Reems Creek Township Cemeteries

Reems Creek Township Cemeteries

Author: Blanche Roberts Robertson

Publisher: WorldComm

Published: 2011-09-01

Total Pages: 460

ISBN-13: 9781566642828

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Headstone Surveys in the Weaverville, North Carolina areawith Extensive Additional Information. Covers to 1993.


Weaverville

Weaverville

Author: Tim W. Jackson

Publisher: Arcadia Publishing

Published: 2015-09-14

Total Pages: 128

ISBN-13: 1439653186

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Native Americans, particularly the Cherokee, inhabited Western North Carolina for thousands of years prior to white settlement. Legend has it that the name Dry Ridge derived from what the natives called the area. When Michael Montraville Weaver provided the land in the 1870s, Weaversville was born. The name was changed to Weaverville a few years later. In the time since, Weaverville has slowly grown. It now offers a quaint and historic downtown, along with substantial newer commercial development on Weaver Boulevard leading to Interstate 26. With the bustling town of Asheville just a few miles down the road, Weaverville has become a haven for retirees, longtime residents, and newcomers who want the cultural offerings of Asheville and the charm of a small town.


Sugarcreek Township/Borough Cemeteries

Sugarcreek Township/Borough Cemeteries

Author:

Publisher:

Published:

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Index to Burkhart Farm Cemetery (Route 322 West); Forest Chapel Cemetery; Hogg Cemetery (near Reno); Mt. Zion Jewish Cemetery (Rocky Grove); County Home / Poor House / Venango Manor (Village of Sugar Creek); Reno Cemetery (near Wanango Country Club); and Van Dusen Cemetery (newar Route 417 and Keely Road).