
A map of the State of North
Carolina
North Carolina ( ) is a
state located on the
Atlantic Seaboard in the
southeastern United States.
The state
borders South
Carolina
and Georgia
to the south, Tennessee
to the west and Virginia
to the
north. North Carolina contains
100 counties.
Its
capital is Raleigh
, and its largest city is Charlotte
.
North Carolina was one of the original English
Thirteen Colonies, and was originally
known as
Province of Carolina.
Spanish
colonial
forces were the first to settle it, however, when the Juan Pardo Expedition built Fort San Juan in 1567. This was sited at
Joara, a Mississippian culture regional
chiefdom near present-day Morganton
in the western interior of the states.
This was
20 years before the English established their first colony at
Roanoke
Island
in an attempt to found a settlement in the Americas.
On May 20, 1861, North Carolina was one of the last of the
Confederate states to declare
secession from the
Union,
to which it was restored on July 4, 1868.
The state was the
location of the first successful controlled, powered and sustained
heavier-than-air flight, by the Wright
brothers, at Kill Devil
Hills
, about 6.4 miles from Kitty
Hawk
on Dec. 17, 1903. Today, it is a
fast-growing state with an increasingly diverse economy and
population. As of July 1, 2008, the population was estimated to be
9,222,414 (a 14.5% increase since April 1, 2000). Recognizing eight
Native
American tribes, North Carolina has the largest population of
Native Americans of any state east of the Mississippi River.
North Carolina has a wide range of elevations, from sea level on
the coast to 6,684 feet (2,037 m) in the mountains. The coastal
plains are strongly influenced by the Atlantic Ocean. Most of the
state falls in the humid subtropical zone. More than from the
coast, the western, mountainous part of the state has a
subtropical highland climate.
As of 2008
(the most current numbers available), North Carolina is the
fourth-fastest growing state in the United
States
and the fastest growing state east of the Mississippi River.
Geography
North
Carolina is bordered by South Carolina
on the south, Georgia
on the southwest, Tennessee
on the west, Virginia
on the
north, and the Atlantic
Ocean
on the east. The
United States Census Bureau
classifies North Carolina as a
southern state in the subcategory of
being one of the
South Atlantic
States.
North
Carolina consists of three main geographic sections: the coastal plain, which occupies the
eastern 45% of the state; the Piedmont region, which contains the
middle 35%; and the Appalachian Mountains
and foothills. The extreme
eastern section of the state contains
the Outer Banks, a string of sandy, narrow
islands which form a barrier between the Atlantic Ocean and inland
waterways.
The Outer Banks form two sounds—Albemarle Sound in the north and Pamlico Sound
in the south. They are the two largest
landlocked sounds in the United States.
Immediately inland, the coastal plain is relatively flat, with rich
soils ideal for growing
tobacco,
soybeans,
melons, and
cotton. The coastal plain is North Carolina's
most
rural section, with few large towns or
cities.
Agriculture remains an important
industry.
The major rivers of the coastal plain: the
Neuse
, Tar
, Pamlico
, and Cape Fear
, tend to be slow-moving and wide.
The coastal plain transitions to the Piedmont region along the
"
fall line", a line which marks the
elevation at which waterfalls first appear on streams and rivers.
The Piedmont region of central North Carolina is the state's most
urbanized and densely populated section. It consists of gently
rolling countryside frequently broken by hills or low mountain
ridges.
A
number of small, isolated, and deeply eroded mountain ranges and
peaks are located in the Piedmont, including the Sauratown Mountains, Pilot
Mountain
, the Uwharrie
Mountains, Crowder's
Mountain
, King's
Pinnacle
, the
Brushy Mountains,
and the South
Mountains. The Piedmont ranges from about
300–400 feet (90–120 m) elevation in the east to over
1,000 feet (300 m) in the west. Due to the rapid population
growth of the Piedmont, many of the farms and much of the rural
countryside in this region is being replaced by
suburbanization: shopping centers, housing
developments, and large corporate office parks. Agriculture is
steadily declining in importance in this region. The major rivers
of the Piedmont, such as the
Yadkin and
Catawba, tend to be fast-flowing,
shallow, and narrow.
The
western section of the state
is part of the Appalachian Mountain
range. Among the subranges of the
Appalachians located in the state are the
Great Smoky Mountains,
Blue Ridge Mountains,
Great Balsam Mountains, and the
Black Mountains.
The Black
Mountains are the highest in the Eastern United States, and
culminate in Mount Mitchell
at 6,684 feet (2,037 m). It is the
highest point east of the
Mississippi
River. Although agriculture remains important,
tourism has become the dominant industry in the
mountains. One agricultural pursuit which has prospered and grown
in recent decades is the growing and selling of
Christmas Trees. Due to the higher altitude
of the mountains, the climate often differs markedly from the rest
of the state. Winters in western North Carolina typically feature
significant snowfall and subfreezing temperatures more akin to a
midwestern state than a southern one.
North Carolina has 17 major river basins.
All the others flow
to the Atlantic
Ocean
. Of the 17 basins, 11 originate within the
state of North Carolina, but only four are contained entirely
within the state's borders - the Cape Fear, Neuse, White Oak and
Tar-Pamlico.
Climate
The geographical divisions of North Carolina are useful when
discussing the
climate of the state.
The Coastal Plain is influenced by the Atlantic Ocean which keeps
temperatures mild in winter and moderate in the summer. Daytime
high temperatures on the coast average less than 89 °F
(31.6 °C) during the summer. In the winter, the coast has the
mildest temperatures in the state, with daytime temperatures rarely
dropping below 40 °F (4.4 °C); the average daytime winter
temperature in the coastal plain is usually in the mid-60's.
Temperatures in the coastal plain rarely drop below freezing even
at night. The coastal plain usually receives only one inch
(2.5 cm) of
snow and/or ice annually, and
in some years there may be no snow or ice at all.
The Atlantic Ocean has less influence on the Piedmont region, and
as a result the Piedmont has hotter summers and colder winters than
the coast. Daytime highs in the Piedmont often average over
90 °F (32.2 °C) in the summer.
While it is not
common for temperatures to reach over 100 °F (37.8 °C) in
North Carolina, when it happens, the highest temperatures are to be
found in the lower areas of the Piedmont, especially around the
city of Fayetteville
. Additionally, the weaker influence of the
Atlantic Ocean means that temperatures in the Piedmont often
fluctuate more widely than the coast.
In the winter, the Piedmont is much less mild than the coast, with
daytime temperatures that are usually in the mid 50's, and
temperatures often drop below freezing at night. The region
averages from 3–5 inches of snowfall annually in the Charlotte
area to 6–8 inches in the Raleigh–Durham area. The Piedmont is
especially notorious for
sleet and
freezing rain. It can be heavy enough in some
storms to snarl traffic and collapse trees and power lines. Annual
precipitation and humidity is lower in the Piedmont than either the
mountains or the coast, but even at its lowest, the precipitation
is a generous 40 in (102 cm) per year.
The
Appalachian
Mountains
are the coolest area of the state, with daytime
temperatures averaging in the low 40's and upper 30's for highs in
the winter and often falling into the teens (−9 °C) or lower
on winter nights. Relatively cool summers have temperatures
rarely rising above 80 °F (26.7 °C). Snowfall in the
mountains is usually 14–20 in (36–51 cm) per year, but it
is often greater in the higher elevations.
For example, during
the Blizzard of 1993 more than of
snow fell on Mount
Mitchell
over a
period of three days. Additionally, Mount Mitchell has
received snow in every month of the year.
Severe weather occurs regularly in North Carolina. On average, the
state receives a direct hit from a
hurricane once a decade. Tropical storms arrive
every 3 or 4 years. In some years, several hurricanes or tropical
storms can directly strike the state or brush across the coastal
areas. Only Florida and Louisiana are hit by hurricanes more often.
Although many people believe that hurricanes menace only coastal
areas, the rare hurricane which moves inland quickly enough can
cause severe damage.
In 1989 Hurricane
Hugo caused heavy damage in Charlotte
and even as far inland as the Blue Ridge Mountains in the
northwestern part of the state. On average, North Carolina
has 50 days of thunderstorm activity per year, with some storms
becoming severe enough to produce
hail,
flash floods, and damaging winds.
