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  1. Charles Washington (1738–1799) was the youngest brother. Mildred Washington (1739–1740) youngest daughter and child; Fifth generation. Bushrod Washington (1762–1829), son of John Augustine Washington and Hannah Bushrod, was a politician and nephew of George Washington.

  2. In 1663 North Carolina was granted to eight of the political friends of the recently restored King of England, Charles II. These men, known as the Lords Proprietors of Carolina, promoted the settlement of this state.

  3. Washington, city, seat of Beaufort county, eastern North Carolina, U.S., along the Pamlico-Tar estuary just east of Greenville. Founded by Colonel James Bonner in 1771 and originally known as Forks of Tar River, it was one of the first places in the United States to be named (December 7, 1776) for.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Mar 25, 2021 · King Charles II ordered that a peace treaty be drawn up between the remaining Indigenous leaders of the Powhatan Paramountcy and the British crown. Cockacoeske was the first signatory of the ...

  5. The Watauga Settlement was the first community established in North Carolina's western frontier and holds the distinction of being perhaps the first American settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains.

  6. Some loyalists rallied to the king, but the royal cause suffered disastrous setbacks at King’s Mountain on October 7, 1780, and Cowpens on January 17, 1781. Lt. Gen. Charles Cornwallis, the commander of British forces at Yorktown, arrived on the Virginia Peninsula in spring 1781 to await reinforcements scheduled to arrive by sea.

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  8. Oct 30, 2016 · Originally Carolana, for King Charles I. On October 30, 1629, England’s King Charles I granted much of what is North and South Carolina to his attorney general, Sir Robert Heath. The land was referred to as Carolana, meaning the “land of Charles.”

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