Wonderful dendro geekery proves the European invasion of NA started in precisely 1021:
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Squatters in Orange County in the 17th and 18th Centuries
Squatters in Orange County in the 17th and 18th Centuries In the 1740s there were two very hot properties in what would, in the 1750s, become Orange County, North Carolina. Those were the Haw Fields and the Forks of the Eno. They were attractive for different reasons; the Haw Fields for fecundity, and the Forks for transportation accessibility........probably. We'll deal with the Haw old fields another time. This note is about the forks of the Eno. We are only beginning to get a vague image of European settlement in what would become Orange County, NC. Until recently "settlement" was presumed to have begun with deed recording in Orange's parent counties; normally thought of as Johnston, Bladen, and Granville Counties. We know, though, that folks were making "tomahawk" claims on land in Carolina long before law came to town. We just don't know how many folks were in the area or where they were. They were, though, in the area, pr...
Maybe North Carolina's most telling Map; the Moseley Map, 1733
In 1733 Emund Moseley was North Carolina's Surveyor General, using his own work probably supplemented by prior work by John Lawson, his predessessor inn that office, produced a map of importance . It is the first published map showing what is now called "Thigpe's Trace", a wagon road arcing across the piedmont, connecting Chesapeake Bay with the Guld of Mexico. It also shows a road matrix in the area north of Albemarle sound that confirms a settlement in that region which dated back to the 1650s. Finally, in an inset map, below the main map, it show's Okracoke Island with an anchorage called "Teaches Hole" immediately off-shore, near a large well, a well suitable for replenishing ships quickly. As Captain Teach was hung for piracy ca 1715, the well is likely to have predated his demise. Taken altogether, it makes North Carolina's history far more interesting than convention teaches it For example, our history books date the settlement of the piedmo...
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