North Carolina averages fewer than 20 tornadoes per year. Many
of these are produced by hurricanes or tropical storms along the
coastal plain. Tornadoes from thunderstorms are a risk, especially
in the eastern part of the state. The western piedmont is often
protected by the mountains breaking storms up as they try to cross
over them. The storms will often reform farther east. Also a
weather feature known as "cold air damming" occurs in the western
part of the state. This can also weaken storms but can also lead to
major ice events in winter."
| Monthly
normal high and low temperatures (Fahrenheit) for various North Carolina
cities. |
|
City |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
Asheville |
46/26 |
50/28 |
58/35 |
66/42 |
74/51 |
80/58 |
83/63 |
82/62 |
76/55 |
67/43 |
57/35 |
49/29 |
| Cape
Hatteras |
54/39 |
55/39 |
60/44 |
68/52 |
75/60 |
82/68 |
85/73 |
85/72 |
81/68 |
73/59 |
65/50 |
57/43 |
|
Charlotte |
51/32 |
56/34 |
64/42 |
73/49 |
80/58 |
87/66 |
90/71 |
88/69 |
82/63 |
73/51 |
63/42 |
54/35 |
|
Fayetteville |
52/31 |
56/33 |
64/39 |
73/47 |
80/56 |
87/65 |
90/70 |
89/69 |
83/63 |
74/49 |
65/41 |
56/34 |
|
Greensboro |
47/28 |
52/31 |
60/38 |
70/46 |
77/55 |
84/64 |
88/68 |
86/67 |
79/60 |
70/48 |
60/39 |
51/31 |
|
Raleigh |
50/30 |
54/32 |
62/39 |
72/46 |
79/55 |
86/64 |
89/68 |
87/67 |
81/61 |
72/48 |
62/40 |
53/33 |
|
Wilmington |
56/36 |
60/38 |
66/44 |
74/51 |
81/60 |
86/68 |
90/72 |
88/71 |
84/66 |
76/54 |
68/45 |
60/38 |
| [3450]|[3451] |
History
Native Americans, Lost Colonies and Permanent Settlement
North Carolina was originally inhabited by many different
prehistoric native cultures. Before 200 CE, they were building
earthwork mounds,
which were used for ceremonial and religious purposes. Succeeding
peoples, including those of the ancient
Mississippian culture established by
1000 CE in the Piedmont, continued to build or add on to such
mounds. In the 500-700 years preceding European contact, the
Mississippian culture built large, complex cities and maintained
farflung regional trading networks. Historically documented tribes
in the North Carolina region included
Cherokee,
Tuscarora,
Cheraw,
Pamlico,
Meherrin,
Coree,
Machapunga,
Cape Fear Indians,
Waxhaw,
Saponi,
Tutelo,
Waccamaw,
Coharie, and
Catawba.
Spanish explorers' traveling inland in the 16th century encountered
the
Mississippian culture
people at
Joara, a regional chiefdom near
present-day
Morganton. Records of
Hernando de Soto attested to his meeting
with them in 1540.
In 1567 Captain Juan Pardo led an expedition into the
interior to claim the area for the Spanish colony, as well as
establish another route to protect silver mines in Mexico
.
Pardo made a winter base at Joara, which he renamed
Cuenca. The expedition built
Fort
San Juan and left 30 men, while Pardo traveled further, and
built and staffed five other forts.
He returned by a different route to
Santa Elena on Parris Island
, South
Carolina
, then a
center of Spanish Florida. In
the spring of 1568, natives killed all the soldiers and burned the
six forts in the interior, including the one at Fort San Juan.
Although the Spanish never returned to the interior, this marked
the first European attempt at colonization of the interior of what
became the United States. A 16th-century journal by Pardo's scribe
Bandera and
archaeological findings
since 1986 at Joara have confirmed the settlement.
In 1584,
Elizabeth I, granted a charter to
Sir Walter Raleigh, for whom the
state capital is named, for land in present-day North Carolina
(then Virginia
). Raleigh established two colonies on the
coast in the late 1580s, both ending in failure. It was the second
American territory the British attempted to colonize.
The demise of one,
the "Lost Colony" of Roanoke Island
, remains one of the mysteries of American
history. Virginia Dare, the
first
English child to be born in
North America, was born on Roanoke Island on August 18, 1587.
Dare
County
is named for her.
As early as 1650, colonists from the Virginia colony moved into the
area of
Albemarle Sound. By 1663,
King
Charles II of England
granted a charter to start a new colony on the North American
continent which generally established its borders. He named it
Carolina in honor of his father
Charles I. By 1665, a second charter
was issued to attempt to resolve territorial questions.
In 1710,
due to disputes over governance, the Carolina colony began to split
into North Carolina and South Carolina
. The latter became a crown colony in
1729.
Colonial Period and Revolutionary War
The first
permanent European settlers of North Carolina were British colonists who migrated south from
Virginia
, following a rapid growth of the colony and the
subsequent shortage of available farmland. Nathaniel Batts was documented as one of the
first of these Virginian migrants.
He settled south of the Chowan River
and east of the Great Dismal Swamp
in 1655. By 1663, this northeastern area of
the
Province of Carolina, known
as the
Albemarle Settlements,
was undergoing full-scale British settlement. During the same
period, the English monarch
Charles II gave the province to the
Lords Proprietors, a group of
noblemen who had helped restore Charles to the throne in 1660. The
new province of "Carolina" was named in honor and memory of King
Charles I (Latin:
Carolus). In 1712, North Carolina became a separate
colony. With the exception of the
Earl Granville holdings,
it became a royal colony seventeen years later.
Differences in the settlement patterns of eastern and western North
Carolina, or the low country and uplands, affected the political,
economic, and social life of the state from the eighteenth until
the twentieth century. The Tidewater in eastern North Carolina was
settled chiefly by immigrants from England and the
Scottish Highlands. The upcountry of
western North Carolina was settled chiefly by
Scots-Irish and
German Protestants, the
so-called "
cohee". Arriving during the
mid-to-late 18th century, the Scots-Irish from Ireland were the
largest immigrant group before the Revolution. During the
Revolutionary War, the English and
Highland Scots of eastern North Carolina tended to remain loyal to
the British Crown, because of longstanding business and personal
connections with Great Britain. The Scots-Irish and German settlers
of western North Carolina tended to favor American independence
from Britain.
Most of the English colonists arrived as
indentured servants, hiring themselves
out as laborers for a fixed period to pay for their passage. In the
early years the line between indentured servants and African
slaves or laborers was fluid. Some Africans
were allowed to earn their freedom before slavery became a lifelong
status. Most of the free colored families formed in North Carolina
before the Revolution were descended from relationships or
marriages between free white women and enslaved or free African or
African-American men. Many had migrated or were descendants of
migrants from colonial Virginia.
As the flow of indentured laborers to the
colony decreased with improving economic conditions in Great
Britain
, more slaves were imported and the state's
restrictions on slavery hardened. The economy's growth and
prosperity was based on slave labor, devoted first to the
production of tobacco.
On April 12, 1776, the colony became the first to instruct its
delegates to the
Continental
Congress to vote for independence from the British crown,
through the
Halifax Resolves passed
by the
North Carolina
Provincial Congress. The dates of both of these
independence-related events are memorialized on the
state flag and
state seal. Throughout the
Revolutionary War, fierce
guerilla
warfare erupted between bands of pro-independence and
pro-British colonists. In some cases the war was also an excuse to
settle private grudges and rivalries.
A major American
victory in the war took place at King's Mountain
along the North Carolina–South Carolina
border. On October 7, 1780 a force of 1000 mountain
men from western North Carolina (including what is today the State
of Tennessee
) overwhelmed a force of some 1000 British troops
led by Major Patrick
Ferguson. Most of the British soldiers in this battle
were Carolinians who had remained loyal to the British Crown (they
were called "Tories"). The American victory at Kings Mountain gave
the advantage to colonists who favored American independence, and
it prevented the British Army from recruiting new soldiers from the
Tories.
The road
to Yorktown
and America's independence from Great
Britain
led through North Carolina. As the British Army moved north from victories in
Charleston
and Camden
, South
Carolina
, the
Southern Division of the Continental
Army and local militia prepared to meet them.
Following
General Daniel Morgan's victory over
the British Cavalry Commander Banastre
Tarleton at the Battle of Cowpens
on January 17, 1781, southern commander Nathanael Greene led British Lord Charles Cornwallis across the heartland
of North Carolina, and away from Cornwallis's base of supply in
Charleston, South Carolina. This campaign is known as "The
Race to the Dan" or "The Race for the River."
Generals
Greene and Cornwallis finally met at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse
in present-day Greensboro
on March 15, 1781. Although the British
troops held the field at the end of the battle,
their casualties at the hands of the numerically superior American
Army were crippling. Following this "
Pyrrhic victory", Cornwallis chose to move
to the Virginia coastline to get reinforcements, and to allow the
Royal Navy to protect his battered army.
