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PlaceDescription
Johnsons Millscommunity in S Pitt County. A post office was est. there in 1882.
Johnsons PondS Wake County on Terrible Creek.
Johnsonvillecommunity in SW Cherokee County at the mouth of Hothouse Branch.
Johnsonvillecommunity in W Harnett County named for Samuel Johnson, early innkeeper there. Surrounding elevated lands first known as Mount Pleasant by Highland Scots who settled there in the 1750s. Name changed later to Camerons Hill for Daniel Cameron, who lived nearby. Afterward changed to its present name. Flora MacDonald, Scottish heroine, lived there, 1774-75. In a mound 4 mi. W are buried over 100 Indians, victims of a massacre shortly before the area was settled by Scots. The mound has been vandalized.
JohnsonvilleSee Traphill.
Johnstonformer county seat in S Onslow County on New River. Est. 1741; destroyed by a hurricane in September 1752 and abandoned. Named for Gabriel Johnston (1699-1752), governor of North Carolina, 1734-52.
Johnston Countywas formed in 1746 from Craven County. Located in the E section of the state, it is bounded by Wilson, Wayne, Sampson, Cumberland, Harnett, Wake, and Nash Counties. It was named for Gabriel Johnston (1699-1752), governor of North Carolina, 1734-52. Area: 795 sq. mi. County seat: Smithfield, with an elevation of 155 ft. Townships are Banner, Bentonville, Beulah, Boon Hill, Clayton, Cleveland, Elevation, Ingrams, Meadow, Micro, O'Neals, Pine Level, Pleasant Grove, Selma, Smithfield, Wilders, and Wilson's Mills. Produces tobacco, corn, soybeans, wheat, oats, cotton, poultry, hogs, livestock, dairy products, sweet potatoes, turkeys, lumber, watermelons, furniture, chemicals, cottonseed oil, pharmaceuticals, wood products, heavy equipment, and crushed stone.
Johnston Court HouseSee Smithfield.
Johnston Swamprises in S Johnston County and flows NE into Stone Creek.
Johnstonvilleformer town est. 1788 in NE Randolph County as the county seat. Named for Governor Samuel Johnston (1733-1816), who was chief executive at the time. The town declined after 1796, when Asheboro was est. as the county seat in a more central location. The community of Brown's Crossroads is now at the site.