School History of North Carolina (From 1584 to the Present Time)

John W. Moore
School History of North Carolina
(From 1584 to the Present Time)

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Title: School History of North Carolina
Author: John W. Moore
Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6080] [Yes, we are more than one
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, SCHOOL
HISTORY OF NORTH CAROLINA ***

This eBook was prepared by Bruce Loving

SCHOOL HISTORY OF NORTH CAROLINA, FROM 1584 TO THE
PRESENT TIME.
BY JOHN W. MOORE. REVISED AND ENLARGED.

PREFACE TO REVISED EDITION.
In the publication of a fourteenth edition it seems proper that something
should be said as to changes made in this work. At a session of the
North Carolina Board of Education, held November 22d, 1881, it was
resolved that "the Board expressly reserve to itself the right to require
further revisions" in Moore's School History of North Carolina, the
second edition of which was then adopted for use in the public schools.
Conforming to this requirement of the State Board of Education, the
author has diligently sought aid and counsel in the effort to perfect this
work. To Mrs. C. P. Spencer, E. J. Hale, Esq., of New York, and Hon.
Montford McGehee, Commissioner of Agriculture, the work is
indebted for many valuable suggestions, but still more largely to Col.
W. L. Saunders, Secretary of State, who has aided assiduously not only
in its revision, but in its progress through the press.
The teacher of North Carolina History will be greatly aided in the work
by having a wall map of North Carolina before the class, and to this
end the publishers have prepared a good and accurate school map,
which will be furnished at a special low price.

CONTENTS.
CHAPTER. I. Physical Description of North Carolina II. Physical
Description--Continued III. Geological Characteristics IV. The Indians

V. Sir Walter Raleigh VI. Discovery of North Carolina VII. Governor
Lane's Colony VIII. Governor White's Colony IX. The Fate of Raleigh
X. Charles II. and the Lords Proprietors XI. Governor Drummond and
Sir John Yeamans XII. Governor Stephens and the Fundamental
Constitutions XIII. Early Governors and their Troubles XIV. Lord
Carteret adds a New Trouble XV. Thomas Carey and the Tuscarora
War XVI. Governor Eden and Black-Beard XVII. Governor Gabriel
Johnston XVIII. The Pirates and Other Enemies XIX. Governor Arthur
Dobbs XX. Governor Tryon and the Stamp Act XXI. Governor Tryon
and the Regulators XXII. Governor Martin and the Revolution XXIII.
First Provincial Congress XXIV. Second Provincial Congress XXV.
The Congress at Hillsboro XXVI. Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge
XXVII. Fourth Provincial Congress Declares Independence XXVIII.
Adoption of a State Constitution XXIX. The War Continued XXX.
Stony Point and Charleston XXXI. Ramsour's Mill and Camden Court
House XXXII. Battle of King's Mountain XXXIII. Cornwallis's Last
Invasion XXXIV. Battle of Guilford Court House XXXV. Fanning and
his Brutalities XXXVI. Peace and Independence XXXVII. The State of
Franklin XXXVIII. Formation of the Union XXXIX. France and
America XL. The Federalists and the Republicans XLI. Closing of the
Eighteenth Century XLII. Growth and Expansion XLIII. Second War
with Great Britain XLIV. After the Storm XLV. The Whigs and the
Democrats XLVI. The Condition of the State XLVII. The Courts and
the Bar XLVIII. Origin of the Public Schools XLIX. Slavery and Social
Development L. The Mexican War LI. The North Carolina Railway
and the Asylums LII. A Spectre of the Past Re-appears LIII. The Social
and Political Status LIV. President Lincoln and the War LV. The War
Between the States LVI. The Combat Deepens LVII. The War
Continues LVIII. War and its Horrors LIX. The Death Wound at
Gettysburg LX. General Grant and his Campaign LXI. North Carolina
and Peace-making LXII The War Draws to a Close LXIII. Concluding
Scenes of the War LXIV. Refitting the Wreck LXV. Governor
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