This
decision would result in Cornwallis's eventual defeat at Yorktown,
Virginia
later in 1781. The Patriots' victory there
guaranteed American independence.
Antebellum Period
On November 21, 1789, North Carolina became the twelfth state to
ratify the
Constitution.
In 1840,
it completed the state capitol
building in Raleigh, still standing today.
Most of North Carolina's slave owners and large
plantations were located in the eastern portion
of the state. Although North Carolina's plantation system was
smaller and less cohesive than those of Virginia, Georgia or South
Carolina, there were significant numbers of planters concentrated
in the counties around the port cities of Wilmington and Edenton,
as well as suburban planters around the cities of Raleigh,
Charlotte and Durham. Planters owning large estates wielded
significant political and socio-economic power in antebellum North
Carolina, often to the derision of the generally non-slave holding
"yeoman" farmers of Western North Carolina.
In mid-century, the
state's rural and commercial areas were connected by the
construction of a 129–mile (208 km) wooden plank road, known
as a "farmer's railroad," from Fayetteville
in the east to Bethania
(northwest of Winston-Salem
).
In addition to slaves, there were a number of
free people of color in the state.
Most were
descended from free African Americans who had migrated along with
neighbors from Virginia
during the eighteenth century. After the
Revolution,
Quakers and
Mennonites worked to persuade slaveholders to free
their slaves. Enough were inspired by their efforts and the
language of men's rights, and arranged for manumission of their
slaves. The number of free people of color rose in the first couple
of decades after the Revolution.
On
October 25, 1836 construction began on the Wilmington and Raleigh
Railroad to connect the port city of Wilmington
with the state capital of Raleigh
. In 1849 the North Carolina Railroad was
created by act of the legislature to extend that railroad west to
Greensboro
, High Point
, and Charlotte
. During the Civil War the
Wilmington-to-Raleigh stretch of the railroad would be vital to the
Confederate war effort; supplies shipped into Wilmington would be
moved by rail through Raleigh to the Confederate capital of
Richmond,
Virginia
.
During the antebellum period North Carolina was an overwhelmingly
rural state, even by Southern standards.
In 1860
only one North Carolina town, the port city of Wilmington
, had a population of more than 10,000.
Raleigh
, the state capital, had barely more than 5,000
residents.
While slaveholding was slightly less concentrated than in some
Southern states, according to the 1860 census, more than 330,000
people, or 33% of the population of 992,622 were enslaved
African-Americans. They lived and worked chiefly on plantations in
the eastern
Tidewater. In addition, 30,463
free people of color lived in the state.
They were also
concentrated in the eastern coastal plain, especially at port
cities such as Wilmington and New Bern
where they had access to a variety of jobs.
Free African Americans were allowed to vote until 1835, when the
state rescinded their suffrage.
American Civil War
In 1860, North Carolina was a slave state, in which about one-third
of the population of 992,622 were enslaved African Americans. This
was a smaller proportion than many Southern states. In addition,
the state had a substantial number of
Free
Negroes, just over 30,000.
The state did not vote to join the Confederacy until President
Abraham Lincoln called on it to
invade its sister-state, South Carolina
, becoming the last or second to last state to
officially join the Confederacy. The title of "last to join
the Confederacy" has been disputed because Tennessee informally
seceded on May 7, 1861, making North Carolina the last to secede on
May 20, 1861. However, the Tennessee legislature did not formally
vote secede until June 8, 1861.
North Carolina was the site of few battles, but it provided at
least 125,000 troops to the Confederacy— far more than any other
state. Approximately 40,000 of those troops never returned home,
dying of disease, battlefield wounds, and starvation. North
Carolina also supplied about 15,000 Union troops.
Elected in 1862,
Governor Zebulon Baird Vance
tried to maintain state autonomy against Confederate President
Jefferson Davis in Richmond
.
Even after secession, some North Carolinians refused to support the
Confederacy. This was particularly true of non-slave-owning farmers
in the state's mountains and western Piedmont region. Some of these
farmers remained neutral during the
war, while some covertly supported the
Union cause during the
conflict. Approximately 2,000 North Carolinians from western North
Carolina enlisted in the
Union Army and
fought for the North in the war, and two additional Union Army
regiments were raised in the coastal areas of the state that were
occupied by Union forces in 1862 and 1863. Even so, Confederate
troops from all parts of North Carolina served in virtually all the
major battles of the
Army of
Northern Virginia, the Confederacy's most famous army. The
largest battle fought in North Carolina was at
Bentonville, which was a futile
attempt by Confederate General
Joseph
Johnston to slow Union General
William Tecumseh Sherman's advance
through the Carolinas in the spring of 1865.
In April 1865 after
losing the Battle of
Morrisville, Johnston surrendered to Sherman at Bennett Place
, in what is today Durham, North Carolina
. This was the last major Confederate Army to
surrender.
North Carolina's port city of Wilmington
was the last Confederate port to fall to the
Union. It fell in the spring of 1865 after the nearby
Second Battle of Fort
Fisher.
The first Confederate soldier to be killed in the Civil War was
Private Henry Wyatt, a North Carolinian. He was killed in the
Battle of Big Bethel in June
1861.
At
the Battle of
Gettysburg
in July 1863, the 26th North Carolina Regiment
participated in Pickett/Pettigrew's Charge
and advanced the farthest into the Northern lines
of any Confederate regiment. During the Battle of
Chickamauga
the 58th North Carolina Regiment advanced farther
than any other regiment on Snodgrass Hill to push back the
remaining Union forces from the battlefield. At Appomattox Court House
in Virginia in April 1865, the 75th North Carolina
Regiment, a cavalry unit, fired the last shots of the Confederate
Army of Northern Virginia
in the Civil War. For many years, North Carolinians proudly
boasted that they had been "First at Bethel, Farthest at Gettysburg
and Chickamauga, and Last at Appomattox."
Demographics

North Carolina Population Density in
2008.

Change in population from 2000 to
2008, using census estimates.
Note the large-scale area of net population loss in the inland
northeastern part of the state; these counties are all related to
each other in that they contain the highest percentage of blacks,
according to the Census 2000 data.
The
United States Census
Bureau, as of July 1, 2008, estimated North Carolina's
population at 9,222,414, which represents an increase of 1,175,914,
or 14.6%, since the last census in 2000. This exceeds the rate of
growth for the United States as a whole. The growth comprises a
natural increase since the last census of 412,906 people (that is
1,015,065 births minus 602,159 deaths) and an increase due to net
migration of 783,382 people into the state.
Immigration from outside
the United States resulted in a net increase of 192,099 people, and
migration within the country produced a net gain of 591,283 people.
Between
2005 and 2006, North Carolina passed New Jersey
to become the 10th most populous state. The
state's population reported as under 5 years old was 6.7%, 24.4%
were under 18, and 12.0% were 65 or older. Females made up
approximately 51% of the population.
Metropolitan Areas
North Carolina has three major
Metropolitan Combined Statistical Areas with
populations of more than 1 million (
U.S. Census
Bureau 2008 estimates):
- The Metrolina:
Charlotte-Gastonia-Salisbury, NC-SC - population
2,338,289
- The
Triangle: Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, NC-
population 1,690,557
- The Piedmont
Triad: Greensboro—Winston-Salem—High Point,
NC - population 1,603,101
North Carolina has nine municipalities with populations of more
than 100,000 (U.S. Census Bureau 2008 estimates):
- Charlotte
: Mecklenburg County - population
687,456
- Raleigh
: Wake County - population
392,552
- Greensboro
: Guilford County - population
250,642
- Winston-Salem
: Forsyth County - population
227.834
- Durham
: Durham County - population
223,800
- Fayetteville
: Cumberland County - population
174,091
- Cary
: Wake County - population
134,545
- High
Point
: Guilford County - population
101,835
- Wilmington
: New Hanover County - population
100,192
Image:Charlotte_at_Dusk.jpg|Charlotte
Image:Downtown-Raleigh-from-Western-Boulevard-Overpass-20081012.jpeg|Raleigh
Image:Greensboro_Skyline.jpg|Greensboro
Image:2008-07-12_Durham_skyline.jpg|Durham
Image:WinSalSkyline12.jpg|Winston-Salem
Image:Market_house_copy.jpg|Fayetteville
Image:Cary NC Amtrak Station.jpg|Cary
Image:HighPoint,NC.jpg|High
Point
Image:WilmingtonAerialViewCoastGuard.jpg|Wilmington
Racial makeup and population trends
| County |
Seat |
2010 Projection |
Mecklenburg |
Charlotte |
936,874 |
Wake |
Raleigh |
920,298 |
Guilford |
Greensboro |
480,028 |
Forsyth |
Winston-Salem |
352,810 |
Cumberland |
Fayetteville |
317,094 |
Durham |
Durham |
267,086 |
Buncombe |
Asheville |
234,800 |
Union |
Monroe |
207,738 |
Gaston |
Gastonia |
207,696 |
New
Hanover |
Wilmington |
202,411 |
In 2007, the U.S. Census estimated that the racial makeup of North
Carolina was as follows: 70%
White
American, 25.3%
African-American, 1.2% American Indian, and
the remaining 6.5% are
Hispanic or Latino
(of any race). North Carolina has historically been a
rural state, with most of the population living on
farms or in small towns. However, over the last 30 years the state
has undergone rapid
urbanization, and
today most of North Carolina's residents live in
urban and
suburban areas,
as is the case in most of the United States.
