Camp Springs | community in SW Caswell County. Believed to have been named because Cornwallis's troops camped there during the American Revolution. |
Camp Swamp | rises in S Columbus County and flows SE into Horry County, S.C., where it enters Buck Creek. |
Camp Tuscarora | Boy Scout camp and lake in S Wayne County S of Sleepy Creek. |
Camp Two Branch | rises in S Haywood County and flows NW into Middle Prong. |
Camp Vance | central Burke County, site of camp for state troops, 1861-64; named for Col. Zebulon B. Vance, Civil War governor. Raided by Federal troops in 1864. |
Camp Vance | a Civil War training camp near Sulphur Springs, central Buncombe County. Named for Col. Robert B. Vance of the 29th N.C. Regiment, which trained there. |
Camp Whiting | a Civil War training camp at Wilmington, W New Hanover County. |
Camp Wilson | See Vaughan's Springs. |
Camp Wyatt | a Civil War training camp in S New Hanover County about 2 mi. N of Fort Fisher. Named for Henry Lawson Wyatt, first North Carolina soldier killed in action in the Civil War, at Bethel Church, June 10, 1861. |
Campania | an estate of 19,000 acres in Currituck, Pasquotank, and Perquimans Counties owned by Thomas Macknight. Being developed at the time of the Revolutionary War. |