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  1. Nov 9, 2009 · North Carolina’s Native American History . People began living in the area now known as North Carolina at least 12,000 years ago.Starting around 700 A.D., indigenous people created more ...

  2. Colonial North Carolina (1600-1763) North Carolina’s proprietors envisioned elaborate courts, feudal manors, and silk production, but managing a colony was more complicated than they’d expected. In the colony’s first fifty years, North Carolina’s settlers faced corrupt officials, violent rebellion, Indian war, isolation, disease ...

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  4. Aug 11, 2019 · The gap between black and white public education in North Carolina increased dramatically. From 1904 to 1920, annual spending per white school averaged $3,442 but only averaged $500 for black schools. School terms were longer in white majority counties that levied local taxes than in black majority counties.

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  5. LEARN NC’s “digital textbook” for North Carolina history provides a new model for teaching and learning. It makes primary sources central to the learning experience, using them to tell the stories of the past rather than merely illustrating it. Special web-based tools help you learn to read those sources and ask good questions of them.

  6. Bertie County, established in 1722 from a section of the Chowan precinct, is located in the northeastern part of North Carolina. A county of rich soil and numerous waterways, Bertie was once inhabited by the Tuscarora. Nathaniel Batts was the first white European to traverse modern-day Bertie, and the Batts House remains a testament to his settlement.

  7. Jun 29, 2008 · ""A Brief History of North Carolina"" is a historical book written by Edwin Anderson Alderman and originally published in 1896. The book provides a comprehensive overview of the history of North Carolina, from the earliest Native American settlements to the end of the 19th century.

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    • Edwin Anderson Alderman
  8. Revolutionary North Carolina (1775-1783) North Carolina’s population at the beginning of the 1770s, was an estimated 266,000, of whom 69,600 were black. [5] Numerous slave revolts and insurrections at the start of the decade frightened many of the tidewater elite, alienating their alliances against the British.

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