In particular, the
cities of Charlotte
and Raleigh
have become major urban centers, with large,
diverse, mainly affluent and rapidly growing populations.
Most of this growth in
diversity
has been fueled by
immigrants from
Latin America, India, and
Southeast Asia.
African Americans
African Americans make up nearly a
quarter of North Carolina's population. The number of middle-class
blacks has increased since the 1970s. African Americans are
concentrated in the state's eastern Coastal Plain and in parts of
the Piedmont Plateau, where they had historically worked and where
the most new job opportunities are. African-American communities
number by the hundreds in rural counties in the south-central and
northeast, and in predominantly black neighborhoods in the cities:
Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro, Fayetteville, Wilmington
and Winston-Salem.
Asian Americans
The state has a rapidly growing proportion of
Asian Americans, specifically those of
Indian and
Vietnamese descent; these groups nearly
quintupled and tripled, respectively, between 1990 and 2002, as
people arrived in the state for new jobs in the growing economy.
Recent estimates suggest that the state's Asian-American population
has increased significantly since 2000.
European Americans
Settled first, the coastal region attracted primarily English
immigrants of the early migrations, including indentured servants
transported to the colonies and descendants of English who migrated
from Virginia.
In addition, there were waves of Protestant
European immigration, including the British, many Scots
Irish, French Huguenots, and Swiss
Germans who settled New Bern
; many Pennsylvania Germans came down the
Shenandoah
Valley
of Virginia
on the Great Wagon
Road and settled in the western Piedmont and the foothills of the
Blue Ridge. There is a
high concentration of
Scots-Irish in
western North Carolina.
A concentration of Welsh (usually included with others from
Britain
and Ireland)
settled east of present Fayetteville
in the 18th century. For a long time the
wealthier, educated planters of the coastal region dominated state
government.
Hispanics/Latinos
Since 1990 the state has seen an increase in the number of
Hispanics/Latinos. Once
chiefly employed as migrant labor, Hispanic residents of the 1990s
and early 2000s have been attracted to low-skilled jobs that are
the first step on the economic ladder. As a result, growing numbers
of Hispanic immigrants are settling in the state.
Native Americans
North Carolina has the highest American Indian population of states
on the East Coast. The estimated population figures for
Native Americans in
North Carolina (as of 2004) is 110,198. To date, North Carolina
recognizes eight Native American tribal nations within its state
borders. Those tribes are the Coharie, Eastern Band of the
Cherokee, Haliwa-Saponi,
Lumbee, Meherrin,
Sappony, Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation and
Waccamaw-Siouan.
Religion
North Carolina, like other
Southern states, has traditionally
been overwhelmingly
Protestant. The 18th
Century
Moravian Church settlements
in the western Piedmont have provided an interesting contrast as
has the late 19th Century Italian Protestant
Waldensian settlement in
Valdese. By the late 19th century, the largest
Protestant denomination was the
Southern Baptists.
However, the rapid
influx of northerners, people
from Florida
and immigrants from Latin America is steadily
increasing the number of Roman
Catholics and Jews in the state.
The Baptists remain the single largest church in the state,
however. The religious affiliations of the people of North
Carolina, as of 2007, are shown in the chart.
Economy

According to the Bureau of Economic
Analysis, the state's 2008 total gross state product was $400.2
billion, it is the ninth wealthiest state in terms of gross
domestic product. Its 2007
per capita
personal income was $33,735, placing 36th in the nation. North
Carolina's agricultural outputs include
poultry and
eggs,
tobacco,
hogs,
milk,
nursery
stock,
cattle,
sweet potatoes, and
soybeans. However, North Carolina has recently been
affected by
offshoring and industrial
growth in countries like China; one in five manufacturing jobs in
the state has been lost to overseas competition. There has been a
distinct difference in the economic growth of North Carolina's
urban and rural areas.
While large cities such as Charlotte
, Raleigh
, Greensboro
, and others have experienced rapid population and
economic growth over the last thirty years, many of the state's
small towns have suffered from loss of jobs and population.
Most of North Carolina's small towns historically developed around
textile and furniture factories. As these factories closed and
moved to low-wage markets in Asia and Latin America, the small
towns that depended upon them have suffered.
The first gold nugget found in the U.S. was found in Cabarrus
County in 1799. The first gold dollar minted in the U.S. was minted
at the Bechtler Mint in Rutherford County.
Agriculture and manufacturing
Over the past century, North Carolina has grown to become a
national leader in
agriculture,
financial services, and
manufacturing. The state's industrial
output—mainly
textiles,
chemicals,
electrical equipment,
paper and
pulp/paper
products—ranked eighth in the nation in the early 1990s. The
textile industry, which was once a mainstay of the state's economy,
has been steadily losing jobs to producers in Latin America and
Asia for the past 25 years, though the state remains the largest
textile employer in the United States. Over the past few years,
another important Carolina industry, furniture production, has also
been hard hit by jobs moving to Asia (especially China). North
Carolina is the leading producer of tobacco in the country. As one
of North Carolina's earliest sources of revenue, it remains vital
to the local economy, although concerns about whether the federal
government will continue to support subsidies for tobacco farmers
has led some growers to switch to other crops like grapes for
wine or leave farming altogether.Agriculture in
the western counties of North Carolina (particularly Buncombe and
surrounding counties) is presently experiencing a revitalization
coupled with a shift to niche marketing, fueled by the growing
demand for organic and local products.
Finance, technology and research
Charlotte
, North Carolina's largest city, continues to
experience rapid growth, in large part due to the banking &
finance industry. Charlotte is now the second largest banking
center in the United States (after New York
), and is home to Bank of America and Wells Fargo subsidiary, Wachovia. The
Charlotte metro area is also
home to 5 other Fortune 500 companies.
BB&T (Branch Banking & Trust), one
of America's largest banks, was founded in Wilson, NC in 1872.
Today, BB&T's headquarters is in Winston-Salem, although some
operations still take place in Wilson.
The
information and biotechnology industries have been steadily on
the rise since the creation of the Research
Triangle Park
(RTP) in the 1950s. Located between
Raleigh
, Durham
, and Chapel Hill
(mostly in Durham County), it is a globally
prominent research center home to over 170 companies and federal
agencies and is the largest and oldest continuously operating
research and science park in the United States. Anchored by UNC
(Chapel Hill), Duke
(Durham), and NC
State
(Raleigh), the park's proximity to these
research universities has no doubt helped to fuel
growth.
The
North Carolina Research
Campus underway in Kannapolis
(approx. northeast of Charlotte) aims to
enrich and bolster the Charlotte area in the same way that RTP
changed the Raleigh-Durham region.
Encompassing , the complex is a
collaborative project involving Duke University
, University of North Carolina at
Charlotte
, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
, and N.C.
State University
, along with private and corporate investors and
developers. The facility incorporates corporate, academic,
commercial and residential space, oriented toward
research and development (R&D)
and biotechnology.
Similarly, in downtown Winston-Salem
, the Piedmont Triad Research Park is
undergoing an expansion. Approximately thirty miles to the east of
Winston Salem's research park, the University of North Carolina at
Greensboro
and North
Carolina A&T State University
have joined forces to create the Gateway
University Research Park, a technology-based research entity
which will focus its efforts on areas such as nanotechnology,
biotechnology & biochemistry, environmental sciences, and
genetics among other science-based disciplines.
Film and the arts
Film
studios are located in Shelby
, Raleigh
, Durham
, Charlotte
, Asheville
, Wilmington
, and Winston-Salem
. Some of the best-known films and television
shows filmed in the state include: All the Real Girls, The Secret Life of Bees,
Being There, Blue Velvet, Bull Durham, A Walk to Remember, Glory, The Color Purple, Cabin Fever, Super Mario Bros.,
Cape Fear,
Children of the Corn,
The Crow, Dawson's
Creek
, Dirty
Dancing, Evil Dead 2,
The Fugitive,
The Green Mile,
Hannibal, The Last of the
Mohicans, Nell,
One Tree Hill,
Patch Adams,
Shallow Hal, Talladega Nights:
The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Leatherheads, Nights in Rodanthe and 28 Days. Half of Steven King's
movies were filmed in North Carolina. The television show most
associated with North Carolina is
The Andy Griffith Show, which
aired on
CBS-TV from 1960 to 1968.
