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Rockingham County, North Carolina

Rockingham County is a county located in the U.S. state of North Carolina. As of the 2020 census, the population was 91,096.[1] Its county seat is Wentworth.[2] The county is known as "North Carolina's North Star".

Rockingham County
Rockingham County Courthouse in Wentworth
Nickname: 
North Carolina's North Star
Motto: 
"You're in a good place"
Location within the U.S. state of North Carolina
North Carolina's location within the U.S.
Coordinates: 36°22′55″N 79°46′58″W / 36.381806°N 79.782754°W / 36.381806; -79.782754
Country United States
State North Carolina
Founded1785
Named forCharles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham
SeatWentworth
Largest communityEden
Area
 • Total572.76 sq mi (1,483.4 km2)
 • Land565.64 sq mi (1,465.0 km2)
 • Water7.12 sq mi (18.4 km2)  1.24%
Population
 (2020)
 • Total91,096
 • Estimate 
(2022)
91,957
 • Density161.05/sq mi (62.18/km2)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Congressional district6th
Websitewww.rockinghamcountync.gov

History edit

Settling and founding edit

 
William Byrd II surveyed the eventual county and dubbed the area the "Land of Eden".

Prior to European colonization, the area eventually comprising Rockingham County was inhabited by Cheraw/Saura Native Americans.[3] In the 1600s they inhabited several small settlements along the Dan River, though around 1710 they migrated towards South Carolina.[4] Between 1728 and 1733, the Dan River Valley in the Granville District was surveyed by William Byrd II as part of efforts to delineate the North Carolina-Virginia border.[5][6] He soon thereafter purchased 20,000 acres of the land, which he described as the "Land of Eden" to attract prospective farmers. The region's first white settlers came from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia and were of German, English, Scottish, and Irish descent.[6] Some had wealthy backgrounds, but most were poor.[7] Some local white men served in militias during the American Revolutionary War.[8] American troops under General Nathanael Greene and British troops under General Charles Cornwallis moved through the area around the time of the Battle of Guilford Court House in 1781.[9]

The North Carolina General Assembly created Rockingham County from a northern portion of Guilford County on December 29, 1785.[10] It was named for Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham,[3] British Prime Minister from 1765 to 1766 and again in 1782. Rockingham's administration was dominated by the American issue. Rockingham wished for repeal of the Stamp Act 1765 and won a Commons vote on the repeal resolution by 275 to 167 in 1766.[11] Settlement, mostly by Scotch-Irish Americans, continued from 1785 up until 1800.[12]

Rockingham County's first court session was convened near Eagle Falls south of the Dan River in February 1786.[10] The following year a wooden courthouse was erected near the center of the county and the community of Rockingham Courthouse was established. The community was renamed Wentworth in 1798,[13] and county court sessions was held there beginning the following May.[14] A new brick courthouse was built in 1824.[13] Wentworth remained a poor and sparse community well into the early 1800s, sustained only by business related to governmental affairs. Leaksville was established in 1795 in an attempt to build a trading community near the confluence of the Dan and Smith rivers.[15]

Antebellum and Civil War edit

By the early 1800s, economic activity in Rockingham County was largely centered around small farms in hilly areas and a handful of plantations near the rivers.[16] Most farmers were engaged in subsistence operations, with tobacco planted as the area's primary cash crop.[17] The economy began to diversify after 1812.[18] In 1813, John Motley Morehead erected the county's first cotton mill at the confluence of the Dan and Smith rivers in Leaksville.[6] In 1818 the town of Madison was platted and the trading post of Jackson was established at Eagle Falls. By 1831, Leaksville hosted an oil mill, sawmill, and cotton gin.[19] Nevertheless, throughout most of the 1800s, tobacco was the main source of economic activity in Rockingham County, with the towns of Madison, Leaksville, and Reidsville serving as market towns for the crop.[20] Following the passage of public school legislation, in 1840 the first public school in North Carolina opened in Rockingham County.[21] A tobacco manufacturing facility was opened in Reidsville in 1856,[20] and by 1859, Madison was home to several industries.[22] That year Leaksville was linked with Danville, Virginia by railroad, the first such line in the county.[23] Slavery grew gradually in the county with the expansion of tobacco operations and, by the 1860s, 37 percent of the population were enslaved.[24]

At the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861, some county men enlisted in the Confederate States Army. Rockingham men eventually formed three companies in North Carolina's 13th Regiment, one in the 14th Regiment, one in the 21st Regiment, six in the 45th Regiment, one in the 63rd Regiment/5th Cavalry, and some reserves, to serve in the war.[25] Rockingham men also formed the 22nd Battalion of the Confederate Home Guard, which was tasked with maintaining order in the county.[26] The local Searcy & Moore gun factory supplied Confederate forces with weapons during the conflict.[27] Some Confederate deserters hid out in the sparse northwestern section of the county during the war, two of whom were found and executed by the Home Guard.[28] At the initiative of the Confederate government, a railroad was built to connect Reidsville with Danville and Greensboro, being completed in May 1864.[23] The war ended in the defeat of the Confederacy in 1865.[29]

Reconstruction and industrialization edit

By the end of the Civil War, the economy of Rockingham County and the Southern United States as a whole was greatly diminished. Cattle were scarce, and the emancipation of slaves severely harmed the prospects of large planters. A New York journalist traveling through Rockingham County in September 1865 reported food and lodging scarce in the area.[30] In the 1868 elections, Republicans gained control of the county government and a black man was elected to the county commission. The white supremacist Ku Klux Klan became active in 1868 and 1869, and 20 alleged Klansmen were arrested and tried for crimes in the county court, though none were convicted. Following investigations by the federal government and a denunciation from David Settle Reid, a widely respected Rockingham Democrat and former governor, Klan activity diminished in 1870.[29]

In the years after the war, Reidsville rapidly grew as a tobacco manufacturing center with the industry benefitting from the railway completed during the war.[20][31] Leaksville, having grown to include 7,500 residents, was incorporated in 1874.[20] The town of Stoneville grew from a mercantile crossroads in the west and was incorporated in 1877.[20][22] Rail service was extended to Madison in the 1880s.[32] Stoneville and Madison largely remained mercantile towns with a few tobacco manufacturers.[31]

