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Caswell County, North Carolina

Caswell County is a county in the U.S. state of North Carolina. It is located in the Piedmont Triad region of the state. At the 2020 census, the population was 22,736.[1] Its county seat is Yanceyville.[2]

Caswell County
Old Caswell County Courthouse in Yanceyville
Motto: 
"Preserving the Past – Embracing the Future"
Location within the U.S. state of North Carolina
North Carolina's location within the U.S.
Coordinates: 36°23′N 79°20′W / 36.39°N 79.34°W / 36.39; -79.34
Country United States
State North Carolina
FoundedJune 1, 1777
Named forRichard Caswell
SeatYanceyville
Largest communityYanceyville
Area
 • Total428.71 sq mi (1,110.4 km2)
 • Land425.37 sq mi (1,101.7 km2)
 • Water3.34 sq mi (8.7 km2)  0.78%
Population
 (2020)
 • Total22,736
 • Estimate 
(2023)
22,807
 • Density53.45/sq mi (20.64/km2)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Congressional districts4th, 6th
Websitewww.caswellcountync.gov

Partially bordering the state of Virginia, the county was formed from Orange County in 1777 and named for Richard Caswell, the first governor of North Carolina.[3] Other Caswell County communities include Blanch, Casville, Leasburg, Milton, Pelham, Prospect Hill, Providence, and Semora.[4]

The Dan River flows through a portion of the county. Hyco Lake is a popular recreational area and key water source.[5]

History edit

Early history edit

The area was first inhabited by Native Americans over 10,000 years ago.[6] Indigenous residents were of Siouan groups, including the Occaneechi.[5] Abundant evidence of indigenous activity has been found in many parts of Caswell County.[7][8]

In 1663 and 1665, Charles I of England gave all of what is now North Carolina and South Carolina (named for him) to eight of his noblemen, the Lords Proprietors.[9] Caswell County was originally part of the land grant belonging to Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon.[10]

Colonial records show land grants in northern Orange County (later Caswell County) as early as 1748. There were Scotch-Irish, German, and English settlements along the Dan River and Hogans and Country Line creeks by 1751. The first recorded settlement occurred between 1750 and 1755 when eight to ten families migrated from Orange County and Culpeper, Virginia.[11] The primary reason for resettlement was economic. They were searching for fertile land, which the low land of the Dan River and several creeks provided.[10]

After the initial settlements, the area experienced rapid population growth. The free settlers who lived in the county before 1800 were mostly of English, Scotch-Irish, French Huguenot, and German descent.[10] Scotch-Irish and German families traversed the Great Wagon Road, which was the main route for settlement in the region, and had come by way of Virginia and Pennsylvania. English and Huguenot migrants came from settled areas of eastern North Carolina, following the Great Trading Path. English colonists also came from Virginia using the same network of roads and trails.[12] Enslaved Africans were brought to the area by slaveholders and slave-trading agents involved in speculation.[13][14] By 1800, enslaved persons accounted for nearly one-third (32%) of Caswell County's population.[10] As they grew in number, substantially so after 1790, they powered more and more of the area's agricultural and economic development.[15]

The settlers first consisted mainly of yeoman farmers and planters. Middle-class settlers arrived afterward in the 18th century and were called the "new families."[16][10] Scotch-Irish and English culture predominated in the area socially, spiritually, educationally, and economically.[17]

Yeoman farmers accounted for more than half the settler population.[10] Few if any were slaveholders at this time. The yeomanry owned small family farms and lived in log homes. They farmed for subsistence, with surpluses going toward debt settlement or bartering for goods. Relying on the skilled and unskilled labor of family members, neighbors, and others, they linked farms to early grist mills and sawmills.[12]

Middle-class families accounted for less than a fifth of the settler population and were chiefly involved in business entrepreneurship, craftsmanship, small-scale commercial farming, export, and trade.[13][10] They actively promoted business and settlement in and around towns such as Leasburg, Milton, and numerous villages to further local economic development and their own upward social mobility. As the area grew more populated and prosperous, a significant number of middle-class residents transitioned to the upper-middle class.[10]

The planter class constituted the upper class and were the smallest segment of the settler population. Most came from prosperous families and were well versed in the literature of the Enlightenment. Due to their social position, they deeply impacted the county economically, culturally, and politically.[18][10] The area's other planters, in contrast, were less prominent and wealthy than the gentry in their midst. They were common or smaller planters with less land and lived more ordinary upper-middle class lives.[19] Several had indentured servants or bound apprentices of mixed race.[20]

No matter their class distinction, planters were the most socioeconomically advantaged inhabitants. They traded commodities with other settlers and were involved in land speculation and the domestic slave trade. They founded mills, sold livestock, and grew profitable crops such as wheat, corn, and oats on farms or plantations.[21] Until the early 1800s, tobacco was harvested mainly as a secondary crop by the settlers depending on changing market demand, pricing, soil exhaustion, and other variables.[22]

From the early 1760s until the early 1770s, it was common for local planters to receive credit loans from British-owned mercantile companies in the province for the purpose of funding the expansion of agricultural production. The monies went toward purchases of additional land and enslaved labor. Such companies also supplied enslaved workers and consumer items to area planters and managed tobacco exports sent to Virginia warehouses.[23] Their merchants offered good tobacco prices initially but eventually reduced them greatly, causing many planters to fall into substantial debt, which could not be repaid without selling land or enslaved people. Due to the American Revolutionary War, most of these debts were never repaid. After the war, the demand for tobacco rose when new markets were found without such middlemen.[24]

Not long after they arrived, the settlers to the area had been progressive in building homes, starting businesses, and establishing churches. Prominent planters promoted a culture of education that later saw the creation of private academies in the early 1800s.[10] The older families were generally more politically and fiscally conservative than the newcomers. They usually voted against funds for postwar internal improvements and were not supportive of expenditures that raised the county debt due to an aversion to raising taxes and expanding the role of government.[10]

Before the Revolutionary War, the biggest threats to public safety and social stability in the region were the French and Indian War and the Regulator Movement in present Orange County.[25] While the movement increased class tensions within communities, the settlers came together in support of the American Revolution.[10]

Prior to the Revolution, the Church of England was the most common religious affiliation in the area.[10] Pennsylvania missionary Hugh McAden founded Red House Presbyterian Church possibly as early as 1755.[26][10] Country Line Primitive Baptist Church was established in 1772.[27] Lea's Chapel, a Methodist Episcopal church, was organized in 1779.[28]

Creation edit

Caswell County was formed from a portion of Orange County, effective June 1, 1777.[29] It was created so that governance could be more localized and efficient.[30] The county was named for Richard Caswell who was the first governor of North Carolina after the Declaration of Independence in 1776, a delegate at the First and Second Continental Congresses, and a senior officer of militia in the Southern theater of the Revolutionary War.[31] The legislative act creating Caswell ordered its first court to be held at the homestead of Thomas Douglas and appointed commissioners to find a permanent location to build a county courthouse and prison.[29]

During the prelude to the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in 1781, Lord Cornwallis pursued General Nathanael Greene through Caswell County. Greene's retreat, called the "Race to the Dan," was a calculated ploy. His objective was to extend Cornwallis far beyond his supply base in Camden, South Carolina, so that his fighting power would be significantly diminished. Cornwallis and his troops marched through Camp Springs and Leasburg, which was the first county seat. They continued on to the Red House Church area of Semora.[10] It is unknown how many locally enslaved people fled to the British for safe haven before the Battle of Yorktown in 1781.[32]

By the war's end in 1783, Caswell County had made significant contributions in personnel and materiel to the war effort. Little fighting took place locally. County residents renowned for their Revolutionary War service include Lieutenant Colonel Henry "Hal" Dixon, John Herndon Graves, Dr. Lancelot Johnston, and Starling Gunn.[30] By that point no county courthouse had been built, so the General Assembly passed another act authorizing the county to erect public buildings. A courthouse was subsequently established at Leasburg, which was officially incorporated in 1788.[29]

After the war, a small number of free Black families moved to the area. Most of the men had served in the Continental Army or Navy.[33] Usually skilled in a trade, they farmed in a manner similar to yeoman farmers but did not have equal rights.[34]

In 1786, a special state census ranked Caswell County as the second-largest county with a population of 9,839. Halifax County ranked first with 489 more inhabitants.[30]

In February 1792, the eastern half of the county legally became Person County. After the division, the seat of Caswell County's government was moved to a more central location. The community hosting the new county seat was originally called Caswell Court House. In 1833, the name was changed to Yanceyville.[35]

Industrialization and growth edit

Early 19th century to World War II edit

In the early 1800s, Caswell County's wealthy landowners were moving away from diversified farming and accelerating toward tobacco as a single cash crop. This agricultural conversion considerably affected the growth of the enslaved population, which rose 54 percent from 1800 to 1810.[10]

In 1810, the village of Caswell Court House (later Yanceyville) had one store and a hattery, two taverns, and approximately fifteen homes. silversmiths, blacksmiths, wheelwrights, coachmakers, and other tradesmen soon began opening businesses. Attorneys, doctors, preachers, and a number of politicians were also drawn to the growing village and county seat.[36]

Around 1830, the "Boom Era" began, which lasted until the American Civil War. During this period, the county saw the creation of new flour and lumber mills and experienced the furniture output of Thomas Day, a free Black businessman in Milton. A cotton factory, foundry, and silk company were also in operation. In Yanceyville, roads were improved and given names by 1841. The town became wealthy enough by 1852 to charter an independent bank, the Bank of Yanceyville, whose market capitalization ranked among the highest in the state.[36]

 
Bank of Yanceyville 20-dollar banknote from 1856

In 1839, on Abisha Slade's farm in Purley, an enslaved man named Stephen discovered the bright leaf tobacco flue-curing process.[37][30] Slade perfected the curing method in 1856. The following year his farm harvested 20,000 pounds (9,100 kg) of bright leaf tobacco on 100 acres of land and the crop was sold in Lynchburg, Virginia, at an exorbitant price. Slade taught the flue-curing technique to many farmers in the area and elsewhere. Bright leaf tobacco became popular with smokers and North Carolina growers gained a dominant position in the tobacco industry as a result.[38]

The tobacco economy, and the industries supported by it, enriched many locals. The lifestyle of many yeoman farmers changed into that of planters.[10] The newly wealthy built impressive homes and sent their children to private academies.[30] However, the majority of Caswell County's inhabitants did not benefit. In 1850, enslaved African Americans accounted for 52 percent of the county's population.[39]

By 1856, tobacco overshadowed all other forms of enterprise in Caswell County. Tobacco warehouses and manufacturing & processing plants dotted the skyline, with the largest centers located in Yanceyville and Milton.[10] The growth of the industry and increase in raw tobacco production created an expanding need for labor. The number of enslaved people grew to 9,355 in 1860, from a total of 4,299 in 1810 and 2,788 in 1800.[10]

There were 26 free Black inhabitants residing in Caswell County in 1800, 90 in 1810, and 282 in 1860. The white population declined from a peak of 8,399 in 1850 to 6,578 in 1860. This was due to the western migration of small-scale farmers who were unable to compete with the larger tobacco planters.[10]

In 1858, at the tail end of the opulent Boom Era, construction began on Caswell County Courthouse. Built using enslaved labor, it was completed in 1861 during the onset of the Civil War.[40][41]

After the war, the county continued its economic dependence on tobacco and was averse to agricultural diversification. The Second Industrial Revolution in varying degrees passed it by. Other than a few tobacco mills, there was an absence of industry and no railroad.[30] The population significantly diminished until 1910 when it began to increase.[42] By then, Yanceyville and Semora had phone service.[43]

The county's population kept growing through the 1920s. To provide better public facilities, the Caswell County Board of Education initiated school improvement projects.[44] During this time in 1926, The Caswell Messenger began publication.[45]

In 1937, the Yanceyville Rotary Club was founded and members successfully pioneered economic and community development projects.[17] Roosevelt's New Deal programs during the Depression years, improved farming techniques starting in the 1940s, and the economic impact of World War II also contributed significantly to revitalizing the area.[36][30]

Post–World War II to early 21st century edit

After World War II, as Caswell County and the broader United States returned to civilian life, it became evident that new efforts were needed to overcome old economic barriers. County leaders in the 1950s and 1960s understood that economic advancement depended on the development of water resources sufficient for industrial expansion, better infrastructure such as roads, providing new and various county-wide services, increasing cultural resources, and operating local government in a business-like fashion.[46] The history of Caswell County in the second half of the 20th century is characterized by much progress in these areas, but critical needs remained. What is more, the heritage of the county's earlier Boom Era of bright leaf tobacco and Greek Revival architecture represented both an opportunity and a hindrance.[46]

By 1950, Caswell County reached a peak of 20,870 inhabitants, which was not surpassed until the 2000 census.[47] The economic upswing of the 1950s saw new businesses entering the area. This included the opening of a meatpacking operation in 1956 in the county's southwest corner. Between the mid-1950s and mid-1980s, the county also attracted textile mills to Yanceyville.[48] Such growth enabled the local government to broaden its tax base and see increases in public revenue.[30]

As the county entered the 21st century, it faced the aftermath of a crisis in the tobacco industry, the urgent need for economic development in light of the Information Age, and a national trend toward heritage tourism as a means of economic growth.[49] Caswell County's economy continued to develop, diversify, and experience growth away from tobacco production. Business and entrepreneurial activity increased due to the area's location, commercial properties, land primed for development, relatively low property tax rate, and other factors.[49][50]

Civil War period edit

In May 1861, North Carolina with some reluctance joined the Confederacy, which by then was at war with the Union.[51][52] Caswell County provided troops, clothing, food, and tobacco in support of the war effort. Companies A, C, and D of the North Carolina Thirteenth Regiment consisted almost entirely of county enlistments. The area's soldiers fought in every major Civil War battle and there were many casualties.[53][10]

In Caswell County in January 1862, a significant number of African Americans fled slavery. Seven patrol squads comprising 34 individuals were dispatched to Yanceyville in search of them.[53] It is unknown if any were able to find safe haven behind Union lines.