The
series is set in the fictional small town of Mayberry, North Carolina, and was based on the
real-life town of Mount Airy, North Carolina
, although it was filmed in California
. Mount Airy is the hometown of actor
Andy Griffith. The show is still
popular in
reruns and is frequently shown in
syndication around the nation.
North
Carolina is also home to some of the Southeast's biggest film
festivals, including the National Black Theatre
Festival and the RiverRun International Film
Festival in Winston-Salem
, and the Full Frame Documentary Film
Festival in Durham, North Carolina
.
Tourism
Tourism destinations in the state include amusement parks, golf,
wineries, beaches, meetings and conventions and sports venues. The
North Carolina tourism industry employs more than 190,000 people.
The state is the 6th most visited in the country (preceded by
Florida, California, New York, Nevada and Pennsylvania). The North
Carolina Department of Commerce maintains a Tourism Services
providing matching funds and consultation for development tourism
in the state including rural tourism. Deer park
Tax revenue
North Carolina personal
income tax is
slightly
progressive, with four
incremental brackets ranging from 6.0% to 8.25%. The base state
sales tax is 4.25%. Most taxable sales or
purchases are subject to the state tax as well as the 2.5% local
tax rate levied by all counties, for a combined 6.75%. Mecklenburg
County has an additional 0.5% local tax for public transportation,
bringing sales taxes there to a total 7.25%. The total local rate
of tax in Dare County is 3.5%, producing a combined state and local
rate there of 7.75%. In addition, there is a 30.2¢ tax per gallon
of
gas, a 30¢ tax per pack of cigarettes, a
79¢ tax on wine, and a 48¢ tax on beer. There are also additional
taxes levied against food and prepared foods, normally totaling 2%
and 8% respectively. The
property tax
in North Carolina is locally assessed and collected by the
counties. The three main elements of the property tax system in
North Carolina are
real property,
motor vehicles and
personal property (inventories and
household personal property are exempt). Estimated at 10.5% of
income, North Carolina’s state/local tax burden percentage ranks
23rd highest nationally (taxpayers pay an average of $3,526
per-capita), just below the national average of 10.6%.
North Carolina ranks
40th in the Tax Foundation's State
Business Tax Climate Index with neighboring states ranked as
follows: Tennessee
(18th), Georgia
(19th), South Carolina
(26th) and Virginia
(13th).
Transportation
International/Major regional airports
Rail
Amtrak operates The
Palmetto with service from New York to
Florence to Savannah Georgia, as well as
Silver Star from New York to
Florence to Tampa via Raleigh, Cary, Southern Pines and Hamlet
N.C., and
Silver
Meteor from New York to Florence to Miami via Rocky Mount N.C
and Fayetteville N.C. The state subsidizes both the
Piedmont and
Carolinian intercity rail serving the
Research Triangle. Amtrak has
announced a third subsidized train that will run between Raleigh
and Charlotte. This train will run midday to complement the
Piedmont and Carolinian and include stops in Greensboro,
Burlington, and High Point. There is also the Crescent which runs
from New York to Atlanta during the early morning before
dawn.
Mass transit

LYNX light rail car in Charlotte
Several cities are served by
mass
transit systems.
The
Charlotte Area Transit
System (CATS) operates a historical trolley line and 76 bus and
shuttle routes serving Charlotte and its satellite cities.
In 2007
it opened the LYNX light
rail line connecting Charlotte
with suburban Pineville
. There are future plans to expand LYNX Light
Rail as well as implementation of
Commuter
Rail and
Streetcar.
The
Fayetteville Area System of
Transit
(FAST) serves the city with ten bus routes and two
shuttle routes.
The
Triangle Transit
Authority operates buses that serve the
Triangle region and connect to
municipal bus systems in
Raleigh,
Durham, and
Chapel Hill; recent efforts to build a
light rail from downtown Raleigh to downtown Durham failed as TTA's
projected ridership did not meet federal standards.
Greensboro is serviced by the Greensboro Transit Authority (GTA),
which operates 14 bus routes. Additionally, the Higher Education
Area Transit (HEAT) system provides service to students who attend
the following institutions: Bennett College, Elon University School
of Law, Greensboro College, Guilford College, Guilford Technical
Community College, North Carolina A&T State University, and
University of North Carolina at Greensboro. The HEAT service
provides transportation between campuses and various other
destinations, including downtown Greensboro.
Winston-Salem Transit Authority (WSTA)
operates 30 bus routes around the city of Winston-Salem
; additionally, WSTA recently completed construction
of a central downtown mult-modal transportation center with 16
covered bus bays adjacent to a large enclosed lobby/waiting
area. There are future plans being discussed for a $52
million streetcar system connecting Piedmont Triad Research
Park/Downtown with Wake Forest University Baptist Medical
Center.
Piedmont Authority for Regional Transportation (PART) is the
Triad's 10-county regional organization with the goal of enhancing
all forms of transportation through regional cooperation. PART
Express Bus provides express shuttle service to each major Triad
city from Piedmont Triad International Airport, while Connections
Express connects the Triad to Duke and UNC Medical Centers. PART is
also administering and developing several rail service studies that
include both commuter and intercity rail.
Wilmington's Wave Transit operates six bus lines within the city as
well as five shuttles to nearby areas and a downtown trolley.
In July 2008, Western Piedmont Regional Transit Authority began
serving Burke, Caldwell, Catawba and Alexander counties in the
region just west of Charlotte.
Jacksonville recently began a trial bus system called the LOOP,
which runs two routes through the city and nearby Camp Lejeune. But
this loop has yet to be made perminant.
Major highways
The North Carolina Highway System consists of a vast network of
Interstate highways,
U.S. routes, and
state
routes. North Carolina has the largest state maintained highway
network in the United States. Major highways include:
Politics and government
The
governor,
lieutenant governor, and eight elected
executive department heads form the
Council of
State. Ten other executive department heads appointed by the
governor form the
North Carolina
Cabinet. The state's current
governor is
Democrat Bev Perdue, the first female governor of the
state. The
North
Carolina General Assembly, or Legislature, consists of two
houses: a 50-member Senate and a 120-member House of
Representatives. For the
2007–2008
session, the current
President Pro
Tempore of the Senate is
Democrat Marc Basnight (the
Lieutenant Governor of
North Carolina is the President of the Senate); The
House
Speaker is
Democrat Joe Hackney.
The
Supreme Court of
North Carolina is the state's highest
appellate court; it numbers seven justices.
The
North Carolina Court
of Appeals is the only intermediate appellate court in the
state; it consists of fifteen judges who rule in rotating panels of
three. Together, the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals constitute
the appellate division of the court system. The trial division
includes the Superior Court and the District Court. All
felony criminal cases, civil cases involving more
than $10,000 and misdemeanor and infraction appeals from District
Court are tried in Superior Court. A
jury of 12
hears the criminal cases. Civil cases—such as
divorce,
custody,
child support, and cases involving
less than $10,000—are heard in District Court, along with criminal
cases involving
misdemeanors and lesser
infractions. The trial of a
criminal
case in District Court is always without a jury. The District
Court also hears juvenile cases involving children under the age of
16 who are delinquent and children under the age of 18 who are
undisciplined, dependent, neglected, or abused. Magistrates accept
guilty pleas for minor misdemeanors, accept guilty pleas for
traffic violations, and accept waivers of trial for
worthless-check cases among other things. In civil
cases, the magistrate is authorized to try small claims involving
up to $5,000 including landlord eviction cases. Magistrates also
perform civil marriages.
State constitution
The state constitution governs the structure and function of the
North Carolina government. It is the highest legal document for the
state and subjugates North Carolina
law. Like
all state constitutions in the United States, this constitution is
subject to
federal judicial review. Any provision of the state
constitution can be nullified if it conflicts with
federal law and the
United States Constitution.
North Carolina has had three
constitutions:
- 1776: Ratified December 18, 1776, as the first constitution of
the independent state. The Declaration of Rights was ratified the
preceding day.
- 1868: Framed in accordance with the Reconstruction Acts
after North Carolina was readmitted into the Union. It was a major
reorganization and modification of the original into fourteen
articles. It also introduced township which each county was
required to create, the only southern state to do so.
