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North Carolina in the Revolutionary War. Charlotte: Heritage Printers. OCLC 4888768. Saunders, William, ed. (1890). The Colonial Records of North Carolina. Vol. 10. Raleigh: Josephus Daniels – via Hathi Trust. Wheeler, Earl M. (July 1964). "Development and Organization of the North Carolina Militia". North Carolina Historical Review. 41 (3 ...
The North Carolina Department of War named this regiment the North Carolina Cavalry, West District Regiment. The regiment only lasted until late December 1780 or early January 1781, as the Board of War appointed Colonel Davie as Superintendent Commissary General of Provisions and Supplies for the state.
The Mecklenburg County regiment was active from its original authorization until the end of the war. It was subordinated to the Salisbury District Brigade under Brigadier General Griffith Rutherford. The Mecklenburg County regiment was involved in 39 known battles, sieges, and skirmishes in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia.
By the time of his death in 1800, Thomas Person owned over 125 square miles of land in North Carolina and Tennessee. [16] He also owned at least 34 slaves that he kept at his estate, Goshen, in Granville County, North Carolina. [17] Person's Ordinary at Littleton, North Carolina, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. [15]
North Carolina in the American Revolution. Troxler, Carole Watterson (July 1990). 'The Great Man of the Settlement': North Carolina's John Legett at Country Harbour, Nova Scotia, 1783–1812., NCHR 67 "A History of The Royal North Carolina Regiment, Lt. Colonel John Hamilton's Corp, 1777–1784, The Recreated Royal North Carolina Regiment".
His parents were both Scots-Irish. His father died before 1763 when he moved with his mother and siblings to Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. He became a farmer and ironmonger. In 1814 he was a Councilor of State for North Carolina. Later in life, he was on the board of trustees of the University of North Carolina. [1] [3]
First piloted in the fall of 2020, the phased transition to have funeral directors and medical providers submit electronic death certificates was a long time coming for North Carolina, one of only ...
The Dobbs County Regiment was a unit of the North Carolina militia that served during the American Revolution.The regiment was one of thirty-five existing county militias that were authorized by the North Carolina Provincial Congress to be organized on September 9, 1775.