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Davidson Historic District is a national historic district located at Davidson, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. The district encompasses 394 contributing buildings, 2 contributing sites, and 2 contributing structures in the central business district and surrounding residential neighborhoods of Davidson and campus of Davidson College .
Maj. William Davidson was a cousin of Col. William Davidson, the first state senator from Buncombe County, North Carolina, who in turn was a cousin of Gen. William Lee Davidson, for whom Davidson College was named. [8] Gen. Davidson's son William Lee Davidson II sold 469 acres (1.90 km2) to the Concord Presbytery to start Davidson College. [9]
Kategori:Personer fra Davidson County i Nord-Carolina; Kategori:Davidson County (Nord-Carolina) Usage on pl.wikipedia.org Hrabstwo Davidson (Karolina Północna) Usage on pnb.wikipedia.org ڈیوڈسن کاؤنٹی، اتلا کیرولینا; Usage on pt.wikipedia.org Condado de Davidson (Carolina do Norte) Usage on ro.wikipedia.org
Davidson County is also served by Davidson-Davie Community College, a comprehensive community college that is a member school of the North Carolina Community College System. Davidson-Davie Community College was chartered in 1958 as an Industrial Education Center designed to provide adults with the education and skills needed to move from an ...
April 28, 2000 (22 E. Center S. Lexington: 17: Good Hope Methodist Church Cemetery: July 10, 1984 (Junction of NC 150 and SR 1445: Welcome: 18: Grace Episcopal Church
Answer: The chain-link fence meanders along an about 400-foot length of greenway in the River Arts District. To the west, across the river, New Belgium Brewing Company looms. To the west, across ...
Abbotts Creek starts in Kernersville, NC in Forsyth County and flows into High Rock Lake near Lexington, NC in Davidson County just north of Hwy 47. The section of High Rock Lake that is officially Abbotts Creeks ends near the Hwy 8 causeway, in Southmont, NC. The median flow at Lexington ranges from 50 to 200 cubic feet per second. [7]
The following is the NC Division of Parks & Recreation description of State Trails: The North Carolina Trails System Act was passed in 1973 to help provide for the state's outdoor recreation needs and to promote public access to natural and scenic areas.