- 1971: Minor consolidation of the 1868 constitution and
subsequent amendments.
Federal apportionments
North Carolina currently has 13
congressional
districts, which, when combined with its two
U.S. Senate seats,
gives the state 15
electoral votes.
In the
111th Congress,
the state is represented by eight
Democratic and five
Republican members of congress,
plus one Republican and one Democratic Senator.
Politics
North Carolina is politically dominated by the
Democratic and
Republican political parties.
Since the 19th century,
third
parties, such as the
Green Party and
Libertarian Party, have
had difficulty making inroads in state politics. They have both run
candidates for office with neither party's winning a state office.
After engaging in a lawsuit with the state over ballot access, the
Libertarian Party qualified to be on the ballot after submitting
more than 70,000 petition signatures
Historically, North Carolina was politically divided between the
eastern and western parts of the state. Before the
Civil War, the eastern half of North
Carolina supported the Democratic Party, primarily because the
region contained most of the state's planter slaveholders who
profited from large cash crops. Yeomen farmers in the western
Piedmont and mountains were not slaveholders and tended to support
the
Whig party, seen as
more moderate on slavery and more supportive of business
interests.
Following the Civil War, Republicans, including newly enfranchised
freedmen, controlled the state government during Reconstruction.
When federal troops were removed in the national compromise of
1877, the Democratic Party gained control of the state government,
partly through white paramilitary groups conducting a campaign of
violence against blacks to discourage them from voting, especially
in the Piedmont counties. Despite that, the number of black
officeholders peaked in the 1880s as they were elected to local
offices in black-majority districts.
Following a downturn in food prices, in 1892 many of the nation's
farmers created the
Populist Party to
represent their interests. The party was strengthened by the
Panic of 1893 and subsequent
nationwide economic depression. In North Carolina, the Republican
and
Populist parties
formed an interracial alliance, called an
electoral fusion, in 1894 which resulted in
control of the state legislature. In 1896 the Republican-Populist
alliance took control of the governorship and many state offices.
In response, many white Democrats began efforts to reduce voter
rolls and turnout. During the late 1890s, white Democrats began to
pass legislation to restrict voter registration and reduce voting
by blacks and poor whites.
With the first step accomplished in 1896 by making registration
more complicated and reducing black voter turnout, in 1898 the
state's Democratic Party regained control of the state government.
Contemporary observers described the election as a "contest
unquestionably accompanied by violence, intimidation and fraud - to
what extent we do not know - in the securing of a majority of
60,000 for the new arrangement". Using the slogan, "
White Supremacy", and backed by influential
newspapers such as the
Raleigh News and Observer
under publisher
Josephus Daniels,
the Democrats ousted the Populist-Republican majority.
Encouraged by the U.S.
Supreme
Court
ruling that upheld the Mississippi disfranchising constitution in Williams v. Mississippi (1898), North
Carolina legislators passed similar provisions in 1900, as did
eight other states. Provisions included imposition of
poll taxes, residency requirements, and
literacy tests. Initially the
grandfather clause was used to exempt
illiterate whites from the literacy test, but many were gradually
disfranchised as well. By these efforts, by 1904 white Democratic
legislators had completely eliminated black voter turnout in North
Carolina. Although African Americans mounted litigation and the
U.S. Supreme Court began to find specific provisions
unconstitutional (as in
Guinn
v. United
States (1915) which struck down the grandfather clause),
state legislatures responded with new mechanisms for restricting
voter registration. Disfranchisement lasted until the
mid-1960s.
With some notable exceptions, North Carolina then became a part of
the
"Solid Democratic South". The Solid
South was based on disfranchisement of most African Americans and
tens of thousands of poor whites. Southern states managed to keep
Congressional apportionment based on total population, despite
having deprived about half the citizens of the power to vote.
However, some counties in North Carolina's western Piedmont and
Appalachian Mountains continued to vote Republican, continuing a
tradition that dated from their yeoman culture and opposition to
secession before the Civil War. In 1952,
aided by the presidential candidacy of popular war hero
Dwight Eisenhower, the Republicans were
successful in electing a U.S. Congressman,
Charles R. Jonas.
In the mid-20th century Republicans began to attract white voters
in North Carolina and other Southern states. This was after passage
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 under
Democratic President Lyndon Johnson, which extended Federal
protection and enforcement of civil rights for all American
citizens. Because the Democratic Party had supported civil rights
at the national level, most black voters (just under 25% of North
Carolina's population in the 1960 census) initially aligned with
the Democrats when they regained their franchise. In 1972, aided by
the landslide re-election of
Richard
Nixon, Republicans in North Carolina elected their first
governor and U.S. senator of the twentieth century.
Senator
Jesse Helms played a major role
in renewing the Republican Party and turning North Carolina into a
two-party state. Under his banner, many conservative white
Democrats in the central and eastern parts of North Carolina began
to vote Republican, at least in national elections. In part, this
was due to dissatisfaction with the national Democratic Party's
stance on issues of
civil rights and
racial integration. In later
decades, conservatives rallied to Republicans over social issues
such as prayer in school,
gun rights,
abortion rights, and
gay rights.
Except for regional son
Jimmy Carter's
election in
1976, North Carolina voted Republican in every presidential
election from 1968 to 2004. At the state level, however, the
Democrats still control most of the elected offices, and as large
numbers of out-of-state residents moved to the state in the 1990s
and 2000s the Republican dominance in presidential elections has
eroded. President
George W. Bush carried North Carolina with 56% of the
vote in 2004, but in 2008 Democratic presidential candidate
Barack Obama narrowly defeated
Republican candidate
John McCain in
North Carolina; he was the first Democratic presidential nominee to
win the state in 32 years.
The Democratic Party's strength is
increasingly centered in densely-populated urban counties such as
Mecklenburg
, Wake
, Durham
, and Guilford
, where the bulk of the state's population
growth has occurred. However, the Republicans maintain a
strong presence in many of North Carolina's rural and small-town
counties, which have become heavily Republican. The
suburban areas around the state's larger cities
usually hold the balance of power and can vote both ways, although
in 2008 they trended towards the Democratic Party. State and local
elections have become highly competitive compared to the previous
one-party decades of the 20th century. For example, eastern North
Carolina routinely elects numerous Republican sheriffs and county
commissioners, a shift that did not happen until the 1980s.
Currently, Democrats hold one of two US Senate seats, the
governorship, majorities in both houses of the state legislature,
state supreme court, and an 8 to 5 majority of U.S. House seats, as
of January 2009.
Two
Presidents of the United
States were born and raised in North Carolina, but both men
began their political careers in neighboring Tennessee
, and were elected President from that state.
The two men were
James K. Polk and
Andrew
Johnson. A third U.S. President,
Andrew Jackson, may also have been born in
North Carolina.
However, as he was born almost precisely on
the state line with South Carolina
, both states claim him as a native son, and
historians have debated for decades over the precise site of
Jackson's birthplace. On the grounds of the old state capitol
building in Raleigh
is a statue dedicated to the Presidents who were
born in the state; Jackson is included in the statue.
Jackson himself stated that he was born in what later became South
Carolina, but at the time of his birth, the line between the states
had not been surveyed.
North Carolina remains a
control state. This is
probably due to the state's strongly conservative Protestant
heritage. Two of the state's counties - Graham and Yancey, which
are both located in
rural areas - remain
"
dry" (the sale of alcoholic beverages is
illegal).
[3453] However, the remaining 98 North Carolina
counties allow the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages, as
is the case in most of the United States. Even in rural areas, the
opposition to selling and drinking alcoholic beverages is
declining, as the decreasing number of "dry" counties
indicates.
In 2005, following substantial political maneuvering, the state
legislature voted to implement a
state lottery, thus
altering North Carolina's reputation as the "anti-
lottery" state, where owning a lottery ticket from
another state was once a felony. By 2005, every state surrounding
North Carolina had a lottery in operation. The
North Carolina Education
Lottery began selling tickets on March 31, 2006. The lottery
has had unexpectedly low sales since its inception.
Education
Elementary and secondary education
Elementary and secondary public schools are overseen by the
North
Carolina Department of Public Instruction. The
North
Carolina Superintendent of Public Instruction is the secretary
of the
North
Carolina State Board of Education, but the board, rather than
the superintendent, holds most of the legal authority for making
public education policy. In 2009, the board's chairman also became
the "chief executive officer" for the state's school system. North
Carolina has 115 public school systems, each of which is overseen
by a local school board. A county may have one or more systems
within it. The largest school systems in North Carolina are the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Schools,
Wake
County Public School System,
Guilford County Schools,
Winston-Salem/Forsyth
County Schools, and
Cumberland County Schools. In
total there are 2,338 public schools in the state, including 93
charter schools.
