From time to time it becomes necessary to report on the death of people prominent in a small community like Oconee County. George Hillsman was prominent almost before Oconee County was a community. Unfortunately, I did not have the pleasure of getting to know him before he died recently. So here is the story that appeared in The Oconee Enterprise about a week after his death.
George Hillsman was affectionately known as “Big Daddy.”
The nickname aptly described him. He lived a large life, and
he took practically everyone he met under his protective wing.
Hillsman, 83, died Wednesday, March 13. He had collapsed the
day before at Hot Thomas Restaurant, one of his favorite hangouts.
David Williams said he thought that Hillsman earned the
nickname in the late ‘60s when he was supervising a crew of laborers, Williams
included, who were working on soil tests in Georgia and nearby states. Williams
was with the Southern Piedmont Experiment Station at the time.
“He was a big man,” said Williams, “probably 375 to 400
pounds. And he was always looking out for us young guys. I believe it was
Wendell Hardigree who said, ‘George is trying to look after us like a big
daddy.’ And the name stuck.
“He took me under his wing,” confirmed Fred Hale, who worked
for Hillsman.
“One of his main deals was where would we eat,” Williams
said. “Over in Saluda, S.C., he found a boarding house that served country
dinners. And not by the plate. You sat down at a table, and they brought you
all you could eat.”
Williams said he talked to Robert Sheats at the funeral last
Saturday. Sheats had been one of those who worked for Hillsman.
“Robert told me that George was like a father figure to
him,” Williams said. “Big Daddy was an appropriate nickname. He was an
encourager. He was one of those people that made you feel better anytime you
were around him, and he was generous to a fault.”
Hillsman was born and raised in Oconee County and lived most
of his life here. He was in the military, and Sidney Bell recalled that
Hillsman once worked in Irwinton, Ga., where he lived next door to Bell’s aunt.
Bell was another one who went to work under Hillsman at
Southern Piedmont.
“He had a way of taking care of you,” said Bell. “He was Big
Daddy to a lot of people.”
Bell was close in age to one of the Hillsman sons, Charles.
“I always loved going over there,” he said. “I’d go help him
haul straw. We built barns and picked up dead chickens. Charles and I had
children about the same age, and George was like an uncle to my children.”
Steve Maxey said that Hillsman was like a brother to him.
They were born 11 days and a mile and a half apart.
“We used to ride tricycles down the road to see each other,”
said Maxey. “We stayed at one or the other’s house all the time. We were down
at the creek, building dams across the branch or fishing or playing in the
woods.”
Maxey became a commercial roofer and worked out of Atlanta
for many years. But the two stayed in touch. Maxey would buy beef from Hillsman
when he killed a cow. When Maxey retired and returned to the area, their
friendship resumed.
Hillsman had a reputation as a good cook, particularly when
it came to chicken mull or turtle mull. Hale remembered the times they caught a
turtle, fed it and then made turtle mull. “He made sure everybody got something
to eat,” Hale said.
Hillsman farmed too, growing chickens and raising cattle.
“The Hillsmans were always willing to try something new,”
said Russ Page. “They put part of
their farm in farmland protection 10 or 12 years ago. When the University of
Georgia came out with a new kind of alfalfa that could be grazed on, they tried
it out.”
Williams recalled a misunderstanding based on Hillsman’s
willingness to try new things. Hillsman had purchased a Simmental bull and was
going to cross-breed it. One of his friends told someone that Hillsman had
bought a “cinnamon tree bull.”
“George was always trying to help someone,” said Williams.
“He’d help them with their cows or their hay. He was the tax man too. There is
no telling how many income tax returns he did for people. He told me the other
day that he was even doing some this year. It was just something he did for
people.”
Charles Osborn said that Hillsman paid for Osborn to go to
soil conservation camp when Osborn was 12 years old.
“He was a
friend to everybody,” Williams said. “He wanted to know everybody. And if he
saw you in Publix and didn’t know you, he would try to find out who you were.”
Like as not, he would find some connection and even kinship
to any new person he met.
Williams said that he suspected that Hillsman had sleep
apnea before anyone knew what to call it.
“He would fall asleep at the drop of a hat,” Williams said.
“He could go to sleep standing up.”
Bell said that he had not spoken to Hillsman since August when
he came to the Antioch Church barbecue. “My job changed the last three years,
and I have not spent as much time with him and that is very regrettable.”
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