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The History of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and North Carolina is an account by William Byrd II of the surveying of the border between the Colony of Virginia and the Province of North Carolina in 1728. Byrd's account of the journey to survey the contentious border with his chief surveyor William Mayo included such nuggets as the ...
The Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665 marked the border between the Colony of Virginia and the Province of Carolina from the Atlantic Ocean westward across North America. The line follows the parallel 36°30′ north latitude that later became a boundary for several U.S. states as far west as the Oklahoma Panhandle, and also came to be associated ...
December 13, 2024 (Blue Ridge Parkway through Virginia and North Carolina: Montvale vicinity: 10: Brook Hill Farm: Brook Hill Farm: June 6, 1997 (0.75 miles (1.21 km) south of the junction of U.S. Route 221 and Bellevue Rd.
Marker for the KY-TN-VA tripoint. The North Carolina–Tennessee–Virginia Corners is a tripoint at which North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia meet. The landmark is located in the Iron Mountains, and is roughly 16 miles (26 km) north of Snake Mountain, and 8 miles (13 km) southwest of Mount Rogers (the highest mountain in Virginia).
Virgilina is located in the southeast corner of Halifax County at (36.545244, −78.773720 The town's southern border is the Virginia–North Carolina line. Virginia State Routes 96 and 49 intersect at the center of town.
The North Carolina Line refers to North Carolina units within the Continental Army. The term "North Carolina Line" referred to the quota of infantry regiments assigned to North Carolina at various times by the Continental Congress. These, together with similar contingents from the other twelve states, formed the Continental Line.
Lindsay Price and Curtis Stone may have dominated the acting and culinary worlds, but their eldest son is ready to take over the music industry.. Price, 47, was a proud mom supporting her son ...
The Fairfax Line; Source: The Fairfax Line: Thomas Lewis's Journal of 1746; Footnotes and index by John Wayland, New Market, Virginia: The Henkel Press (1925 publication). The Fairfax Line was a surveyor's line run in 1746 to establish the limits of the "Northern Neck land grant" (also known as the "Fairfax Grant") in colonial Virginia.