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Historical Records of North Carolina Counties - The County Records

$ 7.38

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Condition: New CD with scanned pages from original publications.
  • State: North Carolina
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Type: CD
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Year: 1939
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days

    Description

    The Historical Records
    Of North Carolina
    -
    The County Records -
    Prepared by the Works Progress Administration
    1,500 pages, indexed, searchable
    -
    Bonus Book –
    U.S. Census of Agriculture – 1959
    Farms, Farm Characteristics,
    Livestock and Products,
    Crops, Fruits, Values
    By U.S. Department of Commerce
    800+ pages, Indexed, Searchable
    *****************************************************************************************
    Digital
    CD
    Requires PDF reader to view
    autoboot menu for easy pc acces; manually open on mac
    **********************************************************************************
    Preface
    PREFACE
    The Historical Records Survey of the Works Progress
    Administration was organized early in 1936 for the primary-
    p
    urpose of inventorying the archives of governmental units in
    the United States other than the Federal government. The project in North Carolina was one of the very first to be organized, and will probably be the first to complete the work as far as county records are concerned. It is with pleasure that I congratulate Dr. Crittenden, Mr. Lacy, and their able staff of workers upon the completion of the first volume of their inventories of county records.
    The basic principle upon which the project has been operated on a nation-wide basis is the mimeographing of county inventories as separate units in a series. Each unit is self-contained,
    although this resultis achieved only at the cost of the duplication of a considerable body of information concerning county government and the contents of individual series of records which are uniform throughout a number of counties.
    I have felt justified in permitting the project in North Carolina to deviate from the nation-wide system by covering all the counties in one set of volumes in which the information on county government and the various series of records would be given only once. The printing of these volumes has been made possible through the cooperation of the North Carolina Historical Commission, of which Dr. Crittenden is secretary.
    I believe that the published lists of the county records of North Carolina will prove to be of great value in the administration of county government and also that they will open up a vast field of research for students of the social sciences.
    Introduction to the County Records
    North Carolina's counties do not vary so extremely in size
    as do those of the nation at large, from New York County,
    New York, with only 22 square miles, to San Bernardino
    County, California, with the enormous area of 20,175 square
    m
    iles. The two smallest North Carolina counties are Chowan,
    in the east, with 165 square miles, and Mitchell, in the west,
    with 213 square miles. The two largest counties are Robeson,
    with 990 square miles, and Bladen, with 976 square miles —
    both in the southeast.The average size of the North Caro
    lina county is 487.4 square miles, as compared with a national
    average of 913 square miles.
    The counties vary considerably in age. Oldest are Curri-
    tuck, Pasquotank, Parquimans, and Chowan, created (as pre-
    cincts) in 1670, in the northeastern or Albemarle section.
    Youngest are Hoke, in the south central region, and Avery,
    in the mountains, both established as recently as 1911. Since
    the east was settled first, the eastern counties tend to be older
    than those in the west. There are, however, numerous excep-
    tions. For example. Buncombe (county seat Asheville), in the
    heart of the mountains, as formed as early as 1792, while
    Dare, farthest east of all the counties, was not established until
    1870.
    The 1930 census gave North Carolina a population of
    3,170,276, an increase of 611,153 or 23.9 per cent since 1920,
    and an average of 65 persons per square mile. Only 13 coun-
    ties (Buncombe, Cabarrus, Catawba, Cleveland, Durham, For-
    syth, Gaston, Guilford, Mecklenburg, New Hanover, Rowan,
    Wake, and Wilson) had a density of more than 100 persons
    to the square mile, while 11 counties (Bladen, Brunswick,
    Camden, Clay, Currituck, Dare, Hyde, Onslow, Pender, Swain,
    and Tyrrell) had less than 25 persons to the square mile. All
    the counties but five showed an increase in population since
    1920. The two most populous counties were Guilford, with
    133,010, and Mecklenburg, with 127,971. The smallest popu-
    lations were those of Tyrrell, with 5,164, and Dare, with 5,202.
    Most of the North Carolina counties are to be classed as
    rural. In 1930 only six of them (Buncombe, Durham, Forsyth,
    Mecklenburg, New Hanover, and Pasquotank) had each a city
    containing more than one-half its total population. Forty-five
    had no town with as many as 2,500 population. There had
    been a rapid growth of urban population since 1920, but the
    percentage of urban population (in towns of 2,500 or over)
    was still only 25.5. The largest towns were Charlotte (Meck-
    lenburg County), with a population of 82,675; Winston-Salem
    (Forsyth County), with 75,274; Greensboro (Guilford County),
    with 53,569; Durham (Durham County), with 52,037; and
    Asheville (Buncombe County), with 50,193.
    Just insert the CD into your Windows computer and use the menu to open your book(s), and to download the latest version of Adobe Reader.
    If your system security prevents the CD from auto loading, just double-left click the Autorun file on the CD.
    For MAC
    (or Windows) manually open the PDF file for your book. Don’t forget to also open the pictures/maps and audio files.
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