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Harold Dallas Bolick

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Harold Dallas Bolick Veteran

Birth
Draper, Rockingham County, North Carolina, USA
Death
1 Oct 2019 (aged 93–94)
Winston-Salem, Forsyth County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
Burlington, Alamance County, North Carolina, USA GPS-Latitude: 36.0855167, Longitude: -79.445657
Plot
Section L Lot 9
Memorial ID
View Source
Harold Dallas Bolick, a 60-year resident of Winston-Salem and 30-year employee of the City, passed away at his home on October 1, 2019. He was 94. Mr. Bolick was the son of the late Henry Wesley and Ida Downey Bolick. He was born in Draper, NC, and raised in the Burlington area. He attended Graham High School and graduated from Lane High School in Charlottesville, VA, where he was on the boxing and football teams and met his future wife, Frances Flynt, who was a sports reporter at the high school. After graduation, he shipped out of San Francisco with the 8th battalion of the U.S. Navy Seabees that went to Oahu, the Marshall Islands, Saipan and Okinawa during World War II. At each place, his battalion was charged with building airports, roads and docks or re-building those that had been damaged by bombs. After the war, he returned to Charlottesville, married the sports reporter and started school at UVA on the GI bill. In 1947, he (and Frances) moved to Burlington to help his Dad in the chicken business, work for the City of Burlington as a rodman and inspector and on his own as a carpenter. In 1949, he started a daily commute from Burlington to Duke University for engineering classes, while working part time as a surveyor, carpenter and father. He finished his Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering in 1953. After working with Lindberg Engineers in Burlington, he moved his family to Winston-Salem to launch a 30-year career with the City, starting as a Survey Field Party Chief, then Supervisor of Parks & Grounds, then Buildings & Grounds Superintendent, then the position he held the longest, City Engineer. During this time, he oversaw tens of millions of dollars of street improvements, construction of the first nine holes of Winston Lake Golf Course and the first rose plantings on Interstate 40 a total of 13,000 during his tenure. He also worked with local garden clubs to beautify median strips such as those on Coliseum Drive and Runnymeade Park, getting azaleas and roses donated by area businesses since these plantings were not in the budget. In his final position as Superintendent of Property Management, Mr. Bolick was responsible for renting, leasing, buying, selling, designing, building and maintaining city property a total of 286 buildings and 2.3 million square feet of floor space and two city cemeteries. He was described by supervisors as a quick learner, willing to go beyond the call of duty, working many hours of overtime when needed, always looking for a better way to do things and an active thinker who did not hesitate to express his opinion. He was also described as loyal, dependable and good at public and employee relations. He was an active member of the Society of Professional Engineers, serving as President of the local chapter. He was also a longtime member of St. Timothy's Episcopal Church and the Runnymeade-Lynwood Lawn Tennis Association. After retirement from the City, he worked as a consultant on several projects including renovation of the Reynolda House in Winston-Salem and Chinqua Penn in Reidsville. He also spent many hours volunteering for Best Health in Winston- Salem; taking care of sick friends and relatives; and helping family, friends and neighbors with household repairs and construction projects. He moved back to Burlington in 2013 to be closer to family, lived in Oak Creek Apartments and attended Providence Church. He loved books, music, cats, seafood, travel, tinkering, friends and family. Wherever he was, in whatever situation and in whatever role, he was an excellent listener, resourceful, a skilled and creative problem solver and a wonderful role model for accepting life's disappointments with grace. And until the end, he carried a handkerchief in his back pocket and insisted on wearing a sport coat, even in 100-degree weather. He was preceded in death by his parents, Wes and Ida; his wife, Frances; his son, John Wesley, his daughter, Teresa; and siblings Henry, Louise (Haithcock), Woody, Donald, Johnny & Hubert. He is survived by his daughter, Jan; grandsons Seth Taylor and Ryan Watts; sons-in-law, Stephen Taylor and Art Chansky; and a host of nieces and nephews scattered across the country. A memorial service will be held at 2:30 on Sunday, November 3 Providence Christian Church, 819 North Main Street, Graham, NC, 27253. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to Providence Christian Church or to Hospice/Palliative Care Center of Alamance-Caswell, 914 Chapel Hill Road, Burlington, NC 27215.

