Articles by Lloyd Johnson

Churches

Welsh-Americans in North Carolina

1664-1775

North Carolina's diverse ethnic history includes the Welsh, who migrated from the middle colonies during the early eighteenth century to work in the naval stores industry.  By the end of the century, the Welsh owned numerous properties and played a vital role in North Carolina society.  More than a few modern-day North Carolinians are of Welsh descent.

Cities

Fayetteville, City of

1776-1835

A bustling, 1800s hub of trade and political activity, home to an important arsenal and center of trade during the Civil War, and home to Fort Bragg and Pope Air Force bases during the twentieth century, Fayetteville has played an important role in North Carolina history and will continue to do so.

Colonial North Carolina

Highland Scots

1664-1775

Countless Highland Scots migrated to North Carolina during the colonial period and lived primarily in the Upper Cape Fear region during the late 1770s.  Immediately the Highland Scots contributed to some of the greatest events in the state's history.  As evidenced by the modern-day Highland Games, these Scots and their families migrated to other parts of the state, where aspects of their culture are alive and well today.

Colonial North Carolina

Sandy Creek Baptists

1664-1775

Sandy Creek Baptists played a key role in the Regulator Movements in North Carolina (1766-1771) and in the tremendous growth of the Baptist denomination in the South.  Their free-will Baptist theology influenced the changing views regarding the common man in America during the late eighteenth century.

Cities

Averasboro (Town of)

1776-1835

On the Cape Fear River during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, only Fayetteville's and Wilmington’s populations outnumbered Averasboro’s.  Yet population and commercial growth were not inevitable.  Only a cemetery surrounded by a grove and a Civil War museum remind anyone that the port town once existed.

Business and Industry

Naval Stores

1664-1775

From the 1730s to the 1860s, the naval stores industry was an increasingly profitable business.  With its abundant Long Leaf Pines, North Carolina soon emerged as an invaluable producer of tar, pitch, and turpentine not only in the national economy but also in the international market.  

Cities

Cross Creek

1664-1775

The second largest Cape Fear River town during the eighteenth century, Cross Creek was formed in 1756,  was combined with Campbelltown in 1778, and was later named Fayetteville in 1783.  During the Revolutionary War,  the town was a hotbed of wartime activity and a home of divided loyalties.