This is a mural painted on a section of fencing located in the Goldsboro Art Square. Local Artist, Jeff Sonksen, is known for painting murals of famous people who made a difference in the world. He started out painting murals for his parents and hanging them up over night when it got dark outside. He often feared that he would get caught by the city. This is one of his contributions to the Goldsboro museum.
Zora Neale Hurston was an African-American novelist, short story writer, folklorist, and anthropologist. When John Hurston, Zora’s father, migrated to Florida in 1892 or 1893 (the date is debated), he first settled in Sanford and became the pastor at Zion Hope Baptist Church while taking care of Zora. Sanford, located ten miles north of Eatonville, had a large African–American community in the early 1900’s. Zora lived in the community on two occasions: in 1912, when she lived with her brother Dick for a short period of time; and in 1933, when she moved to a boarding house in July to write Jonah’s Gourd Vine. She finished the book in seven weeks and was evicted from her room on the day the book was accepted for publication in early October. Zora was a writer like no other and would frequently reference Georgetown and Goldsboro in her writing.