

 FY 2021 - 2022

Audit FY 21-22

Budget Ordinance FY 21-22

Budget Message FY 21-22

Adopted Budget FY 21-22

 
FY 2020 - 2021

Audit FY 20-21

Budget Ordinance FY 20-21

Budget Message FY 20-21

Adopted Budget FY 20-21

FY 2019 - 2020

Audit FY 19-20

Budget Ordinance FY 19-20

Budget Message FY 19-20

Adopted Budget FY 19 - 20

FY 2018 - 2019

Audit FY 18-19 

Budget Ordinance FY 18-19

Budget Message FY 18-19

Adopted Budget FY 18-19

  
FY 2017 - 2018

Audit FY 17-18

Budget Ordinance FY 17-18

Budget Message FY 17-18 

Adopted Budget FY 17-18

 
FY 2016 - 2017

Audit FY 16-17

Budget Ordinance FY 16-17

Budget Message FY 16-17 

Adopted Budget FY 16-17

FY 2015 - 2016

Audit FY 15-16

Budget Ordinance FY 15-16

Budget Message FY 15-16

Adopted Budget FY 15-16

 
FY 2014 - 2015

Audit FY 14-15

Budget Ordinance FY 14-15

Budget Message FY 14-15

Adopted Budget FY 14-15