Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Since 2009 the USDA has invested $6.3 billion in rural housing and businesses development, utility construction, and other community programs across North Carolina. More than $1.6 billion was invested in 2012, in which over 8000 families were aided through the Single Family Housing Program. [ 6 ]
The church was formerly known as Wheeleys Meeting House (as well as once called Wheeley's Church and Upper South Hico Church [1] [2]). The church and its cemetery sit at a small rural crossroads about 1 mile south of North Carolina Highway 49. The church is known to locals simply as Wheelers and is located near Gordonton in Bushy Fork Township. [3]
The North Carolina chapter of the American Planning Association proposed reforms which were adopted in 2005. [2] The purpose of these reforms was to simplify, modernize, and make technical changes to the existing land use and planning laws. [2] The reform bills were sponsored by state Senator Daniel G. Clodfelter and Representative Lucy T ...
LA's Emergency Renters Assistance Program has been amended to supply 100% of tenants' unpaid rent for April 1, 2020, through March 31, 2021 (up from 80% for people whose landlord agreed to waive ...
The district encompasses 117 contributing buildings and 2 contributing structures on four contiguous farms near Wilson. The main plantation house on each farm are the Federal -style W. D. Petway House (c. 1820); the Greek Revival house built for Colonel David Williams (c. 1845-1860); the house built for Cally S. Braswell ("Hawthorne"; c. 1855 ...
Christ Episcopal Church and Parish House (New Bern, North Carolina) Church of the Good Shepherd (Cashiers, North Carolina) Church of the Holy Trinity (Hertford, North Carolina) Church of the Immaculate Conception (Halifax, North Carolina) Church of the Incarnation (Highlands, North Carolina) Church of the Redeemer (Asheville, North Carolina)
Key Memorial Chapel, formerly the parish church of Saint Philip the Apostle, is a historic Catholic chapel located at 150 E. Sharpe Street in Statesville, Iredell County, North Carolina. It is within the Diocese of Charlotte. It was built in 1898, and is a small one-story, two bay by four bay, Late Gothic Revival-style brick
Richmond County is a member of the Lumber River Council of Governments, a regional planning board representing five counties. [61] It is located in North Carolina's 9th and 8th congressional districts, [62] the North Carolina Senate's 29th district, and the North Carolina House of Representatives' 52nd district. [63]