North Carolina Gazetteer browse
Place | Description |
---|---|
Ash Branch | rises in W Jackson County and flows NE into Tuckasegee River. |
Ash Cove | NE Cherokee County in the Snowbird Mountains. |
Ash Cove Creek | rises in NE Cherokee County and flows SW into Gipp Creek. |
Ash Flat Branch | rises in S Macon County and flows N into Allison Creek. |
Ash Hill | community in E Surry County served by post office, 1881-1907. |
Ash Knob | central Clay County between Downing and Licklog Creeks. |
Ashby Harbor | a bay on the W shore of Roanoke Island, E Dare County, in the waters of Croatan Sound. Site of landing by troops of Union general Ambrose Burnside, February 7, 1862. |
Ashe County | was formed in 1799 from Wilkes County. In the NW corner of the state, it is bounded by the states of Tennessee and Virginia and by Alleghany, Wilkes, and Watauga Counties. It was named for Samuel Ashe (1725-1813), Revolutionary patriot, superior court judge, and governor of the state (1795-98). Area: 427 sq. mi. County seat: Jefferson, with an elevation of 2,900 ft. Townships are Chestnut Hill, Clifton, Creston, Elk, Grassy Creek, Helton, Horse Creek, Hurricane, Jefferson, Laurel, North Fork, Obids, Oldfields, Peak Creek, Pine Swamp, Piney Creek, Pond Mountain, Walnut Hill, and West Jefferson. Produces corn, tobacco, Christmas trees, rubber products, wood products, hay, dairy livestock, chemicals, textiles, hosiery, furniture, and electronics. Home to a cheese plant in West Jefferson. Copper and mica are mineral products, and the county has a potential for the production of stone, iron ore, and gem stones. |
Ashe Creek | rises in E Pender County in Holly Shelter Bay and flows W into Northeast Cape Fear River. Appears as Ashes Mill on the Price map, 1808, and as Ashe's Mill Creek on the MacRae map, 1833. Exeter, which see, was nearby. |
Ashe Gap | on the Mitchell County, N.C.-Carter County, Tenn., line. |