In the spring of 1862, salt used for meat preservation was rationed, which was a statewide measure. As the war raged on, the county's inhabitants faced food shortages. Daily necessities were in short supply. Speculators benefitted while most remained in need.[53]

The minutes of the Caswell County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions from January 1863 to July 1866 were either lost or destroyed. Consequently, it is difficult for researchers to ascertain what was occurring in the county's court system during this period.[53]

At the 1860 U.S. census, 58.7 percent of Caswell County's population was enslaved.[54] Due to the Emancipation Proclamation in January 1863, enslaved African Americans in Confederate territory were recognized as free individuals by the executive branch of the U.S. federal government. They gained military protection upon crossing into Union-controlled areas or through the advance of federal troops.[55]

Many African Americans likely either fled or attempted to flee the area between 1863 and the war's end. Most remained confined behind Confederate lines until Union forces occupied much of the state during the Carolinas campaign in 1865.[51]

Reconstruction era edit

After the Civil War during Reconstruction, the pattern of daily life in Caswell County dramatically changed. The previous plantation way of life had disappeared. Small farmers fell into deeper poverty. Abandoned land and eroded soil permeated the landscape. The area faced a decreased standard of living and insufficient public revenue for services that governments ordinarily provided.[10]

Many whites in the county resented the war's outcome as did others in the North Carolina Piedmont area. Regional newspapers actively fomented their bitterness. When Congressional Reconstruction was established in 1867,[56] a large segment of residents characterized it as an effort by Radical Republicans to force Black suffrage upon them. A significant number began flocking to the Conservative Party, which was a coalition of the prewar Democratic Party and old-line Whigs.[57]

African Americans in the area had experienced immense jubilation when informed of the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. Their freedom was then safeguarded by Union troops, the Freedmen's Bureau, and the protection of the Thirteenth Amendment. However, in 1866 restrictive state laws called "Black Codes" were passed in North Carolina by former Confederate legislators who had returned to power as Conservatives.[58] Enacted to regain control over African Americans, these laws were nullified by congressional civil rights legislation later in 1866.[59]

In 1868 and 1869, the Republican-controlled General Assembly ratified the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments respectively.[60] Ensuring the right to vote regardless of race, color, or previous condition of servitude, the Fifteenth Amendment became a part of the U.S. Constitution in February 1870.[61] In that year's U.S. census, African Americans represented approximately 59 percent of Caswell County's population.[62] Over a span of five years from 1865 to 1870, they had gained constitutional protection from slavery and voting rights. They could seek employment, use public accommodations, acquire land, and participate in the political process.[63]

In January 1868, thirteen African American delegates representing 19 majority-Black counties attended the state's constitutional convention in Raleigh. They were North Carolina's first Black Caucus. Their members included a Republican legislator from Caswell County named Wilson Carey. At the convention, he spoke out against Conservative proposals to attract white immigrants to North Carolina. Carey felt the focus should instead be on African American North Carolinians who had built up the state.[64]

The 1868 constitutional convention passed resolutions that included the abolition of slavery, the adoption of universal male suffrage, the removal of property and religious qualifications for voting and office holding, and the establishment of a uniform public school system. Because the convention gave North Carolina a new constitution in 1868 that protected the rights of African Americans, the state was readmitted to the Union that same year on July 4 upon ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment.[65]

Enfranchising African Americans with the right to vote in elections was anathema to county and statewide Conservative Party members. This was not only due to their white supremacy but also because it threatened their power. Their animosity toward white and Black Republicans had begun to skyrocket when Republican gubernatorial candidate William W. Holden endorsed universal male suffrage at the party's state convention in March 1867.[57] The suffrage resolution's passage and Holden's victory in 1868 substantially added to the continuing friction. This growing tension helped make Caswell County and the region a hotbed of Ku Klux Klan activity that same year. African Americans and their supporters in the area were subsequently subjected to a heinous campaign of violence, intimidation, and murder to prevent them from voting.[57]

As Klan violence in Caswell County escalated in 1870, the Republican state senator of the area, John W. Stephens, became increasingly fearful of attack.[66] On May 21, he went to the courthouse in Yanceyville to convince the former Democratic county sheriff, Frank A. Wiley, to seek re-election as a Republican with his support and thus achieve a political reconciliation in the county.[67] Wiley had secretly agreed to work with the Klan and lured Stephens into a trap, whereby he was choked with a rope and stabbed to death by Klansmen in a vacant courthouse room. The current sheriff, Jessie C. Griffith, himself a Klansman and prominent Conservative, made little effort to investigate the assassination.[68]

Holden was disgusted by the murder of Stephens.[69] Conferring with his advisers, he decided to raise a militia to combat the Klan in Caswell and nearby Alamance County.[70] On July 8, he declared Caswell County to be in a state of insurrection.[71] About 350 militiamen, led by Colonel George Washington Kirk, arrived on July 18 and established headquarters in Yanceyville.[72] The militia arrested 19 men in the county as well as several dozen more in Alamance County, and Klan activities in both counties promptly ceased.[73] The prisoners were initially denied habeas corpus before being turned over to local courts, which did not convict any of the accused.[74] On November 10, Holden declared that there was no longer a state of insurrection in Alamance and Caswell counties.[75]

In December 1870, the state legislature, which had a Conservative majority that had come into power on the heels of the political backlash they had spearheaded against Holden over the incident, impeached him on eight charges. He was convicted on six of them and removed from office in March 1871. Holden's departure severely weakened the Republican Party in the state.[57]

The Conservative Party proceeded to institute white supremacy in state government in 1876.[65] They dropped the name "Conservative" that same year to become the Democratic Party of North Carolina.[76] When federal troops left the next year, ending Reconstruction, the stage was set for the passage of Jim Crow laws.[65]

Civil rights movement edit

By the end of the 1960s, Caswell County's public schools were beginning to fully integrate. A decade and a half earlier in 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Brown v. Board of Education that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional. In a later decision by the Court in May 1955 known as Brown II, school districts were given the ambiguous order to desegregate "with all deliberate speed."[77] Like many school boards in the South at the time, the Caswell County Board of Education interpreted the Court's ambiguity in a manner that served to delay, obstruct, and slow the process of racially integrating its schools.[78][79]

The Board of Education's resistance to integration had already been emboldened by North Carolina's passage of the Pupil Assignment Act in April 1955. The legislation gave county school boards full school placement authority.[79] Driven by the act's power, the Pearshall Plan's passage, and the prevailing anti-integration sentiment of the white community, the school district kept assigning children to schools in a segregated manner.[80]

In response to these developments, fifteen local African American parents presented a petition to the school district in August 1956 calling for the abolition of segregation, which the board refused to consider. Undeterred, the parents organized protests that included the NAACP. A federal lawsuit was subsequently filed in December 1956 asking for the immediate desegregation of Caswell County and North Carolina schools.[81]

In August 1957, 43 local students, many of whom were plaintiffs via their parents in the federal court case, applied for admission to public schools that were closer to their homes than the segregated ones they had been assigned.[82] The school board denied their applications and continued to reject them through 1962.[80] Nevertheless, the federal lawsuit kept moving forward.[83]

In December 1961, U.S. District Court Judge Edwin M. Stanley ruled that two brothers, Charlie and Fred Saunders, could promptly attend Archibald Murphey Elementary School, a now-closed formerly all-white school near Milton. When the new semester began in January, however, they did not present themselves for enrollment. The Ku Klux Klan had sent a threatening letter to the Saunders family previously.[84] According to an affidavit submitted by the children's father C.H. Saunders Sr., the KKK's threats caused him to miss a school board reassignment hearing ordered by the judge in August 1961 prior to his final judgment. Saunders also conveyed that he would be agreeable to transferring schools if his children's protection at Murphey Elementary could be assured.[84]

A year after the Saunders decision, Stanley ruled that the school district had been improperly administering the Pupil Assignment Act. In December 1962, he told the school boards of Caswell County and the city of Durham to allow every schoolchild complete freedom of choice regarding school placement.[85] On January 22, 1963, sixteen African American schoolchildren enrolled in four of the county's previously all-white schools.[80]

On their first day of school, a group of white men harassed and threatened one of the parents, Jasper Brown, who was a local civil rights leader and farmer. He was pursued and menaced by the men as he drove home. After a rear-end collision, the other vehicle's driver emerged with a firearm. Fearing for his life, Brown shot and wounded two of the men in an exchange of fire before turning himself in to police.[86][80] Due to the circumstances, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy was soon informed of the incident.[87]

Several months later, Brown was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon and served 90 days in jail. While awaiting trial, white men bombed his yard.[88] His four children and the 12 others who integrated the county's schools were physically threatened and emotionally abused throughout the semester. Despite requests from the NAACP and concerned families, no police protection was provided. Furthermore, the Board of Education refused to arrange school bus transportation.[89][80]

By late 1967, only 57 African American children out of a Black student population of approximately 3,000 were attending integrated public schools in Caswell County.[90][80] While there had been some faculty integration, the less than two percent enrollment rate in essence preserved segregation. The school district's integration plan had not fostered sufficient desegregation.[91] Its "freedom of choice" plan put the onus of integration on individual African American students and parents, who had to opt to cross the color line themselves.[91] If they did so, they faced social stigma, severe discrimination, and other hardships. Consequently, many families, though supportive of integration efforts, chose to keep their children safe in valued Black schools such as Caswell County High School.[92][80]

The school district's low integration rate resulted in the U.S. Office of Education citing the county in 1966 as one of seven in the state that were not in compliance with its civil rights Title IV guidelines. The bureau began taking steps to cut off federal funding.[93] The school district was not in full compliance with federal integration standards until 1969.[94] In that year, the Caswell County Board of Education implemented a plan for complete desegregation after Judge Stanley ordered the school district in August 1968 to integrate starting in the 1969–1970 school year.[95][96][80]

When school integration and consolidation subsequently occurred, Bartlett Yancey High School in Yanceyville became the only public high school in the county after Caswell County High School's closure in 1969.[97] The closed high school building's educational use was promptly reconfigured. The new integrated school was named N.L. Dillard Junior High School in honor of the former high school's principal. Integrated elementary schools were established based on zoning.[94]

Political leaders edit

Caswell County has produced notable political leaders throughout its history. Such politicians include Donna Edwards, Archibald Debow Murphey, Romulus Mitchell Saunders, and Bartlett Yancey, Jr.[98][99][100][101]

Legislators from the county had considerable influence on state politics during the first half of the 19th century.[30] Bartlett Yancey was speaker of the North Carolina Senate from 1817 to 1827. Romulus Mitchell Saunders was concurrently speaker of the North Carolina House of Commons from 1819 to 1820.[102]

Archibald D. Murphey has been called the "Father of Education" in North Carolina. Serving as a state senator, he proposed a publicly financed system of education in 1817. Murphey also made proposals regarding internal improvements and constitutional reform.[103]

