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Located in the district are the separately listed Burgaw Depot and Pender County Courthouse. Other notable contributing buildings include the M. M. Moore House (c. 1885), Murphy-Sasser House (c. 1907), Dr. H. B. Thomas House (c. 1910), Burton-Noel House (1917), Burgaw Presbyterian Church (c. 1880), Macedonia African Methodist Episcopal (AME ...
Burgaw is a town in and the county seat of Pender County, North Carolina, [4] United States. The population was 3,088 at the 2020 census . Burgaw is part of the Wilmington, NC Metropolitan Statistical Area .
Burgaw Depot is a historic train station located at Burgaw, Pender County, North Carolina. It was built about 1850 by the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad , with a later 1898 T-shaped addition of passenger waiting rooms and offices and a 1916-1917 addition of freight and warehouse space.
The moment Jamie and Melissa Guinn laid eyes on the house — nestled on the edge of the tiny Avery County town of Minneapolis, N.C. — they adored it.
McGowen is an English language surname. The more common Anglicization of Mac Gobhann is McGowan. [1] Notable people, having the surname alternatively spelled McGowen or Gowen include: Franklin B. Gowen (1836–1889), attorney, president of Reading Railroad; James McGowen (1855–1922), Premier of New South Wales (1910–1913)
James McGowen (1855–1922), Premier of New South Wales 1910–1913; Jayden McGowan, American football player; Jewel McGowan (1921–1962), American dancer; Joe McGowan (born 1944), Irish historian; John McGowan (disambiguation), several people, including; Jack McGowan (playwright) (1894–1977), Broadway writer, performer and producer
McQuinn is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Delores McQuinn (born 1954), American politician; Donald E. McQuinn (born 1930), American writer; George McQuinn (1910–1978), American baseball player
Burgaw Normal and Industrial School, organized in 1896 as Burgaw Institute, was a school for African American students in Burgaw, North Carolina. A Normal School, it taught school teachers. [1] In 1925 it became Burgaw Colored High School. In 1939 the Pender County Board of Education acquired the school from the Baptist Association that ran it.