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8 results for "Holloman, Charles"
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Record #:
10442
Author(s):
Abstract:
Using an old handmade map, ca. 1710 or 1711, of eastern North Carolina, Holloman identifies and provides a brief description of Tuscarora Indian towns.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 9, Feb 1966, p16-17, 29-30, map
Record #:
31431
Abstract:
In 1711, North Carolina's non-Indian population was only 9500 comprised mostly of German Palatines and Swiss settlers who had arrived to establish a colony on the Trent and Neuse Rivers. The settlers made good progress near New Bern until the Tuscarora Massacre in September 1711. New Bern lay under siege for twenty-two weeks.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 8, January 1966, p21-22, 28-30, il
Record #:
31432
Author(s):
Abstract:
The North Carolina Citizens Association is celebrating its twenty-fifth anniversary of service to the state. Throughout its career, the NCCA has garnered respect and trust among business leaders, professional leaders and statesmen. The organization took shape during the Great Depression, providing counsel for business, education, professions, agriculture, and government. Now the NCCA keeps growing, promoting a prosperous state economy and progressive state.
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Record #:
10438
Author(s):
Abstract:
Holloman describes the burning of the state's capitol in June 1831. Accounts from the Raleigh newspaper, the RALEIGH REGISTER, are included.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 22 Issue 10, Mar 1965, p51-52, 54-56, il
Record #:
10441
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Tuscarora War raged off and on for a year and a half in eastern North Carolina. The war began with a general massacre of while settlers in Bath County on September 21, 1711, and ended with the four day battle at Fort Neoheroka, March 20-23, 1713. Over 600 whites and Indians were killed there. Holloman recounts the events.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 7, Dec 1965, p15-18, 30, 32, il, map
Record #:
31421
Abstract:
As the last stand of the armed resistance of the Tuscarora Indian Nation in North Carolina, Fort Nohoroco raged in battle for four days before resistance ceased. The battle at Fort Nohoroco brought an end to the Tuscarora War which raged for a year and half in eastern North Carolina.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 7, December 1965, p15-18, 30, il, map
Record #:
31260
Author(s):
Abstract:
Ideal Cement Company has a new plant at Castle Hayne to cook Eastern Carolina marl into high quality modern cement. The company will be turning out 3.5 million barrels of cement a year at Castle Hayne from an over over 450 foot long and 12 feet wide over, using 300 tons of coal and thousands of kilowatt hours of electricity a day.
Source:
Record #:
31248
Abstract:
The name Branch Banking and Trust Company rings well in the ears of many North Carolinians. The institution, established in 1872, had grown into one of the state's leading financial giants, spreading across eastern North Carolina from Wilson. Furthermore, it was one of the only banks that didn't go 'busted' in North Carolina when the Great Depression hit in the early 1930s.
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