Donna Edwards is a former U.S. congresswoman. Before entering Congress, she was the executive director of the National Network to End Domestic Violence, which provides advocacy and legal support to battered women. She worked to pass the Violence Against Women Act of 1994. In 2015, Edwards and other members of Congress introduced the Restoring Education and Learning Act (REAL Act) to reinstate Pell Grants to prisoners.[104]

Depiction in the arts edit

Writers including Alex Haley and artists such as Maud Gatewood have commented on Caswell County's history in their work. The county was briefly referenced in Haley's 1977 television miniseries Roots. It was cited as the location of champion cock fighter Tom Moore's (Chuck Connors) plantation.[105] When Gatewood designed the county seal in 1974, she added two large tobacco leaves as a symbol of the crop's long prominence in the area.[106]

Geography edit

 
Interactive map of Caswell County
 
Hyco Lake

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 428.71 square miles (1,110.4 km2), of which 425.37 square miles (1,101.7 km2) is land and 3.34 square miles (8.7 km2) (0.78%) is water.[107] It is bordered by Person, Orange, Alamance, and Rockingham counties, and the state of Virginia.[108] The Dan River flows through a part of the county. Hyco Lake is an important water source and popular recreational site.[5]

For a comprehensive overview of Caswell County's geography see When the Past Refused to Die: A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777–1977, by William S. Powell (1977) at 1–22.[109]

State and local protected areas edit

Major water bodies edit

Adjacent counties edit

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
179010,096
18008,701−13.8%
181011,75735.1%
182013,25312.7%
183015,18514.6%
184014,693−3.2%
185015,2693.9%
186016,2156.2%
187016,081−0.8%
188017,82510.8%
189016,028−10.1%
190015,028−6.2%
191014,858−1.1%
192015,7596.1%
193018,21415.6%
194020,03210.0%
195020,8704.2%
196019,912−4.6%
197019,055−4.3%
198020,7058.7%
199020,693−0.1%
200023,50113.6%
201023,7190.9%
202022,736−4.1%
2023 (est.)22,807[1]0.3%
U.S. Decennial Census[117]
1790–1960[118] 1900–1990[42]
1990–2000[119] 2010[120] 2020[1]

2020 census edit

Caswell County racial composition[121]
Race Number Percentage
White (non-Hispanic) 14,036 61.73%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 6,804 29.93%
Native American 65 0.29%
Asian 61 0.27%
Pacific Islander 13 0.06%
Other/Mixed 755 3.32%
Hispanic or Latino 1,002 4.41%

As of the 2020 census, there were 22,736 people and an estimated 8,993 households and 6,186 families residing in the county. In 2020, the estimated median age was 46.2 years. For every 100 females, there were an estimated 101.9 males.[121]

2010 census edit

Caswell County racial composition[122]
Race Number Percentage
White (non-Hispanic) 14,513 61.19%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 7,991 33.69%
Native American 70 0.30%
Asian 60 0.25%
Pacific Islander 4 0.02%
Other/Mixed 337 1.42%
Hispanic or Latino 744 3.14%

At the 2010 census, there were 23,719 people and an estimated 8,788 households and 6,345 families residing in Caswell County.[122] In 2010, the estimated median age was 42.8 years. For every 100 females, there were an estimated 103.7 males.[123]

2000 census edit

At the 2000 census,[124] there were 23,501 people and an estimated 8,670 households and 6,398 families residing in the county. The population density was 55 people per square mile (21 people/km2). There were 9,601 housing units at an average density of 23 units per square mile (8.9 units/km2). The racial makeup of the county was 61.07% White, 36.52% African American, 1.77% Hispanic or Latino, 0.19% Native American, 0.15% Asian, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 1.17% from other races, and 0.86% from two or more races.

Out of the 8,670 households, 31.00% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 55.20% were married couples living together, 14.20% had a female householder with no husband present, and 26.20% were non-families. 23.20% of all households consisted of individuals living alone and 10.20% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.56 and the average family size was 3.01.

The age distribution of the county's population consisted of 23.20% under the age of 18, 7.70% from 18 to 24, 30.10% from 25 to 44, 26.00% from 45 to 64, and 13.00% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 38 years. For every 100 females, there were 102.50 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 102.30 males.

The median income for a household in the county was $35,018 and the median income for a family was $41,905. Males had a median income of $28,968 versus $22,339 for females. The per capita income for the county was $16,470. About 10.90% of families and 14.40% of the population were below the poverty line, including 18.30% of those under age 18 and 21.10% of those age 65 and over.

Government and politics edit

Seated in Yanceyville, Caswell County's government consists of 28 departments, an elected board of commissioners, a clerk to the board, and an appointed county manager.[125] The county has additional central administration, Cooperative Extension, E-911, and Juvenile Crime Prevention Council staff.[126] Caswell County is a member of the Piedmont Triad Council of Governments.[127] The county lies within the bounds of the 22nd Prosecutorial District, the 17A Superior Court District, and the 17A District Court District.[128]

United States presidential election results for Caswell County, North Carolina[129]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 7,089 58.82% 4,860 40.33% 102 0.85%
2016 6,026 54.44% 4,792 43.29% 252 2.28%
2012 5,594 50.67% 5,348 48.45% 97 0.88%
2008 5,208 47.95% 5,545 51.05% 109 1.00%
2004 4,868 51.58% 4,539 48.10% 30 0.32%
2000 4,270 50.70% 4,091 48.58% 61 0.72%
1996 3,310 40.57% 4,312 52.86% 536 6.57%
1992 2,793 33.40% 4,725 56.50% 845 10.10%
1988 3,299 43.93% 4,189 55.79% 21 0.28%
1984 3,992 48.84% 4,157 50.86% 25 0.31%
1980 2,156 37.32% 3,529 61.09% 92 1.59%
1976 1,761 32.08% 3,707 67.54% 21 0.38%
1972 2,983 59.65% 1,922 38.43% 96 1.92%
1968 1,036 17.20% 2,137 35.47% 2,851 47.33%
1964 1,793 41.64% 2,513 58.36% 0 0.00%
1960 1,272 30.99% 2,832 69.01% 0 0.00%
1956 1,204 32.79% 2,468 67.21% 0 0.00%
1952 973 27.25% 2,597 72.75% 0 0.00%
1948 351 14.63% 1,651 68.82% 397 16.55%
1944 492 20.37% 1,923 79.63% 0 0.00%
1940 351 13.07% 2,335 86.93% 0 0.00%
1936 207 7.67% 2,493 92.33% 0 0.00%
1932 169 8.31% 1,858 91.39% 6 0.30%
1928 749 44.45% 936 55.55% 0 0.00%
1924 467 30.21% 1,075 69.53% 4 0.26%
1920 505 28.96% 1,239 71.04% 0 0.00%
1916 338 28.48% 849 71.52% 0 0.00%
1912 154 17.04% 705 77.99% 45 4.98%

Elected officials edit

In January 2022, Caswell County's elected officials were:[130][131][132]

  • Tony Durden, Jr. (D), Caswell County Sheriff
  • John Satterfield (D), Caswell County Clerk of Courts
  • Ginny S. Mitchell (D), Caswell County Register of Deeds

Caswell County Board of Commissioners:

  • Jeremiah Jefferies (D)
  • Nathaniel Hall (D)
  • William E. Carter (D)
  • Rick McVey (R), (chairman)
  • David Owen (R), (Vice Chair)
  • Steve Oestreicher (R)
  • John D. Dickerson (R)

North Carolina General Assembly representatives:

U.S. House of Representatives:

Economy edit

The economy of Caswell County is rooted in agriculture, which continues to develop and experience growth away from tobacco cultivation. The area's location, commercial properties, land primed for development, and relatively low property tax rate have contributed to an increase in business activity and entrepreneurship.[133][50]

Caswell County's agricultural sector produces hemp, tobacco, soybeans, corn, wheat, oats, barley, hay, alfalfa, beef cattle, sheep, swine, and poultry. The county also produces minerals such as soapstone, graphite, mica, corundum, microcline, and beryl.[134][5]

NC Cooperative Extension in Yanceyville connects local agribusinesses and farmers with crucial research-based information and technology.[135] The Caswell County Local Foods Council manages the Caswell Farmers' Market in Yanceyville and initiates community-driven projects.[136]

The county is home to two industrial parks: Pelham Industrial Park in Pelham and Caswell County Industrial Park in Yanceyville.[137] CoSquare, a coworking space that offers several business possibilities for entrepreneurs, is located in Yanceyville's downtown historic district.[138] The largest industries in Yanceyville are accommodation and food services, health care and social assistance, and manufacturing.[139] Manufactured goods include textiles, clothing, and electronics.[5]

Caswell County benefits from its proximity to the greater Piedmont Triad area, Danville, Virginia, and the Research Triangle. Residents have access to a host of goods, services, attractions, and employment in the region.[140] The county receives economic activity in kind from these neighboring areas.[49]

Infrastructure edit

Utilities edit

 
Water tower in Yanceyville

Transportation edit

 
Entering Caswell County from Danville, Virginia, on US 29

Major highways edit

Interstate 40 and Interstate 85 are the closest interstate highways to the county, located 14 miles (23 km) south in Graham. When I-785 is completed, it will run through Caswell County near Pelham.[142]

Airports edit

Railroad edit

Danville station, located 13.9 miles (22 km) north of Yanceyville[144]

Public transit edit

  • Caswell County Area Transportation System (CATS)[145]

Other edit

Education edit

 
Piedmont Community College – Caswell County Campus

Higher education edit

Primary and secondary education edit

The Caswell County public school system has six schools ranging from pre-kindergarten to twelfth grade. The school district operates one high school, one middle school, and four elementary schools:[149]

  • Bartlett Yancey High School
  • N.L. Dillard Middle School
  • North Elementary School
  • Oakwood Elementary School
  • South Elementary School
  • Stoney Creek Elementary School

Healthcare edit

Health care providers in Caswell County include:

  • Caswell Family Medical Center[150]
  • Sovah Family Medicine-Yanceyville[151]
  • Yanceyville Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center[152]
  • Caswell House[153]

Parks and recreation edit

 
Caswell Community Arboretum, Yanceyville

Caswell County's outdoor recreational areas include:[154][155][156]

  • Animal Park at the Conservators Center (in Anderson township)
  • The Dan River (in Milton)
  • Hyco Lake (near Semora)
  • Person Caswell Recreation Park (near Semora)
  • Maud F. Gatewood Municipal Park (in Yanceyville)
  • S.R. Farmer Lake (in Yanceyville township)
  • Cherokee Scout Reservation's Boy Scouts of America camp (near S.R. Farmer Lake)
  • Yanceyville Park/Memorial Park (in Yanceyville)
  • Caswell Community Arboretum (in Yanceyville)
  • Caswell County Parks & Recreation Center (in Yanceyville)
  • Caswell Pines Golf Club (in Yanceyville township)
  • Caswell Game Land (near Yanceyville)
  • Country Line Creek (in Caswell Game Land)
  • Hyco Creek (in Caswell Game Land)

Indoor and outdoor recreational facilities, as well as sports programs and activities, are offered by the Caswell County Department of Parks & Recreation.[156] The Caswell Senior Center, which is located in Yanceyville, has recreation and fitness facilities built in 2009.[157]

Arts and culture edit

 
Caswell County Veterans Memorial, Yanceyville

Caswell County hosts two major festivals a year: the "Bright Leaf Hoedown" and the "Spring Fling."[158] The Bright Leaf Hoedown is a one-day outdoor festival held in late September in downtown Yanceyville. It features local food vendors, live entertainment, crafts, and non-profit organizations, usually drawing more than 5,000 guests.[159][160] The Spring Fling is a two-day event and is held on a weekend in late April or early May on the grounds of the Providence Volunteer Fire Department.[161]

The Caswell County Historical Association hosts its annual Heritage Festival in Yanceyville every May. The festival celebrates county history through tours, living history reenactments, games, vendors, and live music.[162]

Downtown Yanceyville's historic district features an antebellum courthouse designed by William Percival and several other examples of antebellum architecture. The Yanceyville Historic District, Bartlett Yancey House, John Johnston House, William Henry and Sarah Holderness House, Melrose/Williamson House, Graves House, and Poteat House are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[163][164]

Warren House and Warren's Store in Prospect Hill and the Garland-Buford House and James Malone House near Leasburg are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in addition to Wildwood near Semora and Woodside near Milton.[165]

Caswell County's cultural attractions also include:[166][167][168][169][5]

