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         North Carolina Cities & Communities Geography:     more detail
  1. Sorting Out the New South City: Race, Class, and Urban Development in Charlotte, 1875-1975 by Thomas W. Hanchett, 1998-08-10
  2. Political Terrain: Washington, D.C., from Tidewater Town to Global Metropolis by Carl Abbott, 1999-06-28

81. HISTORY: Echoes From The Past Blur What's To Be | The Winston Salem Journal - Jo
Salem was the largest city in north carolina, with a The new northSouth highwayalso created a dividing 1970s and 1980s, the big manufacturing cities of the
http://www.journalnow.com/wsj/specialreports/leader/09econ.html
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HISTORY: Echoes from the past blur what's to be
By John Hinton
JOURNAL REPORTER
Richard Joshua Reynolds could have picked any one of several North Carolina towns to come to and start a tobacco business. But he chose the small town of Winston, partly because of its rail connection to the main line that ran through Greensboro. The rest is history.
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Winston-Salem has never been blessed with the geography that drives many cities to success. It doesn't have a port. It's not on a big river or along the central rail line. What it lacked in these departments it made up for with a culture based on shrewd business dealings and an entrepreneurial spirit. And the city rode those assets for all they were worth. Now, in a new century, as the city and county have completed one business cycle and moved to the next, the question is simple: Can they do it again?

82. IRP Minnesota - Charlotte, NC Maps
Map 3 Charlotte, north carolina Metropolitan Area Percent in surrounding downtownCharlotte to the north and west. city of Charlotte and other cities in the
http://www.umn.edu/irp/maps/charlottenc.html
Disparities in Housing Between
African Americans and Whites in Charlotte
Click on maps to see the full size images. Map #1 - Charlotte, North Carolina Metropolitan Area Municipalities Map #2 - Charlotte, North Carolina Metropolitan Area African American Population Segregation levels for African Americans are quite low in Charlotte compared to other U.S. metropolitan areas, in part due to the clustered pattern of racial populations. African Americans in the city of Charlotte live mostly in the northern and western sections of the city, while whites tend to live mostly in the south and east. Charlotte the city is much more segregated than the region as a whole. And though there is spatial variance for African Americans in the Charlotte region that may minimize distances to opportunity structures in the region, poverty and lower housing values intersect most of the clustered African American neighborhoods in the region. Map #3 - Charlotte, North Carolina Metropolitan Area Percent in Poverty

83. AGPix.com
cities (variety of coverage); cities (landmarks, tourist New York (variety of coverage);north carolina (variety of north Dakota (variety of coverage); northern
http://www.agpix.com/photographer/stock/A0077910_complete.html
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84. Runaways And The Abolition Movement
African Americans, especially in the north, vehemently opposed groups, and large southerncities such as New Orleans, and Charleston, South carolina (Gara 1961
http://afgen.com/underground_railroad2.html
History And Geography Of
The Underground Railroad
Part 2
Runaways and the Abolition Movement
In the British North America and later the United States, antislavery sentiment flourished during the revolutionary period, but faded slightly by the beginning of the early 19th century. The call to end human bondage compelled freed African Americans and Quakers to form abolition societies such as the American Anti-Slavery Society and the New England Anti-Slavery Society in the North. Moreover, churches such as African Methodist Episcopal, Baptist, African Methodist Episcopal Zion, Presbyterian, and Methodist as well as Black fraternal organizations and social clubs played key roles in calling for emancipation and human rights. The antislavery movement played a primary role in assisting runaways to freedom. Abolitionists were crucial to the operations of the underground, but not all of them participated in or sanctioned its activities. Occasionally, African American and White abolitionists worked jointly to aid the runaway. Yet for the most part, the African American abolitionist played a key role in underground activities. Since most African American abolitionists were former bondsmen, they usually took a personal interest in helping loved ones or anyone who wanted to gain freedom. Their work contributed to the success of the Underground Railroad.
Origins of the Underground Railroad
In 1831, the popularity of the railroad train coupled with legendary flights of certain runaways introduced the name for the underground movement. Supposedly, the term Underground Railroad originated when an enslaved runaway, Tice Davids, fled from Kentucky and may have taken refuge with John Rankin, a White abolitionist, in Ripley, Ohio. Determined to retrieve his property, the owner chased Davids to the Ohio River, but Davids suddenly disappeared without a trace, leaving his owner bewildered and wondering if the slave had "gone off on some underground road." The success of Davids' escape soon spread among the enslaved on southern plantations (Stein 1981: 5þ10; Hamilton 1993: 53-56).

