An additional section of the previously printed map overlaps the section of the Pamlico Sound. The map details Carteret County as well as well as creeks, island changes, and landmarks.
Continuing the Mouzon Map, this section overlaps the previously printed one with Carteret County. The map shows long-gone counties and extinct towns. Present-day Jacksonville is shown as a ferry site. Kinston is called Kingstowne.
This section of the map displays big towns of the day, including Salem, Salisbury, and Hillsborough, as well as the Trading Path, Indian villages, and the most prominent peak of Mount Arrarat.
This portion of the map shows the frontier conditions of this portion of North Carolina. This section displays the area bordering the state of South Carolina.
This is the last section of the Mouzon Map and shows mostly South Carolina and Georgia territory. It finishes out the corner of North Carolina around the Tryon section, in the vicinity of Green and Pacolet rivers.
Reproduced from Photostats of a copy owned by the Department of Archives and History, this copy of Mouzon's map from 1775 depicts North Carolina's eastern territories as they were at the end of the 18th-century.
Many names, once representing important towns, have entirely disappeared from state maps, while in other instances names have been changed not only once but several times. The first seat of government, Tower Hill, existed only on paper and there were changes at Hillsboro, Martinsville, and old Bloomsbury.