  • Caswell Council for the Arts (in Yanceyville)
  • Caswell County Civic Center (in Yanceyville)
  • Caswell County Veterans Memorial (in Yanceyville)
  • Caswell Farmers' Market (in Yanceyville)
  • Caswell Horticulture Club
  • Gunn Memorial Public Library (in Yanceyville)
  • Milton Historic District
  • Milton Renaissance Foundation Museum & Visitors Center
  • Milton Studio Art Gallery
  • Piedmont Triad Visitor Center (in Pelham)
  • Old Caswell County Jail (in Yanceyville)
  • Old Poteat School/Poteat One-Room School (in Yanceyville)
  • Red House Presbyterian Church (in Semora)
  • Richmond-Miles History Museum (in Yanceyville)
  • Shangri-La Miniature Stone Village (in Prospect Hill)
  • Thomas Day House and Union Tavern (in Milton)
  • Town of Yanceyville Public Safety Memorial
  • Yanceyville Museum of Art
  • Yanceyville Pavilion
  • Yanceyville's municipal water tower
  • Yoder's Country Market (in Yanceyville)

The Caswell County Civic Center in Yanceyville has a full-size professionally equipped stage, a 912-seat auditorium, and meeting and banquet facilities for up to 500. The Civic Center also has accessories for concerts, theatre, and social functions as well as a lobby art gallery.[170]

Gunn Memorial Public Library in Yanceyville conducts summer reading programs for children of all ages.[171]

Communities edit

 
Map of Caswell County with municipal and township labels

Towns edit

Unincorporated communities edit

Townships edit

The following townships are in Caswell County:[108]

  • Anderson
  • Dan River
  • Hightowers
  • Leasburg
  • Locust Hill
  • Milton
  • Pelham
  • Stoney Creek
  • Yanceyville

Notable people edit

Academia edit

Art, literature, and music edit

Athletes edit

Business edit

Government and law edit

Miscellaneous edit

See also edit

References edit

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  167. ^ "Milton Studio Art Gallery". Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  168. ^ "Piedmont Triad Visitor Center". Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  169. ^ "Yoder's Country Market". Retrieved December 4, 2022.
  170. ^ "Caswell Civic Center". County of Caswell, North Carolina. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  171. ^ "Caswell County Library". County of Caswell, North Carolina. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  172. ^ "A. Oveta Fuller, Ph.D." Microbiology & Immunology. September 23, 2015. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  173. ^ "Totten, Henry Roland". www.ncpedia.org. Retrieved June 17, 2022.
  174. ^ Floyd, Mike. "CM columnist Mel Melton leads a Zydeco band as well as cooks cajun". The Caswell Messenger. Retrieved June 17, 2022.
  175. ^ "John Gunn". Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  176. ^ "Neal Watlington". Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  177. ^ "Carl Willis". Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  178. ^ Rsf (October 11, 2009). "Caswell County North Carolina: Giles Mebane (1809–1899)". Caswell County North Carolina. Retrieved June 17, 2022.
  179. ^ "Caswell County North Carolina Ancestral Trackers". www.ancestraltrackers.net. Retrieved June 17, 2022.
  180. ^ "Hugh B. Webster". Retrieved March 8, 2022.

Works cited edit

  • Ashe, Samuel A'Court (1925). History of North Carolina. Vol. II. Raleigh: Edwards & Broughton. OCLC 244120893.
  • Brisson, Jim D. (April 2011). "'Civil Government Was Crumbling Around Me': The Kirk-Holden War of 1870". The North Carolina Historical Review. 8 (2): 123–163. JSTOR 23523540.
  • Brown, Deborah F. (2004). Dead-End Road. ISBN 9781418427832.
  • Corbitt, David Leroy (2000). The formation of the North Carolina counties, 1663-1943 (reprint ed.). Raleigh: North Carolina Division of Archives and History. OCLC 46398241.
  • Powell, William S. (1976). The North Carolina Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Tar Heel Places. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807812471.
  • Powell, William S. (1977). When the Past Refused to Die: A History of Caswell County, North Carolina, 1777-1977. Durham, NC: Moore Pub. Co.
  • Sartin, Ruby Pearl (1972). Caswell County: The First Century, 1777–1787. Greensboro: The University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG): College Collection.
  • Walker, E.V. (1993). Caswell County Training School, 1933–1969: Relationships between Community and School. Harvard Educational Review, 63, 161–183.
  • Walker, Vanessa Siddle (1996). Their Highest Potential: An African American School Community in the Segregated South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

External links edit

  •   Geographic data related to Caswell County, North Carolina at OpenStreetMap
  • Official website
  • Caswell County History Website
  • Caswell County Photograph Collection

