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UNC, Chapel Hill, and Carborro History

  • Thread starter Thread starter donbosco
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Here's something that I wrote about that part of the country.

"My brother has always been a fan of country roads and the unbeaten path. That fondness for ‘Blue Highways’ is one of only a very few things that we have in common in fact and something we inherited from our Momma and Deddy. Soon after I earned my driver’s license he taught me a true ‘back way’ from #Bonlee, #DeepChatham to #ChapelHill. The route was a meandering one with only very short runs on Highways 64 and 87 and the rest left to official four-digit State Roads with historic and locally significant names. I drove this way countless times as I tried, often desperately, to bridge the two worlds of my youth. Bonlee is certainly my homeland and roots go deep in Chatham but in Chapel Hill I actually found my truest Home.

Out of Bonlee you go down on Rives Chapel Baptist Church Road where Tick Creek bottoms out and after winding three or four miles through that “goodliest of land” you emerge onto Highway 64 where after less than a mile you turn left onto Bowers Store Road. Crossing 64 the land rises and at the top of a hill with a clearing and a view in all directions you take a right onto Henderson-Tanyard Road till it dead ends into Castlerock Farm Road where you turn right. Some of y’all may know Henderson-Tanyard because of The Shakori Hills Festivals.

One of my many personal landmarks along the way is a house that for decades has been the parking spot for a truck that has painted on it ‘Billy “Crash” Craddock.” Google Earth tells me that it is still there (642 Castle Rock Rd) after all these years. Craddock was born in Greensboro in 1939 and was a country and rockabilly phenom. He kicked off his career at 18 - a heart throb designed to challenge Elvis - and became a star in Australia. “Boom, Boom Baby” was a #1 hit for him there. Now 85 according to his Facebook page he was still performing as recently as last June in Star, NC. Listen/Watch his classic performance here:

https://youtu.be/F5KAMWnCByM?t=2


At the end of Castle Rock Farm you come up on Highway 87 and go left until you turn right on Brown’s Chapel Road which becomes Chicken Bridge Road. Along that quarter mile stretch you’ll see one of the two North Carolina Historical Markers dedicated to Captain Johnston Blakeley. (Anybody from Carrboro/Chapel Hill ought to be able to make it home from there - shame on you if you can’t). Here’s the entry for the Chatham Blakeley marker: https://ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?MarkerId=H-10


Here’s ‘The Rest of the Story’ on Blakeley and his marker. On May 1, 1814 ‘The USS Wasp’ set sail commanded by Johnston Blakeley of Rockrest, Chatham County and @UNC, with the mission to harass the British navy and shipping (War of 1812). Many victories followed but ‘The Wasp’ was lost at sea-Blakeley was honored posthumously. See here: https://www.ncdcr.gov/.../johnston-blakeley-war-of-1812... ‬ ‪

I wondered about Blakeley for many years - There is also a marker to the captain in Wilmington (it bears the code D 37 and has smaller lettering than it should as it has been knocked down multiple times and replaced I am told-). Here is the entry for that Blakeley marker: https://ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?MarkerId=D-37

For many years I confused Blakeley with James Waddell, a Confederate ship’s captain honored with a sign in downtown Pittsboro. For good measure here’s the Waddell marker entry: https://ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?MarkerId=H-17

As for Blakeley as you can see, there are indeed two different markers. I’ve got no explanation.

NCPedia has a fuller account of the story of Blakeley and the exploits of ‘The Wasp.’ https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/blakeley-johnston more intriguing to me is Blakeley’s pre-maritime life. As a student (1797-99) at UNC he headed the Philanthropic Society and his portrait hangs in New West Hall on campus there. ‪

In his honor a poem was penned and published in ‘The North Carolina Magazine’ in 1855, Volume 3. ‬
No more shall Blakeley's thunder roar,
Upon the stormy deep;
Far distant from Columbia's shore,
His tombless ruins sleep;
But long Columbia's song shall tell,
How Blakeley fought,
how Blakeley fell.

Unfortunately Greensboro-born Crash Craddock (1939) as of yet has no historical marker.
 
Can't get to Chicken Bridge unless you turn at Frosty's!
Was it called "Chicken Bridge" because it was one lane or did a chicken truck wreck on it?
It was one lane.

I get to Chicken Bridge by way of White Cross Road from my house.
 
Going to Greensboro or points west I pretty much took Old Greensboro Rd from CH/Carrboro or the Ferguson, etc to old gboro. if coning from Chatham. Eli Whitney, Kimesville. Haven't driven it in years but I am sure there's been developement along the way.
 
Going to Greensboro or points west I pretty much took Old Greensboro Rd from CH/Carrboro or the Ferguson, etc to old gboro. if coning from Chatham. Eli Whitney, Kimesville. Haven't driven it in years but I am sure there's been developement along the way.
 
Picture of chicken truck that fell through the bridge. My dad knew the driver.
This is the origin of the name.

As I understand it, while there is no dispute about how the name came about, there is some about the WHEN this happened? Do you think your dad knows?
 
Early 1950s
A wooden bridge crossing the Haw River in Pittsboro collapsed beneath Walter Hugh Campbell and his Studebaker truck full of chickens and is known today as Chicken Bridge
 
Unfortunately my dad has passed and I can’t find any info on the date.

I'm sorry for your Dad's passing.

I'd bet that the Chatham County Historical Preservation Society would love a copy of that photograph. I've never seen it before nor anything like it (I'm from Chatham).
 
Perhaps not exactly CH/Carrboro but it's interesting and they are putting up a commemorative plaque thus week. Wanted to beat out @donbosco 😛


The Gourd Patch Affair, or the Lewelling Conspiracy, was a failed uprising against North Carolina's Patriot government in the summer of 1777. A group of Martin, Tyrrell, Pitt, and Bertie County farmers met in a pumpkin patch and crafted a secret plot. Their aim? Assassinate North Carolina's governor, overthrow the