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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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3 results for "Booker, Louise R"
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Record #:
9948
Author(s):
Abstract:
In March 1863, Confederate Reserve soldiers stationed at Fort Branch on the Roanoke River in Martin County encountered and fired on a group of Federal ships that were on their way to the Federal base in Plymouth. A Williamston man, George L. Whitley, was a 17 year old sharpshooter at Fort Branch and is said to have mortally wounded the Captain of the lead vessel, causing the flotilla's retreat to Hamilton. A group of Alabama men are currently facing charges involving salvaging without a permit for raising three Fort Branch cannons from the Roanoke River in 1972. Responsibility for the cannons has been turned over to the N.C. Department of Archives and History and the Fort Branch Battlefield Commission.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 40 Issue 16, Feb 1973, p25, il
Full Text:
Record #:
35498
Author(s):
Abstract:
According to the author, no historian truly knows how North Carolinians came to be known as Tar Heels. What can be declared as truth from the seven versions of its origins shared: the long history that the nickname has; and how many NC citizens are proud to claim the label.
Source:
New East (NoCar F 251 T37x), Vol. 4 Issue 2, Mar/Apr 1976, p17
Subject(s):
Record #:
35548
Author(s):
Abstract:
Believed to have been cursed by fairies, a woman turned into a large rat for several days each year.
Subject(s):