North Carolina Gazetteer browse

    Tips for Searching
PlaceDescription
Catawba Ferryoperated on Catawba River at Lincoln-Mecklenburg county line in NW Mecklenburg County.
Catawba LakeSee Lake Wylie.
Catawba LandSee Piedmont.
Catawba Riverrises in the Blue Ridge Mountains in SW McDowell County near the Buncombe-McDowell county line. It flows NE through McDowell and E through Burke County; forms successively the Caldwell-Catawba, Alexander-Catawba, Iredell-Catawba, Iredell-Lincoln, Mecklenburg-Lincoln, and Mecklenburg-Gaston county lines. It enters South Carolina W of Charlotte and flows S to join Big Wateree Creek in Wateree Pond to form the Wateree River about 20 mi. above Camden. From its headwaters to the South Carolina line, it flows approx. 150 mi. Catawba was an Indian word that may have meant "people of the river banks" or "people of the river [Catawba] with broken banks." For some of the named fords across the river, see also Beattie's, Cowan's, Island, Sherrills, Tools, and Tuckasege.
Catawba Springspopular pre-Civil War resort on Killian Creek, E Lincoln County. Owned by Capt. John Reid, Revolutionary soldier, and known first as Reid's Springs.
Catawba Springscommunity in N Catawba County. Former resort, popular in late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Est. as Elliott Springs on June 10, 1859, and became White Sulphur Springs on August 1, 1860. The Sparkling Catawba Springs Company was inc. in 1869 to erect buildings and open and maintain the mineral springs. Became Sparkling Catawba Springs in 1877.
Catawba Springs TownshipE Lincoln County.
Catawba StationSee Catawba.
Catawba TownshipE Catawba County. Name changed in 1879 from Hamilton Township.
Catawba ValeSee Old Fort.