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  2. Carolinas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolinas

    The Carolinas were known as the Province of Carolina during America's early colonial period, from 1663 to 1712. Prior to that, the land was considered part of the Colony and Dominion of Virginia, from 1609 to 1663. The province was named Carolina to honor King Charles I of England. Carolina is taken from the Latin word for "Charles", Carolus.

  3. Province of Carolina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Province_of_Carolina

    In early 1670 the Lords Proprietors founded a sturdier new settlement named Charles Town (present day Charleston) when they sent 150 colonists to the province, landing them on the south bank of the Ashley River, South Carolina. (The town moved across the river to a more defensible site on the peninsula between the Ashley and Cooper Rivers in 1680.

  4. Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Colonial_Boundary_of...

    By 1819 [1] it was surveyed as far west as the Mississippi River near New Madrid, Missouri, where it created the Kentucky Bend. It is a historic civil engineering landmark, as designated by the American Society of Civil Engineers. It would later be said of the project: The boundary Charles II envisioned was one of the most grandiose in history.

  5. Roanoke River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roanoke_River

    The Roanoke River (/ ˈ r oʊ. ə ˌ n oʊ k / ROH-ə-nohk) runs 410 miles (660 km) long [1] through southern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina in the United States. [2] A major river of the southeastern United States, it drains a largely rural area of the coastal plain from the eastern edge of the Appalachian Mountains southeast across the Piedmont to Albemarle Sound.

  6. Old Buncombe Road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Buncombe_Road

    The Old Buncombe Road, also known, wholly or in part, as the Catawba Trail, the Drovers' Road, the Old Charleston Road, the Saluda Gap Road, the Saluda Mountain Road, the Old Warm Springs Road, and the Buncombe Turnpike, was a 19th-century wagon road in North America connecting the Carolinas to Kentucky and Tennessee, which had access by river ...

  7. List of river borders of U.S. states - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_river_borders_of_U...

    In 1763, Britain defeated France in the Seven Years' War, whose North American theater was called the French and Indian War. At that time, Canada, which had been a French colony, became a British colony, and Parliament made the north bank of the Ohio the southern boundary of Canada.

  8. Province of North Carolina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Province_of_North_Carolina

    Toward the end of this period, the boundaries were more well defined and extended to include the Cherokee lands in the west. [17] [18] Two important maps of the province were produced: one by Edward Moseley in 1733, and another by John Collet in 1770. Moseley was surveyor general of North Carolina in 1710 and from 1723 to 1733.

  9. New River (Kanawha River tributary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_River_(Kanawha_River...

    Much of the river's course through West Virginia is designated as the New River Gorge National Park and Preserve, and the New River is one of the nation's American Heritage Rivers. In 1975, North Carolina designated a 26.5-mile (42.6 km) segment of the river as "New River State Scenic River", by including it in the state's Natural and Scenic ...