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Simon Dixon, a Quaker who migrated from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, came to the Cane Creek area and what is now known as Snow Camp, North Carolina during the late 1740s. [3]: 15 By 1751, as many as thirty other Quaker families had migrated to Snow Camp.
Simon A. Dixon (October 12, 1728 – April, 1781) was the founder and prominent member of the community of Snow Camp, North Carolina. He was also one of the founding members of the Cane Creek Friends Meeting , the first Quaker community in the Piedmont (United States) region of North Carolina .
Snow Camp was also a site of early Quaker settlement in North Carolina, as Friends from Pennsylvania migrated to the Cane Creek valley in the mid-1700s and established the Spring Meeting at Snow Camp; several historic buildings clustered around the spring remain from that settlement. [citation needed]
Battle of Bloody Creek (1757) ... Joseph Broussard; Burying the Hatchet ceremony (Nova Scotia) C. Cane Creek Friends Meeting; Cape Sable campaign ... Simon Dixon ...
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The plays are set within the local context of the Cane Creek Friends Meeting, a Quaker congregation established October 7, 1751, in what is now southern Alamance County. (Snow Camp was for a time part of Guilford County during the Revolutionary-era events of Sword of Peace). The Cane Creek meetinghouse is a few hundred feet from the amphitheater.