caswell, county, north, carolina, caswell, county, county, state, north, carolina, located, piedmont, triad, region, state, 2020, census, population, county, seat, yanceyville, caswell, countycountyold, caswell, county, courthouse, yanceyvillesealmotto, preser. Caswell County is a county in the U S state of North Carolina It is located in the Piedmont Triad region of the state At the 2020 census the population was 22 736 1 Its county seat is Yanceyville 2 Caswell CountyCountyOld Caswell County Courthouse in YanceyvilleSealMotto Preserving the Past Embracing the Future Location within the U S state of North CarolinaNorth Carolina s location within the U S Coordinates 36 23 N 79 20 W 36 39 N 79 34 W 36 39 79 34Country United StatesState North CarolinaFoundedJune 1 1777Named forRichard CaswellSeatYanceyvilleLargest communityYanceyvilleArea Total428 71 sq mi 1 110 4 km2 Land425 37 sq mi 1 101 7 km2 Water3 34 sq mi 8 7 km2 0 78 Population 2020 Total22 736 Estimate 2023 22 807 Density53 45 sq mi 20 64 km2 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern Summer DST UTC 4 EDT Congressional districts4th 6thWebsitewww wbr caswellcountync wbr gov Partially bordering the state of Virginia the county was formed from Orange County in 1777 and named for Richard Caswell the first governor of North Carolina 3 Other Caswell County communities include Blanch Casville Leasburg Milton Pelham Prospect Hill Providence and Semora 4 The Dan River flows through a portion of the county Hyco Lake is a popular recreational area and key water source 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Creation 1 3 Industrialization and growth 1 3 1 Early 19th century to World War II 1 3 2 Post World War II to early 21st century 1 4 Civil War period 1 5 Reconstruction era 1 6 Civil rights movement 1 7 Political leaders 1 8 Depiction in the arts 2 Geography 2 1 State and local protected areas 2 2 Major water bodies 2 3 Adjacent counties 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 2010 census 3 3 2000 census 4 Government and politics 4 1 Elected officials 5 Economy 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Utilities 6 2 Transportation 6 2 1 Major highways 6 2 2 Airports 6 2 3 Railroad 6 2 4 Public transit 6 3 Other 7 Education 7 1 Higher education 7 2 Primary and secondary education 8 Healthcare 9 Parks and recreation 10 Arts and culture 11 Communities 11 1 Towns 11 2 Unincorporated communities 11 3 Townships 12 Notable people 12 1 Academia 12 2 Art literature and music 12 3 Athletes 12 4 Business 12 5 Government and law 12 6 Miscellaneous 13 See also 14 References 15 Works cited 16 External linksHistory editEarly history edit The area was first inhabited by Native Americans over 10 000 years ago 6 Indigenous residents were of Siouan groups including the Occaneechi 5 Abundant evidence of indigenous activity has been found in many parts of Caswell County 7 8 In 1663 and 1665 Charles I of England gave all of what is now North Carolina and South Carolina named for him to eight of his noblemen the Lords Proprietors 9 Caswell County was originally part of the land grant belonging to Edward Hyde 1st Earl of Clarendon 10 Colonial records show land grants in northern Orange County later Caswell County as early as 1748 There were Scotch Irish German and English settlements along the Dan River and Hogans and Country Line creeks by 1751 The first recorded settlement occurred between 1750 and 1755 when eight to ten families migrated from Orange County and Culpeper Virginia 11 The primary reason for resettlement was economic They were searching for fertile land which the low land of the Dan River and several creeks provided 10 After the initial settlements the area experienced rapid population growth The free settlers who lived in the county before 1800 were mostly of English Scotch Irish French Huguenot and German descent 10 Scotch Irish and German families traversed the Great Wagon Road which was the main route for settlement in the region and had come by way of Virginia and Pennsylvania English and Huguenot migrants came from settled areas of eastern North Carolina following the Great Trading Path English colonists also came from Virginia using the same network of roads and trails 12 Enslaved Africans were brought to the area by slaveholders and slave trading agents involved in speculation 13 14 By 1800 enslaved persons accounted for nearly one third 32 of Caswell County s population 10 As they grew in number substantially so after 1790 they powered more and more of the area s agricultural and economic development 15 The settlers first consisted mainly of yeoman farmers and planters Middle class settlers arrived afterward in the 18th century and were called the new families 16 10 Scotch Irish and English culture predominated in the area socially spiritually educationally and economically 17 Yeoman farmers accounted for more than half the settler population 10 Few if any were slaveholders at this time The yeomanry owned small family farms and lived in log homes They farmed for subsistence with surpluses going toward debt settlement or bartering for goods Relying on the skilled and unskilled labor of family members neighbors and others they linked farms to early grist mills and sawmills 12 Middle class families accounted for less than a fifth of the settler population and were chiefly involved in business entrepreneurship craftsmanship small scale commercial farming export and trade 13 10 They actively promoted business and settlement in and around towns such as Leasburg Milton and numerous villages to further local economic development and their own upward social mobility As the area grew more populated and prosperous a significant number of middle class residents transitioned to the upper middle class 10 The planter class constituted the upper class and were the smallest segment of the settler population Most came from prosperous families and were well versed in the literature of the Enlightenment Due to their social position they deeply impacted the county economically culturally and politically 18 10 The area s other planters in contrast were less prominent and wealthy than the gentry in their midst They were common or smaller planters with less land and lived more ordinary upper middle class lives 19 Several had indentured servants or bound apprentices of mixed race 20 No matter their class distinction planters were the most socioeconomically advantaged inhabitants They traded commodities with other settlers and were involved in land speculation and the domestic slave trade They founded mills sold livestock and grew profitable crops such as wheat corn and oats on farms or plantations 21 Until the early 1800s tobacco was harvested mainly as a secondary crop by the settlers depending on changing market demand pricing soil exhaustion and other variables 22 From the early 1760s until the early 1770s it was common for local planters to receive credit loans from British owned mercantile companies in the province for the purpose of funding the expansion of agricultural production The monies went toward purchases of additional land and enslaved labor Such companies also supplied enslaved workers and consumer items to area planters and managed tobacco exports sent to Virginia warehouses 23 Their merchants offered good tobacco prices initially but eventually reduced them greatly causing many planters to fall into substantial debt which could not be repaid without selling land or enslaved people Due to the American Revolutionary War most of these debts were never repaid After the war the demand for tobacco rose when new markets were found without such middlemen 24 Not long after they arrived the settlers to the area had been progressive in building homes starting businesses and establishing churches Prominent planters promoted a culture of education that later saw the creation of private academies in the early 1800s 10 The older families were generally more politically and fiscally conservative than the newcomers They usually voted against funds for postwar internal improvements and were not supportive of expenditures that raised the county debt due to an aversion to raising taxes and expanding the role of government 10 Before the Revolutionary War the biggest threats to public safety and social stability in the region were the French and Indian War and the Regulator Movement in present Orange County 25 While the movement increased class tensions within communities the settlers came together in support of the American Revolution 10 Prior to the Revolution the Church of England was the most common religious affiliation in the area 10 Pennsylvania missionary Hugh McAden founded Red House Presbyterian Church possibly as early as 1755 26 10 Country Line Primitive Baptist Church was established in 1772 27 Lea s Chapel a Methodist Episcopal church was organized in 1779 28 Creation edit Caswell County was formed from a portion of Orange County effective June 1 1777 29 It was created so that governance could be more localized and efficient 30 The county was named for Richard Caswell who was the first governor of North Carolina after the Declaration of Independence in 1776 a delegate at the First and Second Continental Congresses and a senior officer of militia in the Southern theater of the Revolutionary War 31 The legislative act creating Caswell ordered its first court to be held at the homestead of Thomas Douglas and appointed commissioners to find a permanent location to build a county courthouse and prison 29 During the prelude to the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in 1781 Lord Cornwallis pursued General Nathanael Greene through Caswell County Greene s retreat called the Race to the Dan was a calculated ploy His objective was to extend Cornwallis far beyond his supply base in Camden South Carolina so that his fighting power would be significantly diminished Cornwallis and his troops marched through Camp Springs and Leasburg which was the first county seat They continued on to the Red House Church area of Semora 10 It is unknown how many locally enslaved people fled to the British for safe haven before the Battle of Yorktown in 1781 32 By the war s end in 1783 Caswell County had made significant contributions in personnel and materiel to the war effort Little fighting took place locally County residents renowned for their Revolutionary War service include Lieutenant Colonel Henry Hal Dixon John Herndon Graves Dr Lancelot Johnston and Starling Gunn 30 By that point no county courthouse had been built so the General Assembly passed another act authorizing the county to erect public buildings A courthouse was subsequently established at Leasburg which was officially incorporated in 1788 29 After the war a small number of free Black families moved to the area Most of the men had served in the Continental Army or Navy 33 Usually skilled in a trade they farmed in a manner similar to yeoman farmers but did not have equal rights 34 In 1786 a special state census ranked Caswell County as the second largest county with a population of 9 839 Halifax County ranked first with 489 more inhabitants 30 In February 1792 the eastern half of the county legally became Person County After the division the seat of Caswell County s government was moved to a more central location The community hosting the new county seat was originally called Caswell Court House In 1833 the name was changed to Yanceyville 35 Industrialization and growth edit Early 19th century to World War II edit In the early 1800s Caswell County s wealthy landowners were moving away from diversified farming and accelerating toward tobacco as a single cash crop This agricultural conversion considerably affected the growth of the enslaved population which rose 54 percent from 1800 to 1810 10 In 1810 the village of Caswell Court House later Yanceyville had one store and a hattery two taverns and approximately fifteen homes silversmiths blacksmiths wheelwrights coachmakers and other tradesmen soon began opening businesses Attorneys doctors preachers and a number of politicians were also drawn to the growing village and county seat 36 Around 1830 the Boom Era began which lasted until the American Civil War During this period the county saw the creation of new flour and lumber mills and experienced the furniture output of Thomas Day a free Black businessman in Milton A cotton factory foundry and silk company were also in operation In Yanceyville roads were improved and given names by 1841 The town became wealthy enough by 1852 to charter an independent bank the Bank of Yanceyville whose market capitalization ranked among the highest in the state 36 nbsp Bank of Yanceyville 20 dollar banknote from 1856 In 1839 on Abisha Slade s farm in Purley an enslaved man named Stephen discovered the bright leaf tobacco flue curing process 37 30 Slade perfected the curing method in 1856 The following year his farm harvested 20 000 pounds 9 100 kg of bright leaf tobacco on 100 acres of land and the crop was sold in Lynchburg Virginia at an exorbitant price Slade taught the flue curing technique to many farmers in the area and elsewhere Bright leaf tobacco became popular with smokers and North Carolina growers gained a dominant position in the tobacco industry as a result 38 The tobacco economy and the industries supported by it enriched many locals The lifestyle of many yeoman farmers changed into that of planters 10 The newly wealthy built impressive homes and sent their children to private academies 30 However the majority of Caswell County s inhabitants did not benefit In 1850 enslaved African Americans accounted for 52 percent of the county s population 39 By 1856 tobacco overshadowed all other forms of enterprise in Caswell County Tobacco warehouses and manufacturing amp processing plants dotted the skyline with the largest centers located in Yanceyville and Milton 10 The growth of the industry and increase in raw tobacco production created an expanding need for labor The number of enslaved people grew to 9 355 in 1860 from a total of 4 299 in 1810 and 2 788 in 1800 10 There were 26 free Black inhabitants residing in Caswell County in 1800 90 in 1810 and 282 in 1860 The white population declined from a peak of 8 399 in 1850 to 6 578 in 1860 This was due to the western migration of small scale farmers who were unable to compete with the larger tobacco planters 10 In 1858 at the tail end of the opulent Boom Era construction began on Caswell County Courthouse Built using enslaved labor it was completed in 1861 during the onset of the Civil War 40 41 After the war the county continued its economic dependence on tobacco and was averse to agricultural diversification The Second Industrial Revolution in varying degrees passed it by Other than a few tobacco mills there was an absence of industry and no railroad 30 The population significantly diminished until 1910 when it began to increase 42 By then Yanceyville and Semora had phone service 43 The county s population kept growing through the 1920s To provide better public facilities the Caswell County Board of Education initiated school improvement projects 44 During this time in 1926 The Caswell Messenger began publication 45 In 1937 the Yanceyville Rotary Club was founded and members successfully pioneered economic and community development projects 17 Roosevelt s New Deal programs during the Depression years improved farming techniques starting in the 1940s and the economic impact of World War II also contributed significantly to revitalizing the area 36 30 Post World War II to early 21st century edit After World War II as Caswell County and the broader United States returned to civilian life it became evident that new efforts were needed to overcome old economic barriers County leaders in the 1950s and 1960s understood that economic advancement depended on the development of water resources sufficient for industrial expansion better infrastructure such as roads providing new and various county wide services increasing cultural resources and operating local government in a business like fashion 46 The history of Caswell County in the second half of the 20th century is characterized by much progress in these areas but critical needs remained What is more the heritage of the county s earlier Boom Era of bright leaf tobacco and Greek Revival architecture represented both an opportunity and a hindrance 46 By 1950 Caswell County reached a peak of 20 870 inhabitants which was not surpassed until the 2000 census 47 The economic upswing of the 1950s saw new businesses entering the area This included the opening of a meatpacking operation in 1956 in the county s southwest corner Between the mid 1950s and