 
Morehead Mill in Spray, c. 1911

The manufacturing sector, particularly in textiles, increased in the late 1800s, driving urbanization and growth in the county's towns.[20] At the initiative of railroad executive Francis Henry Fries, in 1895 the Mayo Mills were built in the western portion of the county, near Madison.[20][6] A community quickly grew around the facility and was incorporated as the town of Mayodan in 1899.[20] That year, another mill was erected in what became the town of Avalon in 1899.[33] At the time of its construction, the Avalon Mill was the largest textile manufacturing plant in the state.[34] The Avalon Mill burned down in 1911, and the rest of the community was integrated into Mayodan. By 1920, the textile operations in the area had consolidated in the latter town as the Washington Mills, making Mayodan the center of western Rockingham's textile industry.[20]

Meanwhile, James Turner Morehead, inherited John Motley Morehead's holdings in Leaksville in 1866. He focused on expanding industry in the area, creating the Spray Water Power and Land Company to develop his mills, and supporting the laying of new railroads.[35] By the 1890s, Morehead had grouped his textile holdings into two companies, the Leaksville Cotton and Woolen Mill Company and the Spray Water Power and Land Company, and turned them over to his son-in-law, Frank Mebane.[36] Under Mebane's direction and with the backing of northern investors, the Spray Water Power and Land Company, between 1898 and 1906, built six new cotton mills and created a warehouse company.[36][37] The expansion of the textile industry led to the growth of two new mill communities in the vicinity of Leaksville, Spray and Draper.[38][22] The three communities collectively became known as the "Tri-Cities".[39] One of Mebane's holdings, the Spray Cotton Mills company, was sold to a private owner in 1897.[37] Most of the rest were taken over by Marshall Field & Company in 1911 and 1912 after Mebane overextended his credit.[36][38]

20th century edit

 
American Tobacco Company plant in Reidsville c. 1937

In October 1906, the county courthouse in Wentworth was destroyed in a fire. The conflagration occurred during a years-long dispute between the citizens of Reidsville, who wanted to move the county seat to their city, and residents from other areas of the county, who were opposed to its relocation. The debate continued for several months until the county commission voted to rebuild the courthouse in Wentworth. The new building was completed in 1908.[40] Economic differences between the tobacco-heavy Reidsville area and the textile-based Leaksville-Draper-Spray area also created political fault lines during the early 20th century.[41] Social, political, and economic rivalries also emerged between Reidsville, Leaksville-Draper-Spray, and the western Rockingham towns of Madison, Mayodan, and Stoneville.[20]

The Penn Brothers Tobacco Company plant in Reidsville came under the control of the American Tobacco Company in 1911.[20][42] Under American Tobacco's control, the factory quickly rose to become Reidsville's most significant industry and the county's largest taxpayer. Offering high wages to workers, in the 1940s and 1950s it served as its corporate owner's flagship facility and peaked with the employment of 2,000 workers.[42] Draper was incorporated in 1949, followed by Spray two years later.[22] In 1953, Marshall Field & Company transferred its Rockingham textile holdings to a new company, Fieldcrest.[36] In September 1967, the towns of Leaksville, Draper, Spray were consolidated into the new city of Eden.[43][44] The consolidation led Eden to surpass Reidsville as the county's largest city.[20] In 1978, Miller Brewing Company invested millions in opening a brewery in Eden, and it quickly became a major, high-paying employer.[20][45]

Economic decline edit

 
The abandoned Spray Cotton Mills facility in Eden, 2009

The textile industry struggled nationally in the 1980s and 1990s.[46] Fieldcrest Cannon, the successor to Fieldcrest, was acquired by Pillowtex in the late 1990s and laid off hundreds of corporate staff in Eden.[45][47] Stoneville's major employer, a furniture factory, filed for bankruptcy in 1990.[20] In March 1998, an EF3 tornado occurred in Rockingham County, the strongest storm on-record to ever impact the area.[48] The tornado damaged homes and a textile mill in Mayodan, destroyed several buildings in Stoneville's main business district, and killed two people.[49][50] In 1999, the former Washington Mills plant in Mayodan closed.[51] Pluma closed its Eden plant in 1999, Spray Cotton Mills closed its yarn mill in 2001, and Pillowtex collapsed in 2003. Some former workers moved to larger cities outside the county in search of jobs.[47]

The decline of textiles left Miller's facility Eden's flagship industry, but it announced its closure in 2015. The loss of the brewery and the textile mills had a knock-off effect on local retail stores, many of which closed due to the loss of customers and competition from national chains such as Walmart.[45] The American Tobacco Company plant in Reidsville underwent ownership changes and layoffs in the 1990s before closing in early 2020.[46]

21st century edit

In 2011, a new courthouse, the Rockingham County Justice Center, was opened in Wentworth, while the former courthouse was transformed into a museum and historical archive.[13][52]

In February 2014, a coal ash pond in Eden at Duke Power's Dan River Steam Station spilled into the Dan River.[53]

Geography edit

 
Interactive map of Rockingham County

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 572.76 square miles (1,483.4 km2), of which 565.64 square miles (1,465.0 km2) is land and 7.12 square miles (18.4 km2) (1.24%) is water.[54] It is bordered by the North Carolina counties of Caswell, Alamance, Guilford, Forsyth, and Stokes, and the Virginia counties of Henry and Pittsylvania.[55] Much of the soil in the county is sandy loam.[56]

Rockingham County is situated in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the Piedmont Triad region.[57]

Rockingham County is crossed by four major rivers. The Dan, Mayo, and Smith Rivers are concentrated in the northwestern portion of the county and feed into the Roanoke River drainage basin. The Haw River in the southeastern portion feeds into the Cape Fear River basin.[58] The county also hosts several creeks, including Matrimony, Cascade, Hogans, County Line, Troublesome, and Little Troublesome.[59] There are also two major lakes, Belews Lake and Lake Reidsville.[60]

State and local protected areas edit

Demographics edit

2020 census edit

Rockingham County racial composition[63]
Race Number Percentage
White (non-Hispanic) 64,218 70.49%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 16,611 18.23%
Native American 282 0.31%
Asian 493 0.54%
Pacific Islander 29 0.03%
Other/Mixed 3,377 3.71%
Hispanic or Latino 6,086 6.68%

As of the 2020 census, there were 91,096 people,[55] 38,462 households, and 25,717 families residing in the county.