Colleges and universities
In 1795,
North Carolina opened the first public university in the United
States—the University of North Carolina (currently named the
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
). More than 200 years later, the University of North
Carolina
system encompasses 17 public universities including UNC-Chapel Hill, North
Carolina State University
, East Carolina University
, Western Carolina University
, UNC
Charlotte
, UNC Greensboro, UNC Wilmington
and Appalachian State
University
. The system also supports several well-known
historically black
colleges and universities such as North
Carolina A&T State University
, North Carolina Central
University
, Winston-Salem State
University, Elizabeth City State
University
, and Fayetteville State
University
. Along with its public universities, North
Carolina has 58 public
community
colleges in its
community college
system.
North
Carolina's most prestigious private
universities and colleges are: Wake
Forest University
, Duke
University
, and Davidson
College
Sports and recreation
Professional sports
Motorsports
The state is also a center in American
motorsports, with more than 80% of
NASCAR racing teams and related industries located in
the Piedmont region.
The largest race track in North Carolina is
Lowe's
Motor Speedway
in Concord
where the Sprint Cup
Series holds three major races each year. The
NASCAR Hall of Fame, located in
Charlotte, is due to open in 2010. Many of NASCAR's most famous
driver dynasties, the Pettys, Earnhardts, Allisons, Jarretts and
Waltrips all live within an hour of Charlotte.
In
off-road motocycle
racing, the Grand National
Cross Country series makes two stops in North Carolina,
Morganton
and Yadkinville
; the only other state to host two GNCC events is
Ohio
. For
sport amateurs, the state holds the
State Games of North Carolina
each year.
Football
Despite having over nine million people, North Carolina's
population being spread out over three major metropolitan areas
precluded attracting any
major professional sports
league teams until 1974, when the
New York Stars of the
World Football League was relocated to
Charlotte in the middle of the season and renamed the Charlotte
Hornets (although the team was referred to as the Charlotte Stars
for the first game in Charlotte).
The National Football League is
represented by the Carolina
Panthers, who began play in 1995, and call Charlotte's Bank of
America Stadium
home. In 2004, the NBA returned to the state with
the Charlotte Bobcats who play
their home games in Time Warner Cable Arena
. The Carolina RailHawks are a men's
professional soccer team in the United Soccer Leagues, and their home
field is the WakeMed Soccer Park
in Cary
. The American Indoor Football
Association is represented by the Fayetteville Guard who plays at Crown
Coliseum
. North Carolina was home to the
Charlotte Rage and the
Carolina Cobras of the
Arena Football League.
Basketball
to that, the
Carolina Cougars of
the
American Basketball
Association played in various North Carolina cites (playing in
the ABA for five seasons, ending in the spring of 1974). Current
Charlotte Bobcats coach Larry
Brown started his coaching career as head coach of the
Cougars.
The first successful franchise from a major professional sports
league to be created in North Carolina were the
Charlotte Hornets of the
National Basketball
Association , which began play in the 1987–88 season. The state
remains without a
Major League
Baseball franchise despite numerous efforts to attract a team
(including the 2006 push to relocate the
Florida Marlins to Charlotte).
Hockey

Stanley Cup awards ceremony at the RBC
Center
June 19, 2006, the
Carolina
Hurricanes, a
National Hockey
League franchise based in Raleigh, won the
Stanley Cup.
The Hurricanes, who call the RBC Center
home, are the first major professional sports team
from North Carolina to win their sport's highest
championship. The team moved to the state in 1996 and
played their games at the Greensboro Coliseum
for their first 2 seasons in North Carolina before
moving to their current home at the Entertainment and Sports
Arena
(later named the RBC Center) in
Raleigh.
Baseball

Durham Bulls Athletic Park
North Carolina is a state known for minor league sports, notably
the setting of the 1987 comedy
Bull
Durham about the
Durham Bulls
of the
Carolina League. The state
boasts over 30 minor league baseball teams in six different
minor leagues, including the
Triple-A
International League
teams in Charlotte and Durham. There are a number of indoor
football, indoor
soccer, minor league
basketball, and
minor
league ice hockey teams throughout the state.
North Carolina has
become a top golf destination for players
across the nation, notably in Pinehurst
, and the community of Southern
Pines
of Moore County
which is home to over 50 golf courses, as well as
the coastal corridor between historic Wilmington, North Carolina
and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina with over 110 golf
courses.
Wrestling
From the 1930s to the early 1990s, the Mid Atlantic Championship
Wrestling professional wrestling promotion, under the Crockett
family, operated almost entirely out of Charlotte. Mid Atlantic was
a long-time member of the
National Wrestling Alliance and
many of their top stars appeared on national television on NWA and
later WCW events. Many retired or still-current wrestlers live in
the Charlotte/Lake Norman area, including
Ric
Flair,
Ricky Steamboat,
Matt and Jeff Hardy,
Stan
Lane,
Shannon Moore and
R-Truth
Rodeo
North Carolina has become a hot bed for professional
bull riding . It is the home of the 1995
PRCA World
Champion Bull Rider Jerome Davis. It is also home to several
professional stock contractors and bull owners including Thomas
Teague of Teague Bucking Bulls. The Golden Belt Buckle state
champion for 2009-2010 is Brad Ballew out of Asheville, North
Carolina.
The Southern Extreme Bull Riding
Association SEBRA headquarters are located in
Archdale
.
College sports
Although North Carolina did not have a major-league professional
sports franchise until the 1980s, the state has long been known as
a hotbed of
college basketball.
Since the formation of the
Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) in
1953, the conference's North Carolina member schools have excelled
in conference play.
The University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
(UNC), Duke University
, and North Carolina State
University
are all located within of one another, creating
fierce rivalries. Wake Forest University
, another ACC member, is located less than to the
west of these schools in Winston-Salem
. UNC has won five
NCAA national championships in basketball: 1957, 1982,
1993, 2005, and 2009. Duke has won three NCAA championships: 1991,
1992, and 2001. NC State has won two: 1974 and 1983. The
Duke-UNC basketball rivalry has been
called one of the best rivalries in sports and the two schools are
often contenders for the national title.
In addition to the
ACC schools, the University of North Carolina at
Charlotte
went to the NCAA's Final
Four in 1977, and Davidson
College near Charlotte went to the NCAA's "Elite Eight" in
1968, 1969, and 2008. In 2007
Barton College in Wilson won the NCAA
Division II championship in men's basketball. Although basketball
remains the dominant college sport in North Carolina, several
schools have also enjoyed success in football and other sports.
Wake
Forest University has also enjoyed substantial success in football;
in 2007 they won the ACC football championship and participated in
the 2007 Orange Bowl in Miami,
Florida
. This was the first major bowl berth for
a North Carolina-based team since Duke defeated Arkansas in the
1961 Cotton Bowl Classic.
Elon University made 4 trips to the
NAIA National Championship in football game winning back to back
championships in 1980 and 1981.
Lenoir-Rhyne University won the 1960
NAIA National Championship in football.
Appalachian State
University
, Elon University,
Western
Carolina University
and North
Carolina A&T State University
have all made trips to the NCAA Football
Championship Subdivision championship playoffs. Western
Carolina University
has made one trip to this championship game, while
Appalachian State
University
became the first school to win the championship
three years in a row from 2005 to 2007.
Recreation
Due to geography, rich history, and growing industry, North
Carolina provides a large range of recreational activities from
swimming at the
beach to
skiing in the
mountains. North Carolina offers
fall colors, freshwater and saltwater
fishing,
hunting,
birdwatching,
agritourism,
ATV trails,
ballooning,
rock
climbing,
biking,
hiking,
skiing,
boating and
sailing,
camping,
canoeing,
caving (spelunking),
gardens,
and
arboretums. North Carolina has
theme parks,
aquariums,
zoos,
museums,
historic sites,
lighthouses, elegant
theaters,
concert halls,
and
fine dining.
North
Carolinians enjoy outdoor recreation utilizing numerous local bike
paths, 34 state
parks, and 14 national
parks which are the Appalachian National Scenic
Trail, the Blue
Ridge Parkway
, Cape Hatteras National
Seashore
, Cape Lookout National
Seashore
, Carl
Sandburg Home National Historic Site
at Flat Rock
, Croatan National Forest
in Eastern
North Carolina, Fort Raleigh National Historic
Site
at Manteo
, Great Smoky Mountains National
Park
, Guilford Courthouse National Military
Park
in Greensboro
, Moores Creek National
Battlefield
near Currie
, the Overmountain
Victory National Historic Trail, Old Salem
National Historic Site in Winston-Salem
, the Trail of Tears National
Historic Trail, Wright Brothers National
Memorial
in Kill Devil Hills, North
Carolina
, Uwharrie
National Forest.