mid 1980s the county also attracted textile mills to Yanceyville 48 Such growth enabled the local government to broaden its tax base and see increases in public revenue 30 As the county entered the 21st century it faced the aftermath of a crisis in the tobacco industry the urgent need for economic development in light of the Information Age and a national trend toward heritage tourism as a means of economic growth 49 Caswell County s economy continued to develop diversify and experience growth away from tobacco production Business and entrepreneurial activity increased due to the area s location commercial properties land primed for development relatively low property tax rate and other factors 49 50 Civil War period edit In May 1861 North Carolina with some reluctance joined the Confederacy which by then was at war with the Union 51 52 Caswell County provided troops clothing food and tobacco in support of the war effort Companies A C and D of the North Carolina Thirteenth Regiment consisted almost entirely of county enlistments The area s soldiers fought in every major Civil War battle and there were many casualties 53 10 In Caswell County in January 1862 a significant number of African Americans fled slavery Seven patrol squads comprising 34 individuals were dispatched to Yanceyville in search of them 53 It is unknown if any were able to find safe haven behind Union lines In the spring of 1862 salt used for meat preservation was rationed which was a statewide measure As the war raged on the county s inhabitants faced food shortages Daily necessities were in short supply Speculators benefitted while most remained in need 53 The minutes of the Caswell County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions from January 1863 to July 1866 were either lost or destroyed Consequently it is difficult for researchers to ascertain what was occurring in the county s court system during this period 53 At the 1860 U S census 58 7 percent of Caswell County s population was enslaved 54 Due to the Emancipation Proclamation in January 1863 enslaved African Americans in Confederate territory were recognized as free individuals by the executive branch of the U S federal government They gained military protection upon crossing into Union controlled areas or through the advance of federal troops 55 Many African Americans likely either fled or attempted to flee the area between 1863 and the war s end Most remained confined behind Confederate lines until Union forces occupied much of the state during the Carolinas campaign in 1865 51 Reconstruction era edit After the Civil War during Reconstruction the pattern of daily life in Caswell County dramatically changed The previous plantation way of life had disappeared Small farmers fell into deeper poverty Abandoned land and eroded soil permeated the landscape The area faced a decreased standard of living and insufficient public revenue for services that governments ordinarily provided 10 Many whites in the county resented the war s outcome as did others in the North Carolina Piedmont area Regional newspapers actively fomented their bitterness When Congressional Reconstruction was established in 1867 56 a large segment of residents characterized it as an effort by Radical Republicans to force Black suffrage upon them A significant number began flocking to the Conservative Party which was a coalition of the prewar Democratic Party and old line Whigs 57 African Americans in the area had experienced immense jubilation when informed of the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 Their freedom was then safeguarded by Union troops the Freedmen s Bureau and the protection of the Thirteenth Amendment However in 1866 restrictive state laws called Black Codes were passed in North Carolina by former Confederate legislators who had returned to power as Conservatives 58 Enacted to regain control over African Americans these laws were nullified by congressional civil rights legislation later in 1866 59 In 1868 and 1869 the Republican controlled General Assembly ratified the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments respectively 60 Ensuring the right to vote regardless of race color or previous condition of servitude the Fifteenth Amendment became a part of the U S Constitution in February 1870 61 In that year s U S census African Americans represented approximately 59 percent of Caswell County s population 62 Over a span of five years from 1865 to 1870 they had gained constitutional protection from slavery and voting rights They could seek employment use public accommodations acquire land and participate in the political process 63 In January 1868 thirteen African American delegates representing 19 majority Black counties attended the state s constitutional convention in Raleigh They were North Carolina s first Black Caucus Their members included a Republican legislator from Caswell County named Wilson Carey At the convention he spoke out against Conservative proposals to attract white immigrants to North Carolina Carey felt the focus should instead be on African American North Carolinians who had built up the state 64 The 1868 constitutional convention passed resolutions that included the abolition of slavery the adoption of universal male suffrage the removal of property and religious qualifications for voting and office holding and the establishment of a uniform public school system Because the convention gave North Carolina a new constitution in 1868 that protected the rights of African Americans the state was readmitted to the Union that same year on July 4 upon ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment 65 Enfranchising African Americans with the right to vote in elections was anathema to county and statewide Conservative Party members This was not only due to their white supremacy but also because it threatened their power Their animosity toward white and Black Republicans had begun to skyrocket when Republican gubernatorial candidate William W Holden endorsed universal male suffrage at the party s state convention in March 1867 57 The suffrage resolution s passage and Holden s victory in 1868 substantially added to the continuing friction This growing tension helped make Caswell County and the region a hotbed of Ku Klux Klan activity that same year African Americans and their supporters in the area were subsequently subjected to a heinous campaign of violence intimidation and murder to prevent them from voting 57 As Klan violence in Caswell County escalated in 1870 the Republican state senator of the area John W Stephens became increasingly fearful of attack 66 On May 21 he went to the courthouse in Yanceyville to convince the former Democratic county sheriff Frank A Wiley to seek re election as a Republican with his support and thus achieve a political reconciliation in the county 67 Wiley had secretly agreed to work with the Klan and lured Stephens into a trap whereby he was choked with a rope and stabbed to death by Klansmen in a vacant courthouse room The current sheriff Jessie C Griffith himself a Klansman and prominent Conservative made little effort to investigate the assassination 68 Holden was disgusted by the murder of Stephens 69 Conferring with his advisers he decided to raise a militia to combat the Klan in Caswell and nearby Alamance County 70 On July 8 he declared Caswell County to be in a state of insurrection 71 About 350 militiamen led by Colonel George Washington Kirk arrived on July 18 and established headquarters in Yanceyville 72 The militia arrested 19 men in the county as well as several dozen more in Alamance County and Klan activities in both counties promptly ceased 73 The prisoners were initially denied habeas corpus before being turned over to local courts which did not convict any of the accused 74 On November 10 Holden declared that there was no longer a state of insurrection in Alamance and Caswell counties 75 In December 1870 the state legislature which had a Conservative majority that had come into power on the heels of the political backlash they had spearheaded against Holden over the incident impeached him on eight charges He was convicted on six of them and removed from office in March 1871 Holden s departure severely weakened the Republican Party in the state 57 The Conservative Party proceeded to institute white supremacy in state government in 1876 65 They dropped the name Conservative that same year to become the Democratic Party of North Carolina 76 When federal troops left the next year ending Reconstruction the stage was set for the passage of Jim Crow laws 65 Civil rights movement edit By the end of the 1960s Caswell County s public schools were beginning to fully integrate A decade and a half earlier in 1954 the U S Supreme Court ruled in Brown v Board of Education that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional In a later decision by the Court in May 1955 known as Brown II school districts were given the ambiguous order to desegregate with all deliberate speed 77 Like many school boards in the South at the time the Caswell County Board of Education interpreted the Court s ambiguity in a manner that served to delay obstruct and slow the process of racially integrating its schools 78 79 The Board of Education s resistance to integration had already been emboldened by North Carolina s passage of the Pupil Assignment Act in April 1955 The legislation gave county school boards full school placement authority 79 Driven by the act s power the Pearshall Plan s passage and the prevailing anti integration sentiment of the white community the school district kept assigning children to schools in a segregated manner 80 In response to these developments fifteen local African American parents presented a petition to the school district in August 1956 calling for the abolition of segregation which the board refused to consider Undeterred the parents organized protests that included the NAACP A federal lawsuit was subsequently filed in December 1956 asking for the immediate desegregation of Caswell County and North Carolina schools 81 In August 1957 43 local students many of whom were plaintiffs via their parents in the federal court case applied for admission to public schools that were closer to their homes than the segregated ones they had been assigned 82 The school board denied their applications and continued to reject them through 1962 80 Nevertheless the federal lawsuit kept moving forward 83 In December 1961 U S District Court Judge Edwin M Stanley ruled that two brothers Charlie and Fred Saunders could promptly attend Archibald Murphey Elementary School a now closed formerly all white school near Milton When the new semester began in January however they did not present themselves for enrollment The Ku Klux Klan had sent a threatening letter to the Saunders family previously 84 According to an affidavit submitted by the children s father C H Saunders Sr the KKK s threats caused him to miss a school board reassignment hearing ordered by the judge in August 1961 prior to his final judgment Saunders also conveyed that he would be agreeable to transferring schools if his children s protection at Murphey Elementary could be assured 84 A year after the Saunders decision Stanley ruled that the school district had been improperly administering the Pupil Assignment Act In December 1962 he told the school boards of Caswell County and the city of Durham to allow every schoolchild complete freedom of choice regarding school placement 85 On January 22 1963 sixteen African American schoolchildren enrolled in four of the county s previously all white schools 80 On their first day of school a group of white men harassed and threatened one of the parents Jasper Brown who was a local civil rights leader and farmer He was pursued and menaced by the men as he drove home After a rear end collision the other vehicle s driver emerged with a firearm Fearing for his life Brown shot and wounded two of the men in an exchange of fire before turning himself in to police 86 80 Due to the circumstances Attorney General Robert F Kennedy was soon informed of the incident 87 Several months later Brown was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon and served 90 days in jail While awaiting trial white men bombed his yard 88 His four children and the 12 others who integrated the county s schools were physically threatened and emotionally abused throughout the semester Despite requests from the NAACP and concerned families no police protection was provided Furthermore the Board of Education refused to arrange school bus transportation 89 80 By late 1967 only 57 African American children out of a Black student population of approximately 3 000 were attending integrated public schools in Caswell County 90 80 While there had been some faculty integration the less than two percent enrollment rate in essence preserved segregation The school district s integration plan had not fostered sufficient desegregation 91 Its freedom of choice plan put the onus of integration on individual African American students and parents who had to opt to cross the color line themselves 91 If they did so they faced social stigma severe discrimination and other hardships Consequently many families though supportive of integration efforts chose to keep their children safe in valued Black schools such as Caswell County High School 92 80 The school district s low integration rate resulted in the U S Office of Education citing the county in 1966 as one of seven in the state that were not in compliance with its civil rights Title IV guidelines The bureau began taking steps to cut off federal funding 93 The school district was not in full compliance with federal integration standards until 1969 94 In that year the Caswell County Board of Education implemented a plan for complete desegregation after Judge Stanley ordered the school district in August 1968 to integrate starting in the 1969 1970 school year 95 96 80 When school integration and consolidation subsequently occurred Bartlett Yancey High School in Yanceyville became the only public high school in the county after Caswell County High School s closure in 1969 97 The closed high school building s educational use was promptly reconfigured The new integrated school was named N L Dillard Junior High School in honor of the former high school s principal Integrated elementary schools were established based on zoning 94 Political leaders edit Caswell County has produced notable political leaders throughout its history Such politicians include Donna Edwards Archibald Debow Murphey Romulus Mitchell Saunders and Bartlett Yancey Jr 98 99 100 101 Legislators from the county had considerable influence on state politics during the first half of the 19th century 30 Bartlett Yancey was speaker of the North Carolina Senate from 1817 to 1827 Romulus Mitchell Saunders was concurrently speaker of the North Carolina House of Commons from 1819 to 1820 102 Archibald D Murphey has been called the Father of Education in North Carolina Serving as a state senator he proposed a publicly financed system of education in 1817 Murphey also made proposals regarding internal improvements and constitutional reform 103 Donna Edwards is a former U S congresswoman Before entering Congress she was the executive director of the National Network to End Domestic Violence which provides advocacy and legal support to battered women She worked to pass the Violence Against Women Act of 1994 In 2015 Edwards and other members of Congress introduced the Restoring Education and Learning Act REAL Act to reinstate Pell Grants to prisoners 104 Depiction in the arts edit Writers including Alex Haley and artists such as Maud Gatewood have commented on Caswell County s history in their work The county was briefly referenced in Haley s 1977 television miniseries Roots It was cited as the location of champion cock fighter Tom Moore s Chuck Connors plantation 105 When Gatewood designed the county seal in 1974 she added two large tobacco leaves as a symbol of the crop s long prominence in the area 106 Geography edit nbsp Interactive map of Caswell County nbsp Hyco Lake According to the U S Census Bureau the county has a total area of 428 71 square miles 1 110 4 km2 of which 425 37 square miles 1 101 7 km2 is land and 3 34 square miles 8 7 km2 0 78 is water 107 It is bordered by Person Orange Alamance and Rockingham counties and the state of Virginia 108 The Dan River flows through a part of the county Hyco Lake is an important water source and popular recreational site 5 For a comprehensive overview of Caswell County s geography see When the Past Refused to Die A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777 