Rockingham County is included in the Greensboro-High Point, NC Metropolitan Statistical Area.[58]

Demographic change edit

The county's population has been stagnant since the 1980s.[46] According to Woods & Poole Economics, the county's population is expected to increase at a slower rate than the rest of the state in future decades.[69]

Government and politics edit

Government edit

Rockingham County is governed by a five-member board of commissioners, each elected to four-year terms.[70] The board elects a chairman and vice-chairman from its members[71] and appoints a county manager.[72] County voters also elect a register of deeds.[73]

Rockingham County is a member of the Piedmont Triad Council of Governments, a regional voluntary association of 12 counties,[74] and the Piedmont Triad Regional Partnership, a regional economic development organization.[45] The county also has its own Soil and Water Conservation District led by an elected supervisor.[75] Rockingham County is located in North Carolina's 6th congressional district,[76] the North Carolina Senate's 26th district, and the North Carolina House of Representatives' 65th district.[77]

Law enforcement and judicial system edit

Rockingham County lies within the bounds of North Carolina's 22nd Prosecutorial District, the 17A Superior Court District, and the 17A District Court District.[78] County voters elect a clerk of Superior Court and a sheriff.[75]

Politics edit

In the early 1990s, Rockingham was a swing county.[80] Politically, the area is conservative.[45] In recent years, voters in most of the county have favored Republicans, though Democrats retain some electoral strength in the city of Reidsville.[81] As of November 2022, the county hosted over 61,684 registered voters. Republicans won all county elections in 2022.[82]

Economy edit

Historically, Rockingham County's economy was largely based around textiles and tobacco.[46] Textiles was largely based in the north of the county around Eden, while tobacco was centered in the south, particularly around Reidsville.[41] The decline of these heritage industries in the 1990s hurt the county's economy.[46] The county has experienced growth in recent years in tourism, manufacturing, and the creation of additional small businesses.[83] Rockingham has a poverty rate of 18 percent, above state and national averages.[84] According to the American Community Survey, from 2017 to 2021 the estimated median household income was $46,993.[1] For 2023, the North Carolina Department of Commerce rated the county as economically distressed.[85]

Transportation edit

Rockingham County is traversed by several major highways which constitute local transportation corridors: U.S. Route 220/Interstate 73, U.S. Route 158, U.S. Route 29/Interstate 785, and U.S. Route 311. Active rail lines serve Eden, Reidsville, Stoneville, Madison, and Mayodan.[58] Airplane facilities are provided by the Rockingham County NC Shiloh Airport.[86][87]

Major highways edit

Education edit

Public education is provided by Rockingham County Schools, which operates 12 elementary schools, four middle schools, four high schools, an early college high school, and an alternative school.[88] The system is led by a school board elected in partisan contests.[89] There is one post-primary institution, Rockingham Community College, located in Wentworth.[90][91] According to the 2021 American Community Survey, an estimated 14.5 percent of county residents have attained a bachelor's degree or higher level of education.[55]

Healthcare edit

Rockingham County is served by two hospitals, Annie Penn Hospital in Reidsville and UNC Rockingham Health Care in Eden.[92] According to the 2021 American Community Survey, an estimated 11.2 percent of county residents lack healthcare coverage.[55] The 2023 University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute's County Health Rankings report found that Rockingham was less healthy than most of the state, with higher average instances of adult smoking, adult obesity, excessive drinking, and several chronic medical conditions.[93]

Culture edit

Like other residents in the north-central portion of North Carolina, Rockingham residents tend to pronounce words such as "out" and "about" the same as "oat" and "aboat".[94] Attractions in Rockingham County include the state parks of the Dan and Mayo rivers, near Mayodan; the historic downtown areas of Leaksville, Draper and Spray in Eden; the Chinqua-Penn Plantation in Reidsville; the Deep Springs Plantation in Stoneville, High Rock Farm in Williamsburg, Mulberry Island Plantation in Stoneville, and the historic Penn House, located in Reidsville. One of the most famous attractions of the Reidsville area is Lake Reidsville. Various historic shops are found in the county, as well.

The Museum & Archives of Rockingham County (the MARC) is the only county historical museum and is located in the Rockingham County Courthouse in Wentworth, the county seat since 1787. The museum features exhibits and artifacts related to Rockingham County history as well as including the restored historic 1816 Wright Tavern (also historically known as Reid House or Reid Hotel) opposite the museum and 1910 Old Jail next door.

In the early 20th century, Rockingham's mill workers produced a substantial amount of old-time music.[95] Hunting has long been popular in the county.[27]

Communities edit

 
Map of Rockingham County with municipal and township labels

Incorporated communities edit

Townships edit

Census-designated place edit

Unincorporated communities edit

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Find a County". National Association of Counties. Retrieved June 7, 2011.
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  4. ^ Rodenbough 1983, pp. 4–5.
  5. ^ Rodenbough 1983, pp. 6–7.
  6. ^ a b c d Aheron 1997, p. 7.
  7. ^ Rodenbough 1983, p. 7.
  8. ^ Rodenbough 1983, pp. 11–12.
  9. ^ Rodenbough 1983, pp. 13–14.
  10. ^ a b Rodenbough 1983, p. 15.
  11. ^ Ross J. S. Hoffman, The Marquis. A Study of Lord Rockingham, 1730–1782 (New York: Fordham University Press, 1973), p. 113.
  12. ^ Rodenbough 1983, p. 19.
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  14. ^ Corbitt 2000, p. 185.
  15. ^ Rodenbough 1983, p. 16.
  16. ^ Rodenbough 1983, pp. 17, 20.
  17. ^ Rodenbough 1983, p. 20.
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  19. ^ Rodenbough 1983, p. 17.
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  25. ^ Rodenbough 1983, p. 27.
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  30. ^ Rodenbough 1983, pp. 34–35.
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  40. ^ Carter, Robert W. Jr. (1983). "The Present Rockingham County Courthouse". The Heritage of Rockingham County, North Carolina, 1983. Winston-Salem, North Carolina: Rockingham County Historical Society in cooperation with Hunter Publishing Company. p. 61. ISBN 0-89459-212-2.
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  43. ^ "Tri-Cities Vote Consolidation; New Municipality Is Named Eden". The Danville Register. No. 27, 548. September 13, 1967. p. 1-B.
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  46. ^ a b c d e Tosczack, Mark (March 29, 2021). "Rockingham County gains momentum". Business North Carolina. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
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Works cited edit