Winston-Salem Journal. October 20, 2019
Harold Dallas Bolick, a 60-year resident of Winston-Salem and 30-year employee of the City, passed away at his home on October 1, 2019. He was 94. Mr. Bolick was the son of the late Henry Wesley and Ida Downey Bolick. He was born in Draper, NC, and raised in the Burlington area. He attended Graham High School and graduated from Lane High School in Charlottesville, VA, where he was on the boxing and football teams and met his future wife, Frances Flynt, who was a sports reporter at the high school. After graduation, he shipped out of San Francisco with the 8th battalion of the U.S. Navy Seabees that went to Oahu, the Marshall Islands, Saipan and Okinawa during World War II. At each place, his battalion was charged with building airports, roads and docks or re-building those that had been damaged by bombs. After the war, he returned to Charlottesville, married the sports reporter and started school at UVA on the GI bill. In 1947, he (and Frances) moved to Burlington to help his Dad in the chicken business, work for the City of Burlington as a rodman and inspector and on his own as a carpenter. In 1949, he started a daily commute from Burlington to Duke University for engineering classes, while working part time as a surveyor, carpenter and father. He finished his Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering in 1953. After working with Lindberg Engineers in Burlington, he moved his family to Winston-Salem to launch a 30-year career with the City, starting as a Survey Field Party Chief, then Supervisor of Parks & Grounds, then Buildings & Grounds Superintendent, then the position he held the longest, City Engineer. During this time, he oversaw tens of millions of dollars of street improvements, construction of the first nine holes of Winston Lake Golf Course and the first rose plantings on Interstate 40 a total of 13,000 during his tenure. He also worked with local garden clubs to beautify median strips such as those on Coliseum Drive and Runnymeade Park, getting azaleas and roses donated by area businesses since these plantings were not in the budget. In his final position as Superintendent of Property Management, Mr. Bolick was responsible for renting, leasing, buying, selling, designing, building and maintaining city property a total of 286 buildings and 2.3 million square feet of floor space and two city cemeteries. He was described by supervisors as a quick learner, willing to go beyond the call of duty, working many hours of overtime when needed, always looking for a better way to do things and an active thinker who did not hesitate to express his opinion. He was also described as loyal, dependable and good at public and employee relations. He was an active member of the Society of Professional Engineers, serving as President of the local chapter. He was also a longtime member of St. Timothy's Episcopal Church and the Runnymeade-Lynwood Lawn Tennis Association. After retirement from the City, he worked as a consultant on several projects including renovation of the Reynolda House in Winston-Salem and Chinqua Penn in Reidsville. He also spent many hours volunteering for Best Health in Winston- Salem; taking care of sick friends and relatives; and helping family, friends and neighbors with household repairs and construction projects. He moved back to Burlington in 2013 to be closer to family, lived in Oak Creek Apartments and attended Providence Church. He loved books, music, cats, seafood, travel, tinkering, friends and family. Wherever he was, in whatever situation and in whatever role, he was an excellent listener, resourceful, a skilled and creative problem solver and a wonderful role model for accepting life's disappointments with grace. And until the end, he carried a handkerchief in his back pocket and insisted on wearing a sport coat, even in 100-degree weather. He was preceded in death by his parents, Wes and Ida; his wife, Frances; his son, John Wesley, his daughter, Teresa; and siblings Henry, Louise (Haithcock), Woody, Donald, Johnny & Hubert. He is survived by his daughter, Jan; grandsons Seth Taylor and Ryan Watts; sons-in-law, Stephen Taylor and Art Chansky; and a host of nieces and nephews scattered across the country. A memorial service will be held at 2:30 on Sunday, November 3 Providence Christian Church, 819 North Main Street, Graham, NC, 27253. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to Providence Christian Church or to Hospice/Palliative Care Center of Alamance-Caswell, 914 Chapel Hill Road, Burlington, NC 27215.

Winston-Salem Journal. October 20, 2019


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