1977 by William S Powell 1977 at 1 22 109 State and local protected areas edit Animal Park at the Conservators Center R Wayne Bailey Caswell Game Land 110 Major water bodies edit Country Line Creek 111 Dan River S R Farmer Lake 112 Hogans Creek 113 Hyco Creek Hyco Lake Lynch Creek Moon Creek 114 North Fork Rattlesnake Creek 115 South Hyco Creek Sugartree Creek Wildwood Lake 116 Adjacent counties edit Person County east Orange County southeast Alamance County south Rockingham County west Pittsylvania County Virginia north Halifax County Virginia north Danville Virginia independent city northDemographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 179010 096 18008 701 13 8 181011 75735 1 182013 25312 7 183015 18514 6 184014 693 3 2 185015 2693 9 186016 2156 2 187016 081 0 8 188017 82510 8 189016 028 10 1 190015 028 6 2 191014 858 1 1 192015 7596 1 193018 21415 6 194020 03210 0 195020 8704 2 196019 912 4 6 197019 055 4 3 198020 7058 7 199020 693 0 1 200023 50113 6 201023 7190 9 202022 736 4 1 2023 est 22 807 1 0 3 U S Decennial Census 117 1790 1960 118 1900 1990 42 1990 2000 119 2010 120 2020 1 2020 census edit Caswell County racial composition 121 Race Number Percentage White non Hispanic 14 036 61 73 Black or African American non Hispanic 6 804 29 93 Native American 65 0 29 Asian 61 0 27 Pacific Islander 13 0 06 Other Mixed 755 3 32 Hispanic or Latino 1 002 4 41 As of the 2020 census there were 22 736 people and an estimated 8 993 households and 6 186 families residing in the county In 2020 the estimated median age was 46 2 years For every 100 females there were an estimated 101 9 males 121 2010 census edit Caswell County racial composition 122 Race Number Percentage White non Hispanic 14 513 61 19 Black or African American non Hispanic 7 991 33 69 Native American 70 0 30 Asian 60 0 25 Pacific Islander 4 0 02 Other Mixed 337 1 42 Hispanic or Latino 744 3 14 At the 2010 census there were 23 719 people and an estimated 8 788 households and 6 345 families residing in Caswell County 122 In 2010 the estimated median age was 42 8 years For every 100 females there were an estimated 103 7 males 123 2000 census edit At the 2000 census 124 there were 23 501 people and an estimated 8 670 households and 6 398 families residing in the county The population density was 55 people per square mile 21 people km2 There were 9 601 housing units at an average density of 23 units per square mile 8 9 units km2 The racial makeup of the county was 61 07 White 36 52 African American 1 77 Hispanic or Latino 0 19 Native American 0 15 Asian 0 03 Pacific Islander 1 17 from other races and 0 86 from two or more races Out of the 8 670 households 31 00 had children under the age of 18 living with them 55 20 were married couples living together 14 20 had a female householder with no husband present and 26 20 were non families 23 20 of all households consisted of individuals living alone and 10 20 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 56 and the average family size was 3 01 The age distribution of the county s population consisted of 23 20 under the age of 18 7 70 from 18 to 24 30 10 from 25 to 44 26 00 from 45 to 64 and 13 00 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 38 years For every 100 females there were 102 50 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 102 30 males The median income for a household in the county was 35 018 and the median income for a family was 41 905 Males had a median income of 28 968 versus 22 339 for females The per capita income for the county was 16 470 About 10 90 of families and 14 40 of the population were below the poverty line including 18 30 of those under age 18 and 21 10 of those age 65 and over Government and politics editSeated in Yanceyville Caswell County s government consists of 28 departments an elected board of commissioners a clerk to the board and an appointed county manager 125 The county has additional central administration Cooperative Extension E 911 and Juvenile Crime Prevention Council staff 126 Caswell County is a member of the Piedmont Triad Council of Governments 127 The county lies within the bounds of the 22nd Prosecutorial District the 17A Superior Court District and the 17A District Court District 128 United States presidential election results for Caswell County North Carolina 129 Year Republican Democratic Third party No No No 2020 7 089 58 82 4 860 40 33 102 0 85 2016 6 026 54 44 4 792 43 29 252 2 28 2012 5 594 50 67 5 348 48 45 97 0 88 2008 5 208 47 95 5 545 51 05 109 1 00 2004 4 868 51 58 4 539 48 10 30 0 32 2000 4 270 50 70 4 091 48 58 61 0 72 1996 3 310 40 57 4 312 52 86 536 6 57 1992 2 793 33 40 4 725 56 50 845 10 10 1988 3 299 43 93 4 189 55 79 21 0 28 1984 3 992 48 84 4 157 50 86 25 0 31 1980 2 156 37 32 3 529 61 09 92 1 59 1976 1 761 32 08 3 707 67 54 21 0 38 1972 2 983 59 65 1 922 38 43 96 1 92 1968 1 036 17 20 2 137 35 47 2 851 47 33 1964 1 793 41 64 2 513 58 36 0 0 00 1960 1 272 30 99 2 832 69 01 0 0 00 1956 1 204 32 79 2 468 67 21 0 0 00 1952 973 27 25 2 597 72 75 0 0 00 1948 351 14 63 1 651 68 82 397 16 55 1944 492 20 37 1 923 79 63 0 0 00 1940 351 13 07 2 335 86 93 0 0 00 1936 207 7 67 2 493 92 33 0 0 00 1932 169 8 31 1 858 91 39 6 0 30 1928 749 44 45 936 55 55 0 0 00 1924 467 30 21 1 075 69 53 4 0 26 1920 505 28 96 1 239 71 04 0 0 00 1916 338 28 48 849 71 52 0 0 00 1912 154 17 04 705 77 99 45 4 98 Elected officials edit In January 2022 Caswell County s elected officials were 130 131 132 Tony Durden Jr D Caswell County Sheriff John Satterfield D Caswell County Clerk of Courts Ginny S Mitchell D Caswell County Register of Deeds Caswell County Board of Commissioners Jeremiah Jefferies D Nathaniel Hall D William E Carter D Rick McVey R chairman David Owen R Vice Chair Steve Oestreicher R John D Dickerson R North Carolina General Assembly representatives Senate Graig R Meyer D 23rd House Renee Price D 50th U S House of Representatives Valerie Foushee D 4th Kathy Manning D 6th Economy editFurther information Yanceyville North Carolina Economy The economy of Caswell County is rooted in agriculture which continues to develop and experience growth away from tobacco cultivation The area s location commercial properties land primed for development and relatively low property tax rate have contributed to an increase in business activity and entrepreneurship 133 50 Caswell County s agricultural sector produces hemp tobacco soybeans corn wheat oats barley hay alfalfa beef cattle sheep swine and poultry The county also produces minerals such as soapstone graphite mica corundum microcline and beryl 134 5 NC Cooperative Extension in Yanceyville connects local agribusinesses and farmers with crucial research based information and technology 135 The Caswell County Local Foods Council manages the Caswell Farmers Market in Yanceyville and initiates community driven projects 136 The county is home to two industrial parks Pelham Industrial Park in Pelham and Caswell County Industrial Park in Yanceyville 137 CoSquare a coworking space that offers several business possibilities for entrepreneurs is located in Yanceyville s downtown historic district 138 The largest industries in Yanceyville are accommodation and food services health care and social assistance and manufacturing 139 Manufactured goods include textiles clothing and electronics 5 Caswell County benefits from its proximity to the greater Piedmont Triad area Danville Virginia and the Research Triangle Residents have access to a host of goods services attractions and employment in the region 140 The county receives economic activity in kind from these neighboring areas 49 Infrastructure editUtilities edit nbsp Water tower in Yanceyville Caswell County s electric system is maintained by Duke Energy and Piedmont Electric Cooperative 141 Telephone network CenturyLink Wireless networks AT amp T Mobility U S Cellular and Verizon Wireless Broadband internet CenturyLink and Comcast Cable television Comcast Transportation edit nbsp Entering Caswell County from Danville Virginia on US 29 Major highways edit nbsp nbsp Future I 785 nbsp US 29 nbsp nbsp US 29 Bus nbsp US 58 nbsp US 158 nbsp NC 49 nbsp NC 57 nbsp NC 62 nbsp NC 86 nbsp NC 87 nbsp NC 119 nbsp NC 150 nbsp NC 700 Interstate 40 and Interstate 85 are the closest interstate highways to the county located 14 miles 23 km south in Graham When I 785 is completed it will run through Caswell County near Pelham 142 Airports edit Yanceyville Municipal Airport 143 Danville Regional Airport located 15 3 miles 25 km north of Yanceyville Person County Airport located 26 2 miles 42 km southeast of Yanceyville Burlington Alamance Regional Airport located 29 4 miles 47 km southwest of Yanceyville Piedmont Triad International Airport located 46 5 miles 75 km southwest of Yanceyville Raleigh Durham International Airport located 56 miles 90 km southeast of Yanceyville Railroad edit Danville station located 13 9 miles 22 km north of Yanceyville 144 Public transit edit Caswell County Area Transportation System CATS 145 Other edit Caswell Correctional Center a medium custody facility of the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction 146 Dan River Prison Work Farm a minimum custody facility of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety 147 Education edit nbsp Piedmont Community College Caswell County Campus Higher education edit Piedmont Community College s satellite campus in Caswell County is located in Yanceyville 148 Primary and secondary education edit Main article Caswell County Schools The Caswell County public school system has six schools ranging from pre kindergarten to twelfth grade The school district operates one high school one middle school and four elementary schools 149 Bartlett Yancey High School N L Dillard Middle School North Elementary School Oakwood Elementary School South Elementary School Stoney Creek Elementary SchoolHealthcare editHealth care providers in Caswell County include Caswell Family Medical Center 150 Sovah Family Medicine Yanceyville 151 Yanceyville Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center 152 Caswell House 153 Parks and recreation edit nbsp Caswell Community Arboretum Yanceyville Caswell County s outdoor recreational areas include 154 155 156 Animal Park at the Conservators Center in Anderson township The Dan River in Milton Hyco Lake near Semora Person Caswell Recreation Park near Semora Maud F Gatewood Municipal Park in Yanceyville S R Farmer Lake in Yanceyville township Cherokee Scout Reservation s Boy Scouts of America camp near S R Farmer Lake Yanceyville Park Memorial Park in Yanceyville Caswell Community Arboretum in Yanceyville Caswell County Parks amp Recreation Center in Yanceyville Caswell Pines Golf Club in Yanceyville township Caswell Game Land near Yanceyville Country Line Creek in Caswell Game Land Hyco Creek in Caswell Game Land Indoor and outdoor recreational facilities as well as sports programs and activities are offered by the Caswell County Department of Parks amp Recreation 156 The Caswell Senior Center which is located in Yanceyville has recreation and fitness facilities built in 2009 157 Arts and culture edit nbsp Caswell County Veterans Memorial Yanceyville Caswell County hosts two major festivals a year the Bright Leaf Hoedown and the Spring Fling 158 The Bright Leaf Hoedown is a one day outdoor festival held in late September in downtown Yanceyville It features local food vendors live entertainment crafts and non profit organizations usually drawing more than 5 000 guests 159 160 The Spring Fling is a two day event and is held on a weekend in late April or early May on the grounds of the Providence Volunteer Fire Department 161 The Caswell County Historical Association hosts its annual Heritage Festival in Yanceyville every May The festival celebrates county history through tours living history reenactments games vendors and live music 162 Downtown Yanceyville s historic district features an antebellum courthouse designed by William Percival and several other examples of antebellum architecture The Yanceyville Historic District Bartlett Yancey House John Johnston House William Henry and Sarah Holderness House Melrose Williamson House Graves House and Poteat House are listed on the National Register of Historic Places 163 164 Warren House and Warren s Store in Prospect Hill and the Garland Buford House and James Malone House near Leasburg are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in addition to Wildwood near Semora and Woodside near Milton 165 Caswell County s cultural attractions also include 166 167 168 169 5 Caswell Council for the Arts in Yanceyville Caswell County Civic Center in Yanceyville Caswell County Veterans Memorial in Yanceyville Caswell Farmers Market in Yanceyville Caswell Horticulture Club Gunn Memorial Public Library in Yanceyville Milton Historic District Milton Renaissance Foundation Museum amp Visitors Center Milton Studio Art Gallery Piedmont Triad Visitor Center in Pelham Old Caswell County Jail in Yanceyville Old Poteat School Poteat One Room School in Yanceyville Red House Presbyterian Church in Semora Richmond Miles History Museum in Yanceyville Shangri La Miniature Stone Village in Prospect Hill Thomas Day House and Union Tavern in Milton Town of Yanceyville Public Safety Memorial Yanceyville Museum of Art Yanceyville Pavilion Yanceyville s municipal water tower Yoder s Country Market in Yanceyville The Caswell County Civic Center in Yanceyville has a full size professionally equipped stage a 912 seat auditorium and meeting and banquet facilities for up to 500 The Civic Center also has accessories for concerts theatre and social functions as well as a lobby art gallery 170 Gunn Memorial Public Library in Yanceyville conducts summer reading programs for children of all ages 171 Communities edit nbsp Map of Caswell County with municipal and township labels Towns edit Milton Yanceyville county seat and largest community Unincorporated communities edit Blanch Camp Springs Casville Cherry Grove Estelle Fitch Frogsboro Hightowers Jericho Leasburg Milesville Osmond Pelham Prospect Hill Providence Purley Quick Semora Stony Creek Townships edit The following townships are in Caswell County 108 Anderson Dan River Hightowers Leasburg Locust Hill Milton Pelham Stoney Creek YanceyvilleNotable people editAcademia edit A Oveta Fuller 1955 2022 associate professor of microbiology at University of Michigan Medical School 172 Henry Lee Graves 1813 1881 president of Baylor University William Louis Poteat 1856 1938 professor of biology and president of Wake Forest University public intellectual early advocate of Darwinian evolution Henry Roland Totten 1892 1974 botanist 173 Art literature and music edit The Badgett Sisters folk and gospel group composed of sisters Celester Connie and Cleonia Badgett Max Drake born 1952 musician Maud Gatewood 1934 2004 artist Mel Melton musician 174 Ida Isabella Poteat 1858 1940 artist and instructor Moses Roper 1815 1891 African American abolitionist author and orator Ray Scott born 1969 country music artist Carolina Slim 1923 1953 Piedmont blues guitarist and singer Hazel Smith 1934 2018 country music journalist publicist singer songwriter television and radio show host and cookbook author Athletes edit Mic hael Brooks born 1991 former NFL player who attended high school in Yanceyville John Gunn 1939 2010 race car driver 175 Lee Pulliam born 1988 stock car racing driver and team owner Neal Watlington 1922 2019 MLB player for the Philadelphia Athletics 176 Carl Willis born 1960 former MLB player and current pitching coach for the Cleveland Guardians 177 Business edit Thomas Day 1801 1861 free Black furniture craftsman and cabinetmaker Edmund Richardson 1818 1886 entrepreneur who produced and marketed cotton Samuel Simeon Fels 1860 1950 businessman and philanthropist Government and law edit Bedford Brown 1795 1870 U S senator Richard Caswell 1729 1789 first and fifth governor of North Carolina Archibald Dixon 1802 1876 U S senator Donna Edwards born 1958 former U S representative Calvin Graves 1804 1877 house member of the North Carolina General Assembly and member of the North Carolina Senate John Kerr Hendrick 1849 1921 U S representative Louisa Moore Holt 1833 1899 First Lady of North Carolina John Kerr 1782 1842 member of the U S House of Representatives John Kerr Jr 1811 1879 congressional representative and jurist John H Kerr 1873 1958 jurist and politician Benjamin J Lea 1833 1894 lawyer and politician who served as a justice on the Tennessee Supreme Court Jacob E Long 1880 1955 15th lieutenant governor of North Carolina from 1925 to 1929 serving under Governor Angus W McLean Giles Mebane 1809 1899 speaker of the North Carolina