  • Aheron, Piper (1997). From Avalon to Eden: A Postcard Tour of Rockingham County. Images of America (illustrated ed.). Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7524-0824-8.
  • Carter, Bob (June 2004). "The Bridge To Nowhere: The Great Mebane's Bridge Controversy" (PDF). The Journal of Rockingham County History and Genealogy. XXIX (1): 1–23.
  • 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.
  • Destination By Design (May 17, 2021), Rockingham Vision Plan 2040: Comprehensive Land Use Plan (PDF), Rockingham County Government
  • Marshall, F. Ray (1967). Labor in the South. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-50700-5.
  • McCorkle, Mac; Salzberg, Rachel (January 2022), The Democrats' Countrypolitan Problem in North Carolina: Progressive Challenge and Opportunity (PDF), Duke University Polis: Center for Politics
  • Powell, William S. (1976). The North Carolina Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Tar Heel Places. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-1247-1.
  • Richman, Barak D. (2007). "The King of Rockingham County and the Original Bridge to Nowhere". Contracts Stories. Foundation Press. ISBN 978-1-58778-721-8.
  • Rodenbough, Charles Dyson, ed. (1983). The Heritage of Rockingham County, North Carolina, 1983. Winston-Salem: Rockingham County Historical Society in cooperation with Hunter Publishing Company. ISBN 0-89459-212-2.
  • Wolfram, Walt; Reaser, Jeffrey (2014). Talkin' Tar Heel: How Our Voices Tell the Story of North Carolina. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-1437-3.

External links edit

  •   Geographic data related to Rockingham County, North Carolina at OpenStreetMap
  • Official website
  • NCGenWeb Rockingham County, genealogy resources for the county

