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Welcome to North Carolina





"Esse Quam Videri"
("to be rather than to seem.")


The Tar Heel State
Origin: In North Carolina's early years, tar was one of the state's major products. There are two contradictory stories about the origin of this nickname. Both stories concern Civil War battles in which North Carolina troops were involved. More here.

The Old North State
Origin: In 1710, Carolina was divided into northern and southern sections. The southern section was called South Carolina and the northern section was called North Carolina. "The Old North State" is a reference to the northern section.


North Carolina's official flag was adopted in 1885. The upper date, May 20th, 1775, commemorates the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence (named for Mecklenburg County, where North Carolina citizens met to declare their freedom from Great Britain, although the original document was destroyed and some people have questioned its existence). The lower date, April 12th, 1776, commemorates the adoption of the Halifax Resolves (this was the first official action by a colony calling for independence from Britain).

A Brief History of North Carolina


English colonists, sent by Sir Walter Raleigh, unsuccessfully attempted to settle Roanoke Island in 1585 and 1587. Virginia Dare, born there in 1587, was the first child of English parentage born in America.

In 1653 the first permanent settlements were established by English colonists from Virginia near the Roanoke and Chowan rivers. The region was established as an English proprietary colony in 1663–1665 and in its early history was the scene of Culpepper's Rebellion (1677), the Quaker-led Cary Rebellion (1708), the Tuscarora Indian War (1711–1713), and many pirate raids.

During the American Revolution, there was relatively little fighting within the state, but many North Carolinians saw action elsewhere. Despite considerable pro-Union, antislavery sentiment, North Carolina joined the Confederacy during the Civil War. Some 40,000 North Carolinians were killed over the course of the war. North Carolina was re-admitted into the Union on July 4th 1868.

Read more about North Carolina's History HERE



North Carolina's state capitol rises majestically on Union Square in downtown Raleigh, a city specifically created in 1792 to serve as North Carolina's permanent capital. Built between 1833-40, the granite building is one of the finest and best preserved examples of civic Greek Revival architecture in the United States. Relatively small in comparison to many other state capitols, this impressive structure has stood as a symbol of pride to North Carolinians for more than 150 years.


North Carolina is divided into three distinct topographical regions: the Coastal Plain, the Piedmont Plateau, and the Blue Ridge / Appalachian Mountains.

The Coastal Plain, bordered on the east by many beaches, offers opportunities for farming, recreation, and manufacturing. The North Carolina coast is protected by a slender chain of islands known as the Outer Banks.

The Appalachian Mountains--including Mount Mitchell, the highest peak in Eastern North America (6,684 feet)-- add to the variety which is apparent in the state's topography. More than 200 mountains rise 5,000 feet or more. In this area, widely acclaimed for its beauty, tourism is an outstanding business.

The Piedmont Plateau, though dotted with many small rolling farms, is primarily a manufacturing area in which the chief industries are furniture, tobacco, and textiles.


North Carolina is a state that embraces you with gorgeous mountains and hills, hundreds of lakes and rivers, waterfalls, and a very desirable climate.

North Carolina's Notorious Pirate,
"Blackbeard"


Click on Blackbeard's flag to learn more...


More Blackbeard links:

Twenty Seven Months Reign of Terror, Treachery and Theatrics Blackbeard, the Man and the Myth





North Carolina Barbecue -
AKA - "Pig Pickin'"




"Perhaps North Carolina's finest contribution to international cuisine, the peculiar institution known as Barbecue is one of those Tarheel hotspots that is often misunderstood by folks outside our borders. Barbecue enjoys a long and distinguished history in North Carolina, and has come to be synonymous with political campaigns, church fund-raisers, and any celebration of merit. In NC barbecue is a noun not a verb!  It has been celebrated itself in song, story, poetry, literature and electronic media. It enjoys as much a prominent place and regional distinctiveness as a 'state dish' as Steamed Crabs do in Maryland, Baked Beans do in Boston, and Salmon does in Seattle. Barbecuing is so competitive in North Carolina that the state boasts no fewer than twenty five annual cook-offs.