Other information
Music
North Carolina is known particularly for its tradition of
old-time music, and many recordings were made
in the early 20th century by folk song collector
Bascom Lamar Lunsford. Musicians such
as the
North Carolina
Ramblers helped solidify the sound of
country music in the late 1920s, while the
influential
bluegrass musician
Doc Watson also came from North Carolina.
Both North and South Carolina are a hotbed for traditional rural
blues, especially the style known as the
Piedmont blues.
The Triangle area has long been a well-known center for
folk,
rock,
metal, and
punk.
James Taylor grew up around Chapel Hill
and his 1968 song "
Carolina in My
Mind" has been called an unofficial anthem for the state.
Also coming from Chapel Hill is the band Squirrel Nut Zippers, who
played a big part in the 1990s swing revival.
Famous food and drinks from North Carolina
A nationally-famous
cuisine from North
Carolina is pork
barbecue. However, there
are strong regional differences and rivalries over the sauces and
method of preparation used in making the barbecue. Eastern North
Carolina pork barbecue uses a
vinegar and
red pepper based sauce and the "whole hog" is cooked, thus using
both white and dark meat.
The "capital" of eastern Carolina barbecue
is usually considered to be the town of Wilson
, near Raleigh
. Western North Carolina pork barbecue uses a
tomato-based sauce, heavily diluted with vinegar, and only the pork
shoulder (dark meat) is used.
The "capital" of western Carolina barbecue
is usually considered to be the Piedmont
Triad town of Lexington
, home of the Lexington Barbecue Festival
which brings in over 100,000 visitors each October.
North
Carolina is the birthplace of Pepsi-Cola,
first produced in 1890 in New Bern
. A regional
soft
drink created and still based in the state is
Cheerwine.
Krispy Kreme, a
popular chain of doughnut stores, was started in North Carolina;
the company's headquarters are in Winston-Salem
. Despite its name, the hot sauce
Texas Pete was created in North Carolina; its
headquarters are also in Winston-Salem.
The Hardees fast-food chain was started in Rocky
Mount
. Another fast-food chain, Bojangles', was started in Charlotte
, and has its corporate headquarters there. A
popular North Carolina restaurant chain is
Golden Corral.
Started in 1973, the chain was founded
in Fayetteville
, with headquarters located in Raleigh
. Popular pickle brand
Mount Olive Pickle
Company was founded in Mount Olive
in 1926. Cook Out, a
popular fast food chain featuring burgers, hot dogs, and milkshakes
in a wide variety of flavors, was founded in Greensboro in 1989 and
operates exclusively in North Carolina.
Ships named for the state
Several ships have been named for the state.
Most famous is the
USS
North Carolina
, a World War II battleship. The ship served in several
battles against the forces of Imperial Japan in the
Pacific theater during
the
war. Now decommissioned, it is part
of the USS
North Carolina Battleship Memorial in
Wilmington. Another
USS
North Carolina, a nuclear attack
submarine, was commissioned in Wilmington, NC on
May 3, 2008.
State symbols
Armed Forces installations
According to former Governor
Mike
Easley, North Carolina is the "most military friendly state in
the nation."
Fort Bragg
, near Fayetteville
, is the largest and most comprehensive military base in the United States and is the
headquarters of the XVIII Airborne
Corps, 82nd Airborne
Division, and the U.S. Army Special Operations
Command.
Serving as the airwing for Fort Bragg is
Pope Air
Force Base
also located near Fayetteville. Marine
Corps Base Camp Lejeune
which, when combined with nearby bases Marine
Corps Air Station Cherry Point
, MCAS New River
, Camp
Geiger
, Camp
Johnson, Stone Bay and Courthouse Bay,
makes up the largest concentration of Marines and sailors in the
world. MCAS Cherry Point
is home of the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing.
Located
in Goldsboro
, Seymour Johnson Air Force
Base
is home of the 4th
Fighter Wing and 916th Air
Refueling Wing. One of the busiest air stations in the
United States Coast Guard
is located at the Coast Guard Air Station
in Elizabeth City
. Also stationed in North Carolina is the
Military Ocean Terminal at Sunny Point in Southport.
See also
References
- Constance E. Richards, "Contact and Conflict",
American Archaeologist, Spring 2008, p.14, accessed 26
June 2008
- US Census Bureau
- David G. Moore, Robin A. Beck, Jr., and Christopher
B. Rodning, "Joara and Fort San Juan: culture contact at the edge
of the world", Antiquity, Vol.78, No. 229, March 2004,
accessed 26 June 2008
- Constance E. Richards, "Contact and Conflict" Warren Wilson College, American
Archaeologist, Spring 2008, accessed 26 June 2008
- North Carolina State Library - North Carolina
History
- Fenn and Wood, Natives and Newcomers, pp. 24-25
- Powell, North Carolina Through Four Centuries, p.
105
- Lefler and Newsome, (1973)
- Paul Heinegg, Free African Americans in Virginia,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware,
Accessed 15 February 2008
- John Hope Franklin, Free Negroes of North Carolina,
1789-1860, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
1941, reprint, 1991
- NC Business History
- Historical Census Browser, 1860 US Census,
University of Virginia, accessed 21 March 2008
- Center for Civic Education
- The University of North Carolina
- Library of Congress
- Classbrain.com
- Table 1: Estimates of Population Change for the
United States and States, and for Puerto Rico and State Rankings:
July 1, 2005 to July 1, 2006. United States Census Bureau.
December 22, 2006. Last accessed December 22, 2006.
- North Carolina-Colonization-The Southern
Colonies
- Pewforum.org
- U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
- Fishman, China, Inc.: How the Rise of the Next Superpower
Challenges America and the World, p. 179
- Duke University
- NC Department of Commerce Wine and Grape Industry
web site.
- The Research Triangle Park
- Change in Dare County Sales and Use Tax Rate
- Western Piedmont Regional Transit
Authority
- NC Libertarians release candidate slate
- Michael J. Klarman, From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The
Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality, New York:
Oxford University Press, 2006, p.30
- Richard H. Pildes, "Democracy, Anti-Democracy, and the
Canon", Constitutional Commentary, Vol.17, 2000, p.
27, accessed 10 March 2008
- Albert Shaw, The American Monthly Review of
Reviews, Vol. XXII, July-December 1900, pp. 273-274,
accessed 27 March 2008
- Richard H. Pildes, "Democracy, Anti-Democracy, and the
Canon", Constitutional Commentary, Vol.17, 2000, pp.
12-13, accessed 10 March 2008
- Historical Census Browser, 1960 US Census,
University of Virginia, accessed 13 March 2008
- Lottery commissioner says games are doing well despite low
sales | WWAY NewsChannel 3 | Wilmington NC News
- News & Observer: Perdue's choice to lead state's
school system takes office
- Secretary of State of North Carolina.
Further reading
- William S. Powell and Jay Mazzocchi, eds.
Encyclopedia of North Carolina (2006) 1320pp; 2000
articles by 550 experts on all topics; ISBN 0-8078-3071-2
- James Clay and Douglas Orr, eds., North Carolina Atlas:
Portrait of a Changing Southern State (University of North
Carolina Press, 1971).
- Crow; Jeffrey J. and Larry E. Tise; Writing North Carolina
History University of North Carolina Press, (1979) online
- Fleer; Jack D. North Carolina Government &
Politics University of Nebraska Press, (1994) online political
science textbook
- Marianne M. Kersey and Ran Coble, eds., North Carolina
Focus: An Anthology on State Government, Politics, and Policy,
2d ed., (Raleigh: North Carolina Center for Public Policy Research,
1989).
- Lefler; Hugh Talmage. A Guide to the Study and Reading of
North Carolina History University of North Carolina Press, (1963) online
- Hugh Talmage Lefler and Albert Ray Newsome, North Carolina:
The History of a Southern State University of North Carolina
Press (1954, 1963, 1973), college textbook
- Paul Luebke, Tar Heel Politics: Myths and Realities
(University of North Carolina Press, 1990).
- William S. Powell, North Carolina through Four
Centuries University of North Carolina Press (1989), college
textbook.
Primary sources
- Hugh Lefler, North Carolina History Told by Contemporaries
(University of North Carolina Press, numerous editions since
1934)
- H. G. Jones, North Carolina Illustrated, 1524-1984
(University of North Carolina Press, 1984)
- North Carolina Manual, published biennially by the
Department of the Secretary of State since 1941.
External links
- General
- Government and education
- Other