rockingham, county, north, carolina, confused, with, rockingham, north, carolina, rockingham, county, county, located, state, north, carolina, 2020, census, population, county, seat, wentworth, county, known, north, carolina, north, star, rockingham, countycou. Not to be confused with Rockingham North Carolina Rockingham County is a county located in the U S state of North Carolina As of the 2020 census the population was 91 096 1 Its county seat is Wentworth 2 The county is known as North Carolina s North Star Rockingham CountyCountyRockingham County Courthouse in WentworthSealLogoNickname North Carolina s North StarMotto You re in a good place Location within the U S state of North CarolinaNorth Carolina s location within the U S Coordinates 36 22 55 N 79 46 58 W 36 381806 N 79 782754 W 36 381806 79 782754Country United StatesState North CarolinaFounded1785Named forCharles Watson Wentworth 2nd Marquess of RockinghamSeatWentworthLargest communityEdenArea Total572 76 sq mi 1 483 4 km2 Land565 64 sq mi 1 465 0 km2 Water7 12 sq mi 18 4 km2 1 24 Population 2020 Total91 096 Estimate 2022 91 957 Density161 05 sq mi 62 18 km2 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern Summer DST UTC 4 EDT Congressional district6thWebsitewww wbr rockinghamcountync wbr gov Contents 1 History 1 1 Settling and founding 1 2 Antebellum and Civil War 1 3 Reconstruction and industrialization 1 4 20th century 1 5 Economic decline 1 6 21st century 2 Geography 2 1 State and local protected areas 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 Demographic change 4 Government and politics 4 1 Government 4 2 Law enforcement and judicial system 4 3 Politics 5 Economy 6 Transportation 6 1 Major highways 7 Education 8 Healthcare 9 Culture 10 Communities 10 1 Incorporated communities 10 2 Townships 10 3 Census designated place 10 4 Unincorporated communities 11 See also 12 References 13 Works cited 14 External linksHistory editSettling and founding edit nbsp William Byrd II surveyed the eventual county and dubbed the area the Land of Eden Prior to European colonization the area eventually comprising Rockingham County was inhabited by Cheraw Saura Native Americans 3 In the 1600s they inhabited several small settlements along the Dan River though around 1710 they migrated towards South Carolina 4 Between 1728 and 1733 the Dan River Valley in the Granville District was surveyed by William Byrd II as part of efforts to delineate the North Carolina Virginia border 5 6 He soon thereafter purchased 20 000 acres of the land which he described as the Land of Eden to attract prospective farmers The region s first white settlers came from Pennsylvania New Jersey Maryland and Virginia and were of German English Scottish and Irish descent 6 Some had wealthy backgrounds but most were poor 7 Some local white men served in militias during the American Revolutionary War 8 American troops under General Nathanael Greene and British troops under General Charles Cornwallis moved through the area around the time of the Battle of Guilford Court House in 1781 9 The North Carolina General Assembly created Rockingham County from a northern portion of Guilford County on December 29 1785 10 It was named for Charles Watson Wentworth 2nd Marquess of Rockingham 3 British Prime Minister from 1765 to 1766 and again in 1782 Rockingham s administration was dominated by the American issue Rockingham wished for repeal of the Stamp Act 1765 and won a Commons vote on the repeal resolution by 275 to 167 in 1766 11 Settlement mostly by Scotch Irish Americans continued from 1785 up until 1800 12 Rockingham County s first court session was convened near Eagle Falls south of the Dan River in February 1786 10 The following year a wooden courthouse was erected near the center of the county and the community of Rockingham Courthouse was established The community was renamed Wentworth in 1798 13 and county court sessions was held there beginning the following May 14 A new brick courthouse was built in 1824 13 Wentworth remained a poor and sparse community well into the early 1800s sustained only by business related to governmental affairs Leaksville was established in 1795 in an attempt to build a trading community near the confluence of the Dan and Smith rivers 15 Antebellum and Civil War edit By the early 1800s economic activity in Rockingham County was largely centered around small farms in hilly areas and a handful of plantations near the rivers 16 Most farmers were engaged in subsistence operations with tobacco planted as the area s primary cash crop 17 The economy began to diversify after 1812 18 In 1813 John Motley Morehead erected the county s first cotton mill at the confluence of the Dan and Smith rivers in Leaksville 6 In 1818 the town of Madison was platted and the trading post of Jackson was established at Eagle Falls By 1831 Leaksville hosted an oil mill sawmill and cotton gin 19 Nevertheless throughout most of the 1800s tobacco was the main source of economic activity in Rockingham County with the towns of Madison Leaksville and Reidsville serving as market towns for the crop 20 Following the passage of public school legislation in 1840 the first public school in North Carolina opened in Rockingham County 21 A tobacco manufacturing facility was opened in Reidsville in 1856 20 and by 1859 Madison was home to several industries 22 That year Leaksville was linked with Danville Virginia by railroad the first such line in the county 23 Slavery grew gradually in the county with the expansion of tobacco operations and by the 1860s 37 percent of the population were enslaved 24 At the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861 some county men enlisted in the Confederate States Army Rockingham men eventually formed three companies in North Carolina s 13th Regiment one in the 14th Regiment one in the 21st Regiment six in the 45th Regiment one in the 63rd Regiment 5th Cavalry and some reserves to serve in the war 25 Rockingham men also formed the 22nd Battalion of the Confederate Home Guard which was tasked with maintaining order in the county 26 The local Searcy amp Moore gun factory supplied Confederate forces with weapons during the conflict 27 Some Confederate deserters hid out in the sparse northwestern section of the county during the war two of whom were found and executed by the Home Guard 28 At the initiative of the Confederate government a railroad was built to connect Reidsville with Danville and Greensboro being completed in May 1864 23 The war ended in the defeat of the Confederacy in 1865 29 Reconstruction and industrialization edit By the end of the Civil War the economy of Rockingham County and the Southern United States as a whole was greatly diminished Cattle were scarce and the emancipation of slaves severely harmed the prospects of large planters A New York journalist traveling through Rockingham County in September 1865 reported food and lodging scarce in the area 30 In the 1868 elections Republicans gained control of the county government and a black man was elected to the county commission The white supremacist Ku Klux Klan became active in 1868 and 1869 and 20 alleged Klansmen were arrested and tried for crimes in the county court though none were convicted Following investigations by the federal government and a denunciation from David Settle Reid a widely respected Rockingham Democrat and former governor Klan activity diminished in 1870 29 In the years after the war Reidsville rapidly grew as a tobacco manufacturing center with the industry benefitting from the railway completed during the war 20 31 Leaksville having grown to include 7 500 residents was incorporated in 1874 20 The town of Stoneville grew from a mercantile crossroads in the west and was incorporated in 1877 20 22 Rail service was extended to Madison in the 1880s 32 Stoneville and Madison largely remained mercantile towns with a few tobacco manufacturers 31 nbsp Morehead Mill in Spray c 1911The manufacturing sector particularly in textiles increased in the late 1800s driving urbanization and growth in the county s towns 20 At the initiative of railroad executive Francis Henry Fries in 1895 the Mayo Mills were built in the western portion of the county near Madison 20 6 A community quickly grew around the facility and was incorporated as the town of Mayodan in 1899 20 That year another mill was erected in what became the town of Avalon in 1899 33 At the time of its construction the Avalon Mill was the largest textile manufacturing plant in the state 34 The Avalon Mill burned down in 1911 and the rest of the community was integrated into Mayodan By 1920 the textile operations in the area had consolidated in the latter town as the Washington Mills making Mayodan the center of western Rockingham s textile industry 20 Meanwhile James Turner Morehead inherited John Motley Morehead s holdings in Leaksville in 1866 He focused on expanding industry in the area creating the Spray Water Power and Land Company to develop his mills and supporting the laying of new railroads 35 By the 1890s Morehead had grouped his textile holdings into two companies the Leaksville Cotton and Woolen Mill Company and the Spray Water Power and Land Company and turned them over to his son in law Frank Mebane 36 Under Mebane s direction and with the backing of northern investors the Spray Water Power and Land Company between 1898 and 1906 built six new cotton mills and created a warehouse company 36 37 The expansion of the textile industry led to the growth of two new mill communities in the vicinity of Leaksville Spray and Draper 38 22 The three communities collectively became known as the Tri Cities 39 One of Mebane s holdings the Spray Cotton Mills company was sold to a private owner in 1897 37 Most of the rest were taken over by Marshall Field amp Company in 1911 and 1912 after Mebane overextended his credit 36 38 20th century edit nbsp American Tobacco Company plant in Reidsville c 1937In October 1906 the county courthouse in Wentworth was destroyed in a fire The conflagration occurred during a years long dispute between the citizens of Reidsville who wanted to move the county seat to their city and residents from other areas of the county who were opposed to its relocation The debate continued for several months until the county commission voted to rebuild the courthouse in Wentworth The new building was completed in 1908 40 Economic differences between the tobacco heavy Reidsville area and the textile based Leaksville Draper Spray area also created political fault lines during the early 20th century 41 Social political and economic rivalries also emerged between Reidsville Leaksville Draper Spray and the western Rockingham towns of Madison Mayodan and Stoneville 20 The Penn Brothers Tobacco Company plant in Reidsville came under the control of the American Tobacco Company in 1911 20 42 Under American Tobacco s control the factory quickly rose to become Reidsville s most significant industry and the county s largest taxpayer Offering high wages to workers in the 1940s and 1950s it served as its corporate owner s flagship facility and peaked with the employment of 2 000 workers 42 Draper was incorporated in 1949 followed by Spray two years later 22 In 1953 Marshall Field amp Company transferred its Rockingham textile holdings to a new company Fieldcrest 36 In September 1967 the towns of Leaksville Draper Spray were consolidated into the new city of Eden 43 44 The consolidation led Eden to surpass Reidsville as the county s largest city 20 In 1978 Miller Brewing Company invested millions in opening a brewery in Eden and it quickly became a major high paying employer 20 45 Economic decline edit nbsp The abandoned Spray Cotton Mills facility in Eden 2009The textile industry struggled nationally in the 1980s and 1990s 46 Fieldcrest Cannon the successor to Fieldcrest was acquired by Pillowtex in the late 1990s and laid off hundreds of corporate staff in Eden 45 47 Stoneville s major employer a furniture factory filed for bankruptcy in 1990 20 In March 1998 an EF3 tornado occurred in Rockingham County the strongest storm on record to ever impact the area 48 The tornado damaged homes and a textile mill in Mayodan destroyed several buildings in Stoneville s main business district and killed two people 49 50 In 1999 the former Washington Mills plant in Mayodan closed 51 Pluma closed its Eden plant in 1999 Spray Cotton Mills closed its yarn mill in 2001 and Pillowtex collapsed in 2003 Some former workers moved to larger cities outside the county in search of jobs 47 The decline of textiles left Miller s facility Eden s flagship industry but it announced its closure in 2015 The loss of the brewery and the textile mills had a knock off effect on local retail stores many of which closed due to the loss of customers and competition from national chains such as Walmart 45 The American Tobacco Company plant in Reidsville underwent ownership changes and layoffs in the 1990s before closing in early 2020 46 21st century edit In 2011 a new courthouse the Rockingham County Justice Center was opened in Wentworth while the former courthouse was transformed into a museum and historical archive 13 52 In February 2014 a coal ash pond in Eden at Duke Power s Dan River Steam Station spilled into the Dan River 53 Geography edit nbsp Interactive map of Rockingham CountyAccording to the U S Census Bureau the county has a total area of 572 76 square miles 1 483 4 km2 of which 565 64 square miles 1 465 0 km2 is land and 7 12 square miles 18 4 km2 1 24 is water 54 It is bordered by the North Carolina counties of Caswell Alamance Guilford Forsyth and Stokes and the Virginia counties of Henry and Pittsylvania 55 Much of the soil in the county is sandy loam 56 Rockingham County is situated in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the Piedmont Triad region 57 Rockingham County is crossed by four major rivers The Dan Mayo and Smith Rivers are concentrated in the northwestern portion of the county and feed into the Roanoke River drainage basin The Haw River in the southeastern portion feeds into the Cape Fear River basin 58 The county also hosts several creeks including Matrimony Cascade Hogans County Line Troublesome and Little Troublesome 59 There are also two major lakes Belews Lake and Lake Reidsville 60 State and local protected areas edit Courtland Park and Bird Sanctuary Dan River Game Land 61 Haw River State Park part Knight Brown Nature Preserve Mayo River State Park 62 Woodland Community ParkDemographics edit2020 census edit Rockingham County racial composition 63 Race Number PercentageWhite non Hispanic 64 218 70 49 Black or African American non Hispanic 16 611 18 23 Native American 282 0 31 Asian 493 0 54 Pacific Islander 29 0 03 Other Mixed 3 377 3 71 Hispanic or Latino 6 086 6 68 As of the 2020 census there were 91 096 people 55 38 462 households and 25 717 families residing in the county Rockingham County is included in the Greensboro High Point NC Metropolitan Statistical Area 58 Demographic change edit Historical populationHistorical population CensusPop Note 17906 211 18008 27733 3 181010 31624 6 182011 47411 2 183012 93512 7 184013 4423 9 185014 4957 8 186016 74615 5 187015 708 6 2 188021 74438 4 189025 36316 6 190033 16330 8 191036 4429 9 192044 14921 1 193051 08315 7 194057 89813 3 195064 81611 9 196069 6297 4 197072 4024 0 198083 42615 2 199086 0643 2 200091 9286 8 201093 6431 9 202091 096 2 7 2022 est 91 957 1 0 9 U S Decennial Census 64 1790 1960 65 1900 1990 66 1990 2000 67 2010 68 2020 1 The county s population has been stagnant since the 1980s 46 According to Woods amp Poole Economics the county s population is expected to increase at a slower rate than the rest of the state in future decades 69 Government and politics editGovernment edit Rockingham County is governed by a five member board of commissioners each elected to four year terms 70 The board elects a chairman and vice chairman from its members 71 and appoints a county manager 72 County voters also elect a register of deeds 73 Rockingham County is a member of the Piedmont Triad Council of Governments a regional voluntary association of 12 counties 74 and the Piedmont Triad Regional Partnership a regional economic development organization 45 The county also has its own Soil and Water Conservation District led by an elected supervisor 75 Rockingham County is located in North Carolina s 6th congressional district 76 the North Carolina Senate s 26th district and the North Carolina House of Representatives 65th district 77 Law enforcement and judicial system edit Rockingham County lies within the bounds of North Carolina s 22nd Prosecutorial District the 17A Superior