"There are two different styles of North Carolina Barbecue, Eastern and Western. In both cases the sauce is a vinegar-based concoction, heavily seasoned; the largest difference is that the Western, or Lexington style of barbecue adds a small amount of tomato-base to the sauce, and also roasts pork shoulders in preference to the whole hog. That's it. That's the difference. Yet these tiny differences have caused near blood feuds between proponents of the two different styles."
- Terry Mancour.




North Carolina Barbecue - A Primer
The Barbecue Festival
Barbecue of the Carolinas




and, last but not least.......

State lawmakers in both chambers unanimously approved a resolution as part of their effort to protect a $1.5 billion racing industry that employs about 10,000 people in North Carolina. As the sport increases in popularity, so does the competition from other states to lure it away.

But lawmakers and others say North Carolina is the best place for a museum. Stock car racing started there and a few hundred race teams - NASCAR and otherwise - are located around Charlotte....

Lowes Motor Speedway

Yes, North Carolinians love racing
(almost as much as pig pickin')!


Click HERE for a list of North Carolina race tracks.







 



The following websites provided information
and graphics for this presentation.


The Insider - NC History
Chimney Rock Park
The 50 States
FOX News NASCAR





From the grandeur of the Great Smoky Mountains, and the beauty of the Blue Ridge Parkway, to the coast and the fragile islands of the Outer Banks, North Carolina has plenty to offer. And with her mild winters and comfortable summers, North Carolina is a great place to live, and a very attractive place to visit again and again.





North Carolina is a state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N).

Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km).
Population, (2000) 8,049,313, a 21.4% increase since the 1990 census.
Capital, Raleigh. 


North Carolina, in the warm temperate zone, has a generally mild climate, with abundant and well distributed rainfall. The state's congenial climate, its many miles of beaches, and its beautiful mountains attract large numbers of visitors and vacationers each year. Chief among the tourist attractions are the Cape Hatteras National Seashore, the Cape Lookout National Seashore, the Blue Ridge Parkway, and the Great Smoky Mts. National Park. Wildlife abounds in national forests (the state has four) and in the Dismal Swamp. Places of historic interest include Fort Raleigh National Historic Site, on Roanoke Island; the Wright Brothers National Memorial, at Kitty Hawk; Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site, at Flatrock; and Guilford Courthouse and Moores Creek national military parks.


North Carolina leads the nation in the production of tobacco and is a major producer of textiles and furniture. It grows 40% of all U.S. tobacco, but the continuing trend is toward diversification. Broilers, hogs, turkeys, greenhouse products, sweet potatoes, corn, soybeans, peanuts, and eggs are important. Plentiful forests supply the thriving furniture and lumber industries. The state has long been a major textile manufacturer, producing cotton, synthetic, and silk goods as well as various kinds of knit items. Other leading manufactures are electrical machinery, computers, and chemicals; the Research Triangle complex near Chapel Hill has spurred high-tech manufacturing, as well as bringing federal jobs into the state. The state also has mineral resources: It leads the nation in the production of feldspar, mica, and lithium materials and produces substantial quantities of olivine, crushed granite, talc, clays, and phosphate rock. There are valuable coastal fisheries, with shrimp, menhaden, and crabs the principal catches. Charlotte developed in the 1980s into a major U.S. banking center, and related businesses have flourished in the area.


The State Bird and Flower
Cardinal (chosen March 4, 1943)
The Cardinal is sometimes called the Winter Redbird because it is most noticable during the winter when it is the only "redbird" present. A yearround resident of North Carolina, the Cardinal is one of the most common birds in our gardens, meadows, and woodlands. The Cardinal is a fine singer, and what is unusual is that the female sings as beautifully as the male.


Dogwood (designated 1941)
The Dogwood is one of the most prevalent trees in our state, found in regions stretching from the mountains to the coast. Its white (and sometimes pink) blooms appear in early spring and last into summer.


