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

Search Results


22 results for "Rights, Douglas L."
Currently viewing results 16 - 22
Previous
PAGE OF 2
Record #:
19780
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Horse Society was a combination protective agency, insurance company, and fraternal order founded on November 10, 1798 in the Winston-Salem area. Members could pay the group to protect personal items from everyday thieves, a flourishing business model until 1874 when expenditures exceeded revenue and the society disbanded. Documents belonging to the society are now stored at the Wachovia Historical Society and some of which are reprinted in this article.
Full Text:
Record #:
14849
Author(s):
Abstract:
The eastern band of Cherokees have never lost the art of basketry which they practice with genuine skill on the Qualla Reservation.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 12 Issue 49, May 1945, p7, f
Full Text:
Record #:
18672
Author(s):
Abstract:
Rights examines the route of the first explorers who ventured into central North Carolina in hopes of trade with the Native Americans.
Source:
Full Text:
Record #:
19747
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article looks at the colonial roots of the Trading Path, an extremely popular travel and trade route through North Carolina that would later become the route for a system of 20th century highways. The article utilizes period accounts of exploration and travel along the path as well as descriptions of encounters with various Indian tribes with a particular focus on the travels of surveyor John Lawson, traders James Needham and Gabriel Arthur, and explorer John Lederer.
Full Text:
Record #:
22562
Author(s):
Abstract:
Although few early written accounts of Indians in the Piedmont region of North Carolina exist, there are traces of the native populations that have been left behind. The Saponi, Tutelo, and especially the Catawba were strong tribes in the Piedmont region, as seen through relics and remains such as stone implements, pottery, arrows, and even graves.
Record #:
19541
Author(s):
Abstract:
Rev. Rights attempts to reconstruct the state's Native American history through sparse historical records. Specifically, the article records tribes' history within the Piedmont region in Orange, Chatham, Wilkes, Carbarrus counties. He studies material culture to better understand the Native American population that once inhabited the Piedmont.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
14988
Author(s):
Abstract:
Many towns and communities can boast that George Washington \"slept here.\" In Winston-Salem, the Salem Tavern, that still exists in North Carolina, once entertained the Father of Our Country, and for two nights at that.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 10 Issue 35, Jan 1943, p4-5, 22, f
Full Text: