Gazetteer
Place | Description |
---|---|
Beaufort |
town and county seat in S central Carteret County. Laid out in 1713 and settled soon afterward. Inc. 1723. Named for Henry Somerset (1684-1714), Duke of Beaufort, one of the Lords Proprietors of Carolina. Built on the site of an Indian village, Wareiock, said to have meant "Fish Town" or "Fishing Village"; the town was first called Fishtown. Home of North Carolina Maritime Museum. Alt. 9. |
Beaufort County (BOE-furt) |
was first called Pamptecough Precinct when it was formed in 1705 from Bath County; the name was changed to Beaufort about 1712 to honor Henry Somerset, Duke of Beaufort (1684-1714), who in 1709 became one of the Lords Proprietors. Located in the E part of the state, it is bounded by Craven, Hyde, Martin, Pitt, Pamlico, and Washington Counties. Area: 957 sq. mi. County seat: Washington, with an elevation of 11 ft. Townships are Bath, Long Acre, Chocowinity, Pantego, Richland, and Washington. Produces tobacco, corn, hogs, cattle, boats, air filters, soybeans, Irish potatoes, peanuts, wheat, oats, sorghum, cotton, canned seafood, lumber, and phosphate. |
Beaufort Inlet |
S central Carteret County, from the Atlantic Ocean into Bogue Sound, between Bogue Banks on the W and Shackleford Banks on the e. Appears as Topsail Inlet on the De Graffenried map (French text), 1711, and was later known as Old Topsail Inlet. |
Beaufort Township |
on Taylors Creek and Beaufort Inlet in central Carteret County. For a time called township no. 4. |
Beaumont |
community in S Chatham County served by post office, 1851-1914. |
Beautancus |
community in N Duplin County near Bear Marsh Branch. |
Beauty Spot |
mountain on the Mitchell County, N.C. Unicoi County, Tenn., line. Alt. 4,254. |
Beauty Spot Gap |
on the Mitchell County, N.C.-Unicoi County, Tenn., line. |
Beaux |
community in N Wilkes County near Mulberry Creek. |
Beaver Branch |
rises in NE Wayne County and flows SE into Nahunta Swamp in W Greene County. The name dates from colonial times. |