State Flag of North Carolina The State Flag
(current version established March 9, 1885)

It is interesting to examine the significance of the dates on North Carolina's flag. The first date, "May 20, 1775," refers to the Mecklenberg Declaration of Independence, although many speculate the authenticity of this particular document. The second date is "April 12, 1776." This date commemorates the Halifax Resolves, a document that places the Old North Sate in the very front rank, both in point of time and in spirit, among those who demanded unconditional freedom and absolute independence from any foreign power. This document, which helps define the state's involvement in the American Revolution, is one of the great landmarks in North Carolina History.


The State Tree and Mammal
Long Leaf Pine (designated 1963)
The pine is the most common of trees found in North Carolina. It is also the most important tree in the history of our state. During the colonial and early statehood periods, the pine was a vital part of North Carolina's economy. Naval stores—tar, pitch, and terpentine—derived from the pine were needed by merchants to supply the shipbuilding industry.


Gray Squirrel (designated 1969)
The gray squirrel is a common inhabitant of most areas of North Carolina, from natural wildlife havens to city parks and suburbs. During the fall and winter months, the gray squirrel survives on a diet of hardwoods, with acorns providing carbohydrates and proteins. In the spring and summer, its diet consists of new growths and fruits supplemented by early corn, peanuts, and insects.


The State Insect
Honey Bee (designated 1973)
This industrious creature is responsible for the annual production of more than $2 million worth of honey in North Carolina. The honey bee's greatest value, however, is its role as a major contributor to the pollination of North Carolina's crops and flowering plants.


OTHER OFFICIAL STATE EMBLEMS

  • Motto: Granite  (to be rather than to seem) (adopted 1893)
  • Song: "The Old North State" (adopted 1927)
  • Colors: Red and Blue (declared 1945)
  • Shell: Scotch Bonnet (designated 1965)
  • Salt Water Fish: Channel Bass (Red Drum) (designated 1971)
  • Precious Stone: Emerald (designated 1973)
  • Reptile: Eastern Box Turtle (designated 1979)
  • Rock: Granite (designated 1979)
  • Beverage: Milk (adopted 1987)
  • Historic Boat: Shad Boat (adopted 1987)
  • Dog: Plott Hound (adopted 1989)

 

North Carolina Facts


The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill is the oldest State University in the United States and Home of the 2005 NCAA Basketball Champions (4/5/2005 -- 75/70 over Illinois.)

In 1903 the Wright Brothers made the first successful powered flight by man at Kill Devil Hill near Kitty Hawk. The Wright Memorial at Kitty Hawks now commemorates their achievement.

High Point is known as the Furniture Capital of the World.

Know as "Fish Town" in the early 1700's when Blackbeard frequented the coast, "Beaufort Town" was established as a seaport with the right to collect customs, in 1722.

The Outer Banks of NC hosts some of the most beautiful beaches in the country.

Whitewater Falls in Transylvania County is the highest waterfall in the eastern United States.

Cape Hatteras is the largest lighthouse ever to be moved due to erosion problems.

The University of North Carolina's mascot, the Tarheels, is a nickname for North Carolinians that supposedly came from the days when NC produced a lot of tar, and someone saw a set of footprints made by someone who had stepped in the tar.

Charles Karault was born and raised in Wilmington.

Havelock is home of Marine Base "Cherry Point." It is the largest air base in the Marine Corps.

North Carolina is the largest producer of sweet potatoes in the nation. Students at a Wilson County school petitioned the North Carolina General Assembly for the establishment of the sweet potato as the official state vegetable.

Harker's Island hosts the annual Core Sound Decoy Festival in December.

Morehead City is home to the North Carolina Seafood Festival, held the first weekend in October every year.

The World War II battleship 'North Carolina' is permanently berthed on the Cape Fear River at Wilmington. She was saved from the scrap heap in the 1960's by public subscription, including donations of dimes by schoolchildren.

The first English colony in America was located on Roanoke Island. Walter Raleigh founded it. The colony mysteriously vanished with no trace except for the unexplained letters "Croatoan" found (1590) carved on a tree on
Roanoke Island off North Carolina by Governor John White when he returned to the colony from England and discovered the colonists gone. White took the letters to mean that the settlers had moved to Croatoan Island some 50 mi (80 km) away, but no trace of them was ever found. The name, in the form Croatan, is popular in the region and is perhaps best known in the name of Croatan Sound, which connects Pamlico Sound with Albemarle Sound.  Another theory was later advanced with the discovery (1937–40) of some 40 stone tablets inscribed with what some believe to be the history of the “lost colony.” The inscriptions tell of the death of many of the colonists (including Virginia Dare) from disease and Native American attacks and of the migration of others into the country's interior, as far away as Atlanta, Ga. The stones' authenticity, however, is questionable. In 1998 scientists said that a study of tree rings showed that the colonists had faced one of the worst droughts in the area's history.

Mount Mitchell in the Blue Ridge Mountains is the highest peak east of the Mississippi. It towers 6,684 feet above sea level.

Krispy Kreme Doughnut was founded in Winston-Salem.

The Venus Fly-Trap is native to Hampstead.

The first miniature golf course was built in Fayetteville.

Babe Ruth hit his first home run in Fayetteville on March 7, 1914.

Winston-Salem was created when the two towns Winston and Salem combined.

The Biltmore Estate in Ashville is America's largest home, and includes a 255-room chateau, an award-winning winery and extensive gardens.

The first English child born in America was born in Roanoke in 1587. Her name was Virginia Dare.

The Lost Colony Outdoor Drama in Albemarle commemorates the birth of Virginia Dare. Scheduled to run just one year, it proved so successful that it has played for more than sixty consecutive summers.

Fontana Dam is the tallest dam in the Eastern United States, at 480 feet high.

Many people believe that North Carolina was the first state to declare independence from England with the Mecklenburg Declaration of 1775.
.

Grandfather Mountain, highest peak in the Blue Ridge, is the only private park in the world designated by the United Nations as an International Biosphere Reserve.

The Mile-High Swinging Bridge near Linville is 5,305 feet above sea level. The bridge actually hangs about 80 feet above the ground.

Pepsi was invented and first served in New Bern in 1898.

Beech Mountain is Eastern America's highest town at 5,506ft above sea level.

Andrew Jackson, seventh President of the United States, was born in the Waxsaws area on the border of North and South Carolina.

Arnold Palmer recognized as the player whose aggressive play and winning personality raised golf to national attention, honed his skills on the championship golf team of Wake Forest University.

James K. Polk, born in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, was the eleventh President of the United States.

Hiram Rhoades Revels, born in Fayetteville in 1822, was the first African-American member of the United States Congress.

Andrew Johnson started his career as a tailor's apprentice in Raleigh, North Carolina and rose to lead in the reuniting of the nation as the seventeenth President of the United States.

North Carolina leads the nation in furniture, tobacco, brick, and textile production.

Saluda, North Carolina is located at the top of the Saluda Grade. The crest of the steepest standard gauge mainline railroad in the United States.

State Motto: Esse quam videri (To be rather than to seem)

The town of Wendell town was named for the American writer, Oliver Wendell Holmes.

The Swiss and German settlement of New Bern was named in honor of the founder's home, Bern, Switzerland. When Bern, Switzerland was founded, it was named by a group of hunters. They named the city for the first animal they came upon on their hunting expedition. It was a bear. "Bern" is the old Germanic word for Bear, and the bear became the symbol of the city. It has been adopted by New Bern, as well.

North Carolina was the first state in the nation to establish a state museum of art in Raleigh.

North Carolina was one of the first states in the U.S. to establish a state symphony. The North Carolina Symphony, founded in 1943, currently performs nearly 185 full-orchestra concerts each year.

North Carolina has the largest state-maintained highway system in the United States. The state's highway system currently has 77,400 miles of roads

The General Assembly of 1987 adopted milk as the official state beverage.

The oldest town in the state is Bath, incorporated in 1705.

Located in northeastern North Carolina on the Albemarle-Pamlico peninsula, Columbia is on the eastern shore of the Scuppernong River. The Indians called the area "the place of the sweet bay tree."

White Lake near Elizabethtown is very unique in that it has a white sandy bottom and is blessed with crystal clear waters. It has also been labeled as the "Nation's Safest Beach." It is truly a child's paradise in that there are no currents, no tides, no hazardous depressions or real dangers of any kind to swimmers.

North Carolina has 1,500 lakes of 10 acres or more in size and 37,000 miles of fresh water streams.

 

 

LIFESTYLE

Top 5 City for Young Singles 
(Top 25 Cities for Every Stage of Your Life List) 

Kiplingers Finance, May 2007

#3 Best Place for African Americans
Black Enterprise, May 2007

Top 10 – Best Place to Find A Mate    
Men's Health, April 2007

Top 10 Tech Towns
Wired, January 2007

#8 Safest City (Cary)      
Morgan Quinto Press, October 2006

#6 Area for Relocating Singles    
Primacy Relocation, October 2006

#13 Overall Quality of Life     
Business Dev. Outlook, September 2006

# 9 Health Rating      
Tampa Bay Partnership, September 2006

#15 Climate Rating      
Tampa Bay Partnership, September 2006

#1 Area Overall (Raleigh-Durham)    
Tampa Bay Partnership, September 2006

#6 Best Cities for Singles     
Forbes.Com, July 2006

#4 Best Places to Live      
Money Magazine, July 2006

#3 Best City for US Bargains     
Hotwire Travel Index, January 2006

Top 20 Place to Live, Work & Play    
Homebuilder.com, November 2005

Top 10 Best Budget Weekend City    
MSN.Com, August 2005

One of "7 Cool Cities"     
Kiplingers, August 2005

#4 Best Cities for Singles     
Forbes.Com, July 2005

#34 "Top 100 Places to Live" (Cary)    
Money Magazine, July 2005

#17 Best Place for U.S. Running    
Runner's World, July 2005

# 8 Best Place for Wireless Connections   
Intel, June 2005

Five Star Quality of Life (Raleigh-Cary)   
Expansion Management, April 2005

Top 50 City: Quality of Life (Raleigh-Cary)   
Expansion Management, March 2005

#4 Best City for Dating (Raleigh-Durham, NC)
Sperling's Best Places, May 2004

#4 City That Rocks
Esquire Magazine, April 2004

Hottest Town in the East (Cary, NC)    
Money Magazine, January 2004 

#6 Most Fun City       
Cranium, January 2004

#1 College Town (Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill) – Tier II 
USA TODAY, August 2003

#10 Lowest Rents-CBD     
Expansion Management, August 2003

#1 Best Place to Live      
MSN House & Home, July 2003


MEETING

#20 Expo's Top 25 Bargain Destinations   
Expo, July/August 2004

#3 Cost-Effective Location for Corporate Meetings  
GetThere, December 2003

#10 Successful Meetings 10 to Watch   
Successful Meetings, December 2003

#1 Best Place to Live & Work    
Employment Review Magazine, June 2003

#9 Best City for Singles      
Forbes Magazine, June 2003

#3 Best Place to Reinvent Your Life    
AARP Magazine, May/June 2003

#10 Low-Stress City (Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, NC) 
Sperlings Best Places, 2003

Top 20 Best Urban Trails (Raleigh's Umstead Park)  
Runner's World, October 2001

#4 Healthiest Metro Area in the US    
Demographics Daily, June 2001

#2 Best Place to Live and Work    
Employment Review, June 2001


EDUCATION

#1 School District in the Nation for Certified Teachers National Board of Teachers, January 2007

#2 Most Educated City     
US Census Bureau-American Community Survey,
2003 (Released April 2005)

#2 Best Public Education System    
Expansion Management, April 2005
(Raleigh – Cary)

#2 Most Educated City     
US Census Bureau-American Community
Survey, 2002 (Released May 2004)

#6 Best Public School System
Expansion Management's MSA Education
(Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill MSA) Quotient Rankings, April 2004

2005 National Superintendent of the Year    
American Association of School
(Bill McNeal, Wake County Public Schools) Administrators, 2004

#3 Best Education In The Biggest Cities    
Forbes, February 2004 (Wake County Schools)

Gold Ribbon School District – Wake County
Expansion Management, December 2003

# 2 Best Place for Education
Forbes Magazine, June 2003

#1 Best City for Education
Places Rated Almanac, Millennium Edition


 

BUSINESS

#3 Best Jobs in the Hottest Cities
Business 2.0, May 2007

#7 Business Boomtown
Inc Magazine, May 2007

#4 Hottest Job Market for Young Adults
Bizjournals, April 2007

#1 Best Place for Business
Inc Magazine, April 2007

#1 Best Place for Business & Career
Forbes.com, April 2007

#1 Best City for Jobs
Forbes.com, February 2007

Top 50 Hottest Cities for Expanding &
Relocating Companies

Expansion Management, February 2007

Top 10 Place in the South for the Creative Class
Southpoint Business & Development, Winter 2007

#1 Best City for Women Entrepreneuers
Allbusiness.com, November 2006

#6 Most Wired City
Forbes.com, August 2006

#2 Best Place for Business & Careers
Forbes, August 2006

Named one of 15 Top Fast Cities (Raleigh-Durham, NC)  
Fast Company, November 2005

#7 Top Metro for Scientists & Engineers Per Capita  
Expansion Magazine, May 2005

#10 Top Metro for University Spending   
Expansion Magazine, May 2005

#7 Best Educated Workforce     
Expansion Magazine, May 2005

#2 Best Place for Business & Careers    
Forbes, April 2005

#4 Best City for Entrepreneurs and Small Business  
Gold Guide Rankings, May 2004

#5 Best City for Economic Dynamism    
Gold Guide Rankings, May 2004

#2 Best Place for Business (Raleigh-Durham, NC)  
Forbes, May 2004

#1 City with the Happiest Workers     
Hudson Employment Index, March 2004

#3 High Value Labor Market Quotient 2005   
Expansion Management, March 2004

#6 Least Expensive Midsize Metro Area for Businesses 
KPMG LLP, February 2004

#1 Hottest Job Market (Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, NC) 
Business 2.0, March 2004

#4 Top State for New Business Sites and Facilities   
Plants Sites and Parks, January 2004

#13 Hottest Cities (Raleigh-Durham, NC)    
Expansion Management Magazine, January 2004

#11 Choice City for Biotechnology
Business Development Outlook, December 2003

#9 Hottest Job Growth Market 2003-2013   
Business 2.0, September 2003

#7 High Value Labor Market Quotient 2003   
Expansion Management, July 2003

#4 Top High-Tech City
Business Facilities, May 2003

#9 Best City for Corporate Headquarters
Business Facilities, April 2003

#3 Best Place for Business and Careers
Forbes Magazine, May 26, 2003

#1 Fastest Growing Local Online Population   
Nielson/Netratings Report, February 2003

#3 Highest Mobile Phone Penetration   
Telephia Report, February 2003

#10 Real Estate Market
Expansion Management, August 2002

#3 in New Biotechnology Companies in the 1990's. 
Signs of Life: The Growth of the Biotechnology Centers in the US. Brookings Institute, June 2002

Top 60 Cybercity
Site Selection Magazine, March 2002

#2 City in the US for Relocation
Expansion Management, January 2002

#3 Hottest Metro
Plants, Sites & Parks, March 2002

Fastest Growing State in Venture Capital Investment
Plants, Sites & Parks, January 2002

5-Star Ranking for Best Economic Metro
Demographics Daily, January 2002

#5 for access to venture capital 
Progressive Policy Institute, April 2001

#3 for access to high-tech jobs
Progressive Policy Institute, April 2001

#8 Most Wired City       
Yahoo! Internet Life, March 2001

#3 for percentage of households using the Net  
Yahoo! Internet Life, March 2001

#4 for broadband use and interest    
Yahoo! Internet Life, March 2001

#7 State (NC) for New Facilities/Expansions in 2000 
Site Selection, March 2001

#4 Best City to Start and Grow a Company in Now  
Inc., December 2000

#3 Best City in the Nation for Entrepreneurship  
Entrepreneur, October 2000

#6 for Directory Density (sites per 1000 capita)  
Yahoo! Internet Life, March 2000

#5 for Hosts Per Capita     
Yahoo! Internet Life, March 2000

#6 Hottest City      
Expansion Management, January 2000

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