85. Raleigh Real Estate And Relocation Help Desk
to include the surrounding three cities (Durham, Chapel squaremile region of NorthCarolina, involving six counties and 26 separate communities that share
http://www.relocationhelpdesk.com/newcomers/021800.html
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Please bookmark this page so you can find us again quickly! Triangle Geography Lesson
North Carolina is called the " Old North State ," a reference that originated with the division of the Carolinas in 1710. It was one of the original thirteen colonies. With 52,660 square miles , North Carolina now has 6.5 million residents. North Carolinians are sometimes called " Tar Heels ," a nickname that dates back to pre-Revolutionary days when tar, pitch and turpentine were extracted from native pine forests for British naval stores. Twenty-five miles from the Virginia border, the Triangle is located in the Piedmonta geographic foothills region lying between mountains and coastal plains. The Triangle is 140 miles from the Appalachians and 130 miles from the coast. Our landscape is characterized by hardwood and evergreen forests, hills, meandering rivers and streams, and a wide variety of soils ranging from sand to rocks to red clay. The term "Triangle" was first coined to refer to an area anchored by three major universities: Duke, UNC-CH and NCSU

86. Cumberland County NC - Web Site Awards
You will be able to view it in our People PlacesGeographyPlaces RegionsUSGeographyNorth CarolinaCities communities section very soon.
http://www.co.cumberland.nc.us/awards.html
Awards
We took a tour of your web site and feel that your site meets the criteria of our Web Author's Choice Award... Congratulations! received 02/02/01 StudyWeb
Congratulations. StudyWeb® is one of the Internet's premier sites for educational resources for students and teachers. Since 1996, our expert reviewers have scoured the Internet to select only the finest sites to be included in StudyWeb's listing of educational links. Each site in StudyWeb® includes a detailed review describing its editorial and visual merits. received 01/27/01 Congratulations. We appreciated your website and wanted to share it with our audience. We're GOVNETWORKS.COM - and your site was awarded the "Digital Government Award of Excellence" today. received 10/10/00 Congratulations!!......Your site definitely qualifies for the "Critical Mass Award". A very nice site, excellent design, clever original graphics, great photos, and your content is informative, entertaining, presented well and easy to access. A worthy enterprise and a positive contribution to the Web. Thanks for helping make the Web a more interesting, useful and attractive place to visit. I really enjoyed my visit to your site and will return again when time permits :)

87. AMS Links

http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/ams/hoelscher/amslinks.htm
American Studies Links
American Studies Links Recommended by Richard P. Horwitz
- A general guide to American Studies links.
American Memory at the Library of Congress
- Online exhibits and searchable archives can be accessed by subject and by period.
American Studies Web at Crossroads
- Collected American Studies links are organized thematically.
Regions
Desert USA
- Online magazine that presents articles, photographs, and interesting facts about desert regions of the United States.
50States.com
- Information and links on the geography, people, politics, and economics of the 50 states. Maintained by Ray Weber of Santa Clara, California.
Great Lakes Information Network
- Links to web sites about the binational Great Lakes region.
Index of Native American Resources on the Internet
- Links to sites with information on the culture, history, and traditions of North American indigenous peoples.
The South: Where Is It? What Is It?

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