Senate during most of the Civil War 178 Anderson Mitchell 1800 1876 U S representative 179 Archibald Debow Murphey 1777 1832 attorney jurist and politician who was known as the Father of Education in North Carolina Romulus Mitchell Saunders 1791 1867 U S representative John W Stephens 1834 1870 North Carolina state senator agent for the Freedmen s Bureau Jacob Thompson 1810 1885 U S secretary of the interior Hugh Webster 1943 2022 register of deeds for Alamance County and North Carolina state senator 180 Marmaduke Williams 1774 1850 Democratic Republican U S congressman George Royal George Williamson 1788 1856 member of the North Carolina Senate Bartlett Yancey Jr 1785 1828 Democrat Republican U S congressman Miscellaneous edit Oscar Penn Fitzgerald 1829 1911 Methodist clergyman journalist and educator Henrietta Phelps Jeffries 1857 1926 African American midwife and a founding member of Macedonia AME Church in Milton Peter U Murphey 1810 1876 naval officer and captain of the CSS Selma during the Civil WarSee also editHaw River Valley AVA wine region partially located in the county List of counties in North Carolina National Register of Historic Places listings in Caswell County North Carolina Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation state recognized tribe that resides in the county Virginia International Raceway a nearby multi purpose road course offering auto and motorcycle racingReferences edit a b c QuickFacts Caswell County North Carolina United States Census Bureau Retrieved March 21 2024 Find a County National Association of Counties Archived from the original on May 31 2011 Retrieved June 7 2011 Caswell County North Carolina www carolana com Retrieved December 20 2022 Our Towns www allincaswellnc com Retrieved December 20 2022 a b c d e f Powell William S 2006 Caswell County NCPedia North Carolina Government amp Heritage Library Retrieved July 12 2021 Claggett Stephen R North Carolina s First Colonists 12 000 Years Before Roanoke North Carolina Office of State Archeology Retrieved July 11 2021 Caswell County History Website American Indian Heritage NCCCHA org Retrieved July 30 2022 Powell 1977 p 28 31 Lords Proprietors Retrieved March 2 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Caswell County The First Century 1777 1877 PDF Archived PDF from the original on December 20 2019 Retrieved August 5 2021 better source needed George Washington was Culpeper County s surveyor from 1749 to 1750 a b History and Architecture of Orange County North Carolina PDF Archived PDF from the original on August 12 2021 Retrieved August 12 2021 a b Settlement of the Piedmont 1730 1775 Retrieved August 16 2021 Patterns in the intercolonial slave trade across the Americas before the nineteenth century Retrieved August 25 2021 The Growth of Slavery in North Carolina Retrieved August 15 2021 The Evolution of Gentility in Eighteenth century England and Colonial Virginia PDF Archived PDF from the original on August 18 2017 Retrieved August 20 2021 a b Caswell is Home of Flue Cured Tobacco The News amp Observer Raleigh NC May 18 1940 p11 Gentry Retrieved August 25 2021 The North Carolina Historical Review Retrieved August 25 2021 Davis Family Retrieved August 31 2021 Plantations of North Carolina Retrieved August 10 2021 Soil Survey of Caswell County North Carolina PDF Archived PDF from the original on January 19 2017 Retrieved August 11 2021 Scotch Merchants Retrieved August 25 2021 Tobacco amp Colonial American Economy Retrieved August 17 2021 Regulator Movement Retrieved August 16 2021 McAden Hugh NCPedia org Retrieved August 16 2021 Historical Sketch of Country Line Church PDF Archived PDF from the original on August 17 2021 Retrieved August 17 2021 Chapel on South Hyco The Story of Lea s Chapel United Methodist Church Person County North Carolina 1750 2000 AD Retrieved June 7 2022 a b c Corbitt 2000 p 59 a b c d e f g h i History of Caswell County NCCCHA org Retrieved August 3 2021 Caswell Richard NCPedia org Retrieved July 11 2021 African Americans and the Revolution Retrieved August 11 2021 List of Free African Americans in the Revolution Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Maryland and Delaware Retrieved August 12 2021 African Americans Part 2 Life under slavery NCpedia www ncpedia org Retrieved November 11 2022 The Formation of the North Carolina Counties 1663 1943 Retrieved April 22 2024 a b c Historical Sketch Retrieved May 11 2022 Bright Leaf Tobacco NCpedia org Retrieved July 8 2021 Slade Abisha Retrieved August 18 2021 Historical Perspectives of Caswell County Retrieved August 10 2021 Yanceyville in Life Magazine 1941 April 26 2022 Retrieved April 28 2022 Percival William fl 1850s Retrieved April 28 2022 a b Forstall Richard L ed March 27 1995 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 13 2015 Onion Rebecca March 16 2015 A Telephone Map of the United States Shows Where You Could Call Using Ma Bell in 1910 Slate Retrieved August 3 2021 National Register of Historic Places Caswell County Training School PDF Archived PDF from the original on May 8 2019 Retrieved August 3 2021 Messenger The Caswell caswellmessenger com Serving Caswell County since 1926 The Caswell Messenger Retrieved November 11 2022 a b Powell 1977 United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 7 2021 Caswell County Textile Industry PDF Retrieved December 26 2022 a b c History of Yanceyville Retrieved June 7 2022 a b Business amp Entrepreneurship AllinCaswellNC com Retrieved July 13 2021 a b North Carolina in the Civil War NCPedia org Retrieved August 7 2021 Secession Retrieved August 20 2021 a b c d Civil War 1861 1865 NCCCHA org Retrieved August 8 2021 Map showing the distribution of the slave population of the southern states of the United States Compiled from the census of 1860 Library of Congress Retrieved April 28 2022 The Emancipation Proclamation October 6 2015 Retrieved July 3 2022 Reconstruction by Allen W Trelease 2006 Retrieved July 7 2022 a b c d The Kirk Holden War of 1870 and the Failure of Reconstruction in North Carolina PDF Archived PDF from the original on August 8 2017 Retrieved August 7 2021 Black Codes Retrieved August 7 2021 Black Codes in North Carolina 1866 Retrieved November 13 2022 Reconstruction Retrieved July 7 2022 All Amendments to the United States Constitution University of Minnesota Human Rights Library North Carolina Counties U S Census Bureau 1870 PDF Archived PDF from the original on February 24 2019 Retrieved July 3 2022 The African American Odyssey A Quest for Full Citizenship Library of Congress February 9 1998 Retrieved July 3 2022 Constitutional Convention 1868 Black Caucus Retrieved August 9 2021 a b c Reconstruction in North Carolina Retrieved August 4 2021 Brisson 2011 pp 137 139 Brisson 2011 p 139 Brisson 2011 pp 139 140 Brisson 2011 p 141 Brisson 2011 p 143 Ashe 1925 p 1114 Brisson 2011 p 146 Brisson 2011 pp 146 147 Brisson 2011 pp 148 152 Brisson 2011 p 152 Conservative Party Retrieved August 8 2021 Brown v Board of Education of Topeka August 15 2016 Retrieved July 11 2021 The Brown II All Deliberate Speed Decision Civil Rights Movement Archive a b The Pupil Assignment Act North Carolina s Response to Brown v Board of Education Retrieved August 12 2021 a b c d e f g h Caswell County History Web Log Caswell County North Carolina School Integration NCCCHA org Retrieved July 26 2021 Desegregation Action is Filed The News amp Observer Raleigh NC December 11 1956 p1 43 Negroes Seek Entry into Schools The Charlotte Observer Charlotte NC August 6 1957 p4 A Jeffers v Whitley 197 F Supp 84 M D N C 1961 Justia Law Retrieved November 11 2022 a b Caswell Negroes Appeal Step Taken The Charlotte Observer Charlotte NC January 31 1962 p12 A Judge Rules on School Integration The Charlotte Observer Charlotte NC December 22 1962 p1 Two Area Men Wounded Caswell Scene Now Calm The Daily Times News Burlington NC January 23 1963 p1 Two White Men Wounded in Caswell Integration The News amp Observer Raleigh NC January 23 1963 p1 Brown 2004 pp 53 57 78 79 Suit Claims Pupil Abuse in Caswell The News amp Observer Raleigh NC March 19 1963 p9 Caswell Hearing Recessed The News amp Observer Raleigh NC August 17 1966 p3 a b Caswell Answers Questions on School Desegregation The Danville Register Danville VA December 21 1966 p1 Caswell County Training School 1933 1969 Relationships between Community and School PDF Harvard Educational Review Archived PDF from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved July 26 2020 Caswell Notified Compliance Lacking for U S Funds The Danville Register Danville VA December 6 1966 p1 a b Judge Rules Caswell in Compliance The News amp Observer Raleigh NC April 11 1969 p3 Their Highest Potential An African American School Community in the Segregated South by Vanessa Siddle Walker University of North Carolina Press 1996 p192 Caswell Ordered To Integrate The Daily Times News Burlington NC August 24 1968 p1 Caswell County High School Flickr August 21 2010 Retrieved July 23 2020 Edwards Donna Biographical Information bioguide congress gov Retrieved November 13 2022 Murphey Archibald Debow Retrieved November 13 2022 Saunders Romulus Mitchell Biographical Information bioguide congress gov Retrieved November 13 2022 Yancey Bartlett Biographical Information bioguide congress gov Retrieved November 13 2022 Saunders Romulus Mitchell Retrieved November 13 2022 Archibald Murphey North Carolina Digital History Retrieved August 5 2021 Keeping It REAL Why Congress Must Act to Restore Pell Grant Funding for Prisoners January 6 2016 SSRN 2711979 Retrieved August 5 2021 Caswell County Genealogy CaswellCountyNC org Retrieved November 25 2022 Tobacco Historical Sketch Retrieved November 25 2022 2020 County Gazetteer Files North Carolina United States Census Bureau August 23 2022 Retrieved September 9 2023 a b Powell 1976 p 93 Geography Overview Caswell County Historical Association Retrieved February 20 2022 NCWRC Game Lands www ncpaws org Retrieved March 30 2023 Country Line Creek in Caswell County NC northcarolina hometownlocator com Retrieved November 28 2022 FARMER LAKE Caswell County NC Caswell County NC Retrieved June 16 2022 Hogans Creek in Caswell County NC northcarolina hometownlocator com Retrieved June 16 2022 Moon Creek in Caswell County NC northcarolina hometownlocator com Retrieved June 16 2022 North Fork Rattlesnake Creek in Caswell County NC northcarolina hometownlocator com Retrieved June 16 2022 Novak Steven Fish Wildwood Lake Caswell County North Carolina Lake Link Retrieved June 16 2022 U S Decennial Census United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 13 2015 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved January 13 2015 Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau April 2 2001 Archived PDF from the original on March 27 2010 Retrieved January 13 2015 State amp County QuickFacts United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on June 6 2011 Retrieved October 18 2013 a b Explore Census Data data census gov Retrieved December 22 2021 a b Decennial Census data census gov Retrieved December 25 2022 American Community Survey data census gov Retrieved December 25 2022 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 Department Directory CaswellCountyNC gov Retrieved July 5 2021 Staff Directory CaswellCountyNC gov Retrieved July 5 2021 Who We Are and What We Do PTRC org Retrieved July 5 2021 Caswell County North Carolina Judicial Branch Retrieved January 11 2023 Leip David Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections uselectionatlas org Retrieved March 15 2018 Caswell County Retrieved January 19 2022 Caswell Government Retrieved January 19 2022 Caswell County Representation North Carolina General Assembly Retrieved April 19 2024 Doing Business Retrieved February 1 2022 Whippoorwill Herb Co About Us Retrieved January 31 2022 Home Retrieved February 17 2022 AboutUs Retrieved August 31 2021 Industrial Parks CaswellCountyNC gov Archived from the original on January 9 2019 Retrieved July 13 2021 CoSquare Center of Entrepreneurship Retrieved August 31 2021 Yanceyville NC Census Place Retrieved February 11 2022 Places to visit about 1 hour from Yanceyville Retrieved February 2 2022 failed verification Locations Retrieved February 15 2022 The Future of Reidsville NC rockitinreidsville Retrieved November 11 2022 6W4 Yanceyville Municipal Airport Retrieved February 27 2022 Danville Virginia Amtrak com Retrieved December 25 2022 CATS Quick Info Retrieved July 3 2021 Caswell Correctional Center Retrieved February 18 2023 Dan River Prison Work Farm Retrieved December 4 2022 Leadership amp Vision Retrieved February 15 2022 Caswell County Schools Retrieved February 2 2022 About CHC Retrieved August 31 2021 Sovah Family Medicine Yanceyville Retrieved May 17 2022 YAD Healthcare Retrieved March 11 2023 Caswell House Exceptional Senior Living Retrieved November 11 2022 Area Info Retrieved February 16 2022 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine tinacarrollbsa June 27 2021 Boy Scout Camp Cherokee Scout Reservation Yanceyville NC retrieved June 27 2021 better source needed a b Parks amp Recreation Retrieved February 23 2022 Senior Services County of Caswell North Carolina Retrieved February 16 2022 Providence Fire amp Rescue 2012 Spring Fling Festival 2012 Archived from the original on September 20 2012 Retrieved August 22 2021 2021 Hoedown set for Saturday September 25 CaswellMessenger com Retrieved June 30 2021 Preserving the past embracing the future Looking back at 2008 NewsofOrange com Retrieved June 30 2021 Annual Events Archived August 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine Caswell County Chamber of Commerce Retrieved March 18 2013 Caswell celebrates heritage with festival GoDanRiver com Retrieved June 27 2021 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 M Ruth Little July 2014 William Henry and Sarah Holderness House PDF National Register of Historic Places Nomination and Inventory North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office Retrieved February 17 2022 National Register Database and Research Retrieved November 13 2022 Home YanceyvilleNC gov Retrieved February 16 2022 Milton Studio Art Gallery Retrieved February 16 2022 Piedmont Triad Visitor Center Retrieved April 22 2022 Yoder s Country Market Retrieved December 4 2022 Caswell Civic Center County of Caswell North Carolina Retrieved February 16 2022 Caswell County Library County of Caswell North Carolina Retrieved June 7 2022 A Oveta Fuller Ph D Microbiology amp Immunology September 23 2015 Retrieved March 31 2022 Totten Henry Roland www ncpedia org Retrieved June 17 2022 Floyd Mike CM columnist Mel Melton leads a Zydeco band as well as cooks cajun The Caswell Messenger Retrieved June 17 2022 John Gunn Retrieved May 20 2022 Neal Watlington Retrieved May 20 2022 Carl Willis Retrieved May 20 2022 Rsf October 11 2009 Caswell County North Carolina Giles Mebane 1809 1899 Caswell County North Carolina Retrieved June 17 2022 Caswell County North Carolina Ancestral Trackers www ancestraltrackers net Retrieved June 17 2022 Hugh B Webster Retrieved March 8 2022 Works cited editAshe Samuel A Court 1925 History of North Carolina Vol II Raleigh Edwards amp Broughton OCLC 244120893 Brisson Jim D April 2011 Civil Government Was Crumbling Around Me The Kirk Holden War of 1870 The North Carolina Historical Review 8 2 123 163 JSTOR 23523540 Brown Deborah F 2004 Dead End Road ISBN 9781418427832 Corbitt David Leroy 2000 The formation of the North Carolina counties 1663 1943 reprint ed Raleigh North Carolina Division of Archives and History OCLC 46398241 Powell William S 1976 The North Carolina Gazetteer A Dictionary of Tar Heel Places Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807812471 Powell William S 1977 When the Past Refused to Die A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777 1977 Durham NC Moore Pub Co Sartin Ruby Pearl 1972 Caswell County The First Century 1777 1787 Greensboro The University of North Carolina at Greensboro UNCG College Collection Walker E V 1993 Caswell County Training School 1933 1969 Relationships between Community and School Harvard Educational Review 63 161 183 Walker Vanessa Siddle 1996 Their Highest Potential An African American School Community in the Segregated South Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caswell County North Carolina nbsp Geographic data related to Caswell County North Carolina at OpenStreetMap Official website Caswell County History Website Caswell County Photograph Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caswell County North Carolina amp oldid 1221044108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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