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A Brief
History of Wake County
The earliest
inhabitants of present day Wake County were the Tuscarora Indians. When
early colonists encroached on their land and took unfair advantage of the
Indians, hostilities broke out that led to the violent
Tuscarora War in 1711. The Indians were eventually defeated and forced
from the area.
Some of the
earliest settlers in the Wake County area were Joel Lane, Theophilus
Hunter, John Hinton, Samuel Scarborough, John Monk, Edward Green, James
Simmons, and William Thompson. The
Joel
Lane House, named Wakefield, was built in the 1760's and is Raleigh's
oldest dwelling.
Wake
County was founded in 1771 and named in honor of Margaret Wake, wife of
William Tryon, the Royal Governor of the British colony of North Carolina.
The new county, located in the east central section of the state, was
formed from parts of Cumberland, Johnston, and Orange counties. The first
courthouse was built at a place called Wake Courthouse, commonly known as
Bloomsbury. During 1771, the first election was held, the first court was
held, and the first militia was formed.

Historical
marker at the southwest corner of
W. Hargett St. and Boylan Ave. in Raleigh
Wake County
lost some its land area during the subsequent formation of other new
counties. Portions were taken by Franklin County in 1787 and by Durham
County in 1881 and 1911. Today, Wake County contains 832 square miles,
includes 12 municipalities, and has
a population of approximately 656,000 (Census).
The
colonial capital of North
Carolina was at New Bern. For several years, during and after the
Revolutionary War, there was no capital, and the General Assembly met in
various locations. In 1792, a commission was appointed to select a site
for a permanent state capital. The members of the commission were leaning
toward land owned by Colonel John Hinton across the Neuse River, but on
the night before the final vote, the committee adjourned to the home of
Joel Lane for an evening of food and spirits. The next day, the vote was
in Lane's favor.
The
City of Raleigh, named for
Sir Walter Raleigh,
was established on 1000 acres purchased from Lane. Though he never set
foot in the New World, two centuries earlier Sir Walter Raleigh had
sponsored the establishment of the first English Colony on the North
Carolina shore at Roanoke Island. The City of Raleigh became both the state capital as well as
the new county seat of Wake County. Raleigh is the only planned state
capital in the United States.

Old Soldiers'
Home (1890-1938)
The home for elderly Confederate veterans was located on a
six-acre complex at the
corner
of New Bern Avenue and Tarboro
Road in Raleigh.
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