Court District and the 17A District Court District 78 County voters elect a clerk of Superior Court and a sheriff 75 Politics edit Historical presidential election returnsUnited States presidential election results for Rockingham County North Carolina 79 Year Republican Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 31 301 65 47 15 992 33 45 516 1 08 2016 26 830 63 46 14 228 33 65 1 220 2 89 2012 25 227 60 04 16 351 38 91 442 1 05 2008 23 899 57 43 17 255 41 47 458 1 10 2004 22 840 61 09 14 430 38 60 118 0 32 2000 18 979 58 35 13 260 40 76 289 0 89 1996 14 255 49 22 12 096 41 77 2 608 9 01 1992 12 678 40 54 13 880 44 39 4 711 15 07 1988 14 591 55 77 11 551 44 15 22 0 08 1984 17 895 62 70 10 605 37 16 39 0 14 1980 11 205 47 64 11 708 49 77 609 2 59 1976 9 362 40 93 13 413 58 65 96 0 42 1972 14 519 71 15 5 530 27 10 358 1 75 1968 8 095 33 46 6 774 28 00 9 324 38 54 1964 9 063 44 22 11 432 55 78 0 0 00 1960 9 456 45 76 11 207 54 24 0 0 00 1956 8 991 50 27 8 896 49 73 0 0 00 1952 6 885 35 66 12 423 64 34 0 0 00 1948 2 936 23 65 8 553 68 89 926 7 46 1944 3 024 25 67 8 755 74 33 0 0 00 1940 2 398 17 49 11 315 82 51 0 0 00 1936 2 522 18 16 11 366 81 84 0 0 00 1932 2 896 26 89 7 795 72 37 80 0 74 1928 5 585 62 08 3 411 37 92 0 0 00 1924 2 566 36 03 4 467 62 72 89 1 25 1920 3 605 44 44 4 507 55 56 0 0 00 1916 1 957 45 80 2 316 54 20 0 0 00 1912 694 20 05 1 939 56 01 829 23 95 In the early 1990s Rockingham was a swing county 80 Politically the area is conservative 45 In recent years voters in most of the county have favored Republicans though Democrats retain some electoral strength in the city of Reidsville 81 As of November 2022 the county hosted over 61 684 registered voters Republicans won all county elections in 2022 82 Economy editHistorically Rockingham County s economy was largely based around textiles and tobacco 46 Textiles was largely based in the north of the county around Eden while tobacco was centered in the south particularly around Reidsville 41 The decline of these heritage industries in the 1990s hurt the county s economy 46 The county has experienced growth in recent years in tourism manufacturing and the creation of additional small businesses 83 Rockingham has a poverty rate of 18 percent above state and national averages 84 According to the American Community Survey from 2017 to 2021 the estimated median household income was 46 993 1 For 2023 the North Carolina Department of Commerce rated the county as economically distressed 85 Transportation editRockingham County is traversed by several major highways which constitute local transportation corridors U S Route 220 Interstate 73 U S Route 158 U S Route 29 Interstate 785 and U S Route 311 Active rail lines serve Eden Reidsville Stoneville Madison and Mayodan 58 Airplane facilities are provided by the Rockingham County NC Shiloh Airport 86 87 Major highways edit nbsp nbsp nbsp I 73 Future I 73 small designated section from Exit 123 to the Guilford County line nbsp nbsp Future I 785 nbsp US 29 nbsp nbsp US 29 Bus nbsp US 158 nbsp US 220 nbsp US 311 nbsp NC 14 nbsp NC 65 nbsp NC 68 nbsp NC 87 nbsp NC 135 nbsp NC 150 nbsp NC 700 nbsp NC 704 nbsp NC 770Education editPublic education is provided by Rockingham County Schools which operates 12 elementary schools four middle schools four high schools an early college high school and an alternative school 88 The system is led by a school board elected in partisan contests 89 There is one post primary institution Rockingham Community College located in Wentworth 90 91 According to the 2021 American Community Survey an estimated 14 5 percent of county residents have attained a bachelor s degree or higher level of education 55 Healthcare editRockingham County is served by two hospitals Annie Penn Hospital in Reidsville and UNC Rockingham Health Care in Eden 92 According to the 2021 American Community Survey an estimated 11 2 percent of county residents lack healthcare coverage 55 The 2023 University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute s County Health Rankings report found that Rockingham was less healthy than most of the state with higher average instances of adult smoking adult obesity excessive drinking and several chronic medical conditions 93 Culture editLike other residents in the north central portion of North Carolina Rockingham residents tend to pronounce words such as out and about the same as oat and aboat 94 Attractions in Rockingham County include the state parks of the Dan and Mayo rivers near Mayodan the historic downtown areas of Leaksville Draper and Spray in Eden the Chinqua Penn Plantation in Reidsville the Deep Springs Plantation in Stoneville High Rock Farm in Williamsburg Mulberry Island Plantation in Stoneville and the historic Penn House located in Reidsville One of the most famous attractions of the Reidsville area is Lake Reidsville Various historic shops are found in the county as well The Museum amp Archives of Rockingham County the MARC is the only county historical museum and is located in the Rockingham County Courthouse in Wentworth the county seat since 1787 The museum features exhibits and artifacts related to Rockingham County history as well as including the restored historic 1816 Wright Tavern also historically known as Reid House or Reid Hotel opposite the museum and 1910 Old Jail next door In the early 20th century Rockingham s mill workers produced a substantial amount of old time music 95 Hunting has long been popular in the county 27 Communities edit nbsp Map of Rockingham County with municipal and township labelsIncorporated communities edit Eden 96 largest community Reidsville 96 Madison 96 Mayodan 96 Stokesdale mostly in Guilford County Stoneville 96 Wentworth 96 county seat Townships edit Huntsville 97 Madison 97 Mayo 97 New Bethel 97 Price 97 Reidsville 97 Ruffin 97 Stoneville 97 Wentworth 97 Williamsburg 97 Census designated place edit Ruffin 98 Unincorporated communities edit Bethany 99 Monroeton 100 Oregon Hill 101 Price 102 Providence 103 See also editList of counties in North Carolina National Register of Historic Places listings in Rockingham County North Carolina Haw River Valley AVA wine region partially located in the countyReferences edit a b c d QuickFacts Rockingham County North Carolina United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 31 2022 Find a County National Association of Counties Retrieved June 7 2011 a b Powell William S 2006 Rockingham County NCPedia North Carolina Government amp Heritage Library Retrieved December 28 2022 Rodenbough 1983 pp 4 5 Rodenbough 1983 pp 6 7 a b c d Aheron 1997 p 7 Rodenbough 1983 p 7 Rodenbough 1983 pp 11 12 Rodenbough 1983 pp 13 14 a b Rodenbough 1983 p 15 Ross J S Hoffman The Marquis A Study of Lord Rockingham 1730 1782 New York Fordham University Press 1973 p 113 Rodenbough 1983 p 19 a b c Our Story Museum amp Archives of Rockingham County Rockingham County Historical Society Museum amp Archives Retrieved January 2 2023 Corbitt 2000 p 185 Rodenbough 1983 p 16 Rodenbough 1983 pp 17 20 Rodenbough 1983 p 20 Rodenbough 1983 pp 16 17 Rodenbough 1983 p 17 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Rockingham Points Of Cooperation In History Of Competition News amp Record September 15 1990 Retrieved January 4 2023 Cross Jerry L 2007 David Settle Reid NCPedia North Carolina Government amp Heritage Library Retrieved December 28 2022 a b c d McKnight Bonnie October 14 2004 100 County Countdown Rockingham County The Herald Sun p B4 a b Rodenbough 1983 p 41 Rodenbough 1983 pp 20 23 Rodenbough 1983 p 27 Rodenbough 1983 p 32 a b Battaglia Danielle March 10 2015 Commissioner tables gun ordinance News amp Record Retrieved January 5 2023 Rodenbough 1983 p 33 a b Rodenbough 1983 p 34 Rodenbough 1983 pp 34 35 a b Rodenbough 1983 p 75 Rodenbough 1983 pp 41 42 Battaglia Danielle June 14 2015 The Death of a Town Avalon News amp Record Retrieved May 13 2016 Aheron 1997 p 13 Butler Lindsey S 1991 Morehead James Turner NCPedia North Carolina Government amp Heritage Library Retrieved January 4 2023 a b c d Eagles Brenda Marks 1991 Mebane Benjamin Franklin Jr NCPedia North Carolina Government amp Heritage Library Retrieved October 25 2022 a b Butler Lindsey S 2006 Spray Water Power and Land Company NCPedia North Carolina Government amp Heritage Library Retrieved January 4 2023 a b Carter 2004 pp 2 3 Marshall 1967 p 173 Carter Robert W Jr 1983 The Present Rockingham County Courthouse The Heritage of Rockingham County North Carolina 1983 Winston Salem North Carolina Rockingham County Historical Society in cooperation with Hunter Publishing Company p 61 ISBN 0 89459 212 2 a b Richman 2007 pp 322 323 a b Lounsbury Helen July 1 1995 Reidsville Forsaken American Tobacco Company News amp Record Retrieved January 4 2023 Tri Cities Vote Consolidation New Municipality Is Named Eden The Danville Register No 27 548 September 13 1967 p 1 B Firesheets Tina February 7 2012 Keeping town s spirit from fading News amp Record Retrieved January 4 2023 a b c d e Martin Edward October 4 2017 Eden s tough transition as MillerCoors departs Business North Carolina Retrieved January 3 2023 a b c d e Tosczack Mark March 29 2021 Rockingham County gains momentum Business North Carolina Retrieved November 17 2022 a b Chapman Dan December 26 2004 Battered mill town braces for onslaught The Charlotte Observer pp 1D 4D Badgett Phillip Blaes Jonathan Keeter Kermit March 20 1998 Severe Weather and Tornado Outbreak National Weather Service NCSU Collaborative Research amp Training Site North Carolina State University Retrieved August 27 2020 Smith Heather J March 16 2008 Ten years on Stoneville tornado still brings vivid memories The News amp Advance Retrieved August 27 2020 Robiglio Deborah March 21 1999 A year after tornado Stoneville celebrates its survival The News amp Observer pp 1B 5B Old Tultex Mill being torn down Fox 8 Nexstar Media Inc February 13 2012 Retrieved January 4 2023 Davis Jonnelle June 19 2011 The new face of justice Greensboro News amp Record Retrieved July 5 2011 Shoichet Catherine E February 9 2014 Spill spews tons of coal ash into North Carolina river CNN Retrieved January 9 2023 2020 County Gazetteer Files North Carolina United States Census Bureau August 23 2022 Retrieved September 9 2023 a b c d Rockingham County North Carolina U S Census Bureau Retrieved January 2 2023 Rodenbough 1983 p 68 About Us www rockinghamcountync gov Retrieved October 2 2023 a b c Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 2021 p 8 Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 2021 pp 22 24 Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 2021 p 22 Dexter Joe September 23 2019 Public provides input on future of Dan River Game Land RockinghamNow Retrieved April 1 2023 Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 2021 p 45 Explore Census Data data census gov Retrieved December 21 2021 U S Decennial Census United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 19 2015 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved January 19 2015 Forstall Richard L ed March 27 1995 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 19 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 19 2015 State amp County QuickFacts United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 29 2011 Retrieved October 29 2013 Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 2021 p 12 Bolstad Erika April 18 1998 Five Seek Commissioner Seats News amp Record Retrieved January 3 2023 Venzon Chris December 10 2020 Rockingham County Commissioners elect new chairman vice chairman WFMY News2 WFMY TV Retrieved January 2 2023 Rockingham County names new manager The News amp Advance November 1 2011 Retrieved January 12 2023 Republicans sweep the ballot in Rockingham County News amp Record Rockingham Now ed November 3 2020 Retrieved January 3 2023 About Us Piedmont Triad Council of Governments Retrieved January 2 2023 a b Hodgin Carrie November 8 2022 Rockingham County General Election Results 2022 WXII TV Hearst Television Retrieved January 1 2023 Doyle Steve October 14 2022 Early voting in North Carolina Here s when and where you can vote for October November 2022 Fox 8 Nexstar Media Inc Retrieved January 2 2022 Rockingham County Representation 2023 2024 Session North Carolina General Assembly Retrieved January 2 2023 Rockingham County North Carolina Judicial Branch Retrieved January 1 2023 Leip David Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections uselectionatlas org Retrieved March 17 2018 Kruger Bill October 3 1992 A grass roots harrumph The News amp Observer pp 1A 8A McCorkle amp Salzberg 2022 pp 15 37 Republicans sweep Rockingham County with decisive victories News amp Record Rockingham Now ed November 11 2022 Retrieved January 2 2023 Brown Jennifer Atkins May 15 2022 Rockingham s diverse economy boosts growth News amp Record Rockingham Now ed Retrieved January 4 2023 Reidsville Outreach Center to host annual Empty Bowl Fundraiser Oct 22 News amp Record Rockingham Now ed September 21 2022 Retrieved January 3 2023 Craver Richard November 30 2022 Forsyth County ranked in the middle for economic health in NC Winston Salem Journal Retrieved October 24 2023 Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 2021 p 71 About Rockingham County NC Shiloh Airport Retrieved January 2 2023 About RCS Rockingham County Schools Retrieved January 2 2023 Boylan Dan June 26 2016 School board races becoming partisan The News amp Observer p 3C Rockingham Community College Retrieved January 2 2023 admin 2 December 16 2013 Main Campuses NC Community Colleges Retrieved January 2 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Rockingham COVID daily cases up 113 over past two weeks News amp Record Rockingham Now ed December 13 2022 Retrieved January 3 2023 Baxley Jaymie October 13 2023 Could tending to Rockingham County s health needs provide a prescription for other rural NC counties NC Health News Retrieved October 24 2023 Wolfram amp Reaser 2014 p 62 Spear Susie C October 25 2019 MARC festival to celebrate county s heritage as a birthplace of American traditional music News amp Record Retrieved January 10 2023 a b c d e f Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 2021 p 10 a b c d e f g h i j Powell 1976 p 421 Feature Details Ruffin Census Designated Place U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 4 2023 Feature Details Bethany U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 4 2023 Feature Details Monroeton U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 4 2023 Feature Details Oregon Hill U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 4 2023 Feature Details Price U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 4 2023 Feature Details Providence U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 4 2023 Works cited editAheron Piper 1997 From Avalon to Eden A Postcard Tour of Rockingham County Images of America illustrated ed Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7524 0824 8 Carter Bob June 2004 The Bridge To Nowhere The Great Mebane s Bridge Controversy PDF The Journal of Rockingham County History and Genealogy XXIX 1 1 23 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 Destination By Design May 17 2021 Rockingham Vision Plan 2040 Comprehensive Land Use Plan PDF Rockingham County Government Marshall F Ray 1967 Labor in the South Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 50700 5 McCorkle Mac Salzberg Rachel January 2022 The Democrats Countrypolitan Problem in North Carolina Progressive Challenge and Opportunity PDF Duke University Polis Center for Politics Powell William S 1976 The North Carolina Gazetteer A Dictionary of Tar Heel Places Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 1247 1 Richman Barak D 2007 The King of Rockingham County and the Original Bridge to Nowhere Contracts Stories Foundation Press ISBN 978 1 58778 721 8 Rodenbough Charles Dyson ed 1983 The Heritage of Rockingham County North Carolina 1983 Winston Salem Rockingham County Historical Society in cooperation with Hunter Publishing Company ISBN 0 89459 212 2 Wolfram Walt Reaser Jeffrey 2014 Talkin Tar Heel How Our Voices Tell the Story of North Carolina Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 1437 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rockingham County North Carolina nbsp Geographic data related to Rockingham County North Carolina at OpenStreetMap Official website NCGenWeb Rockingham County genealogy resources for the county Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rockingham County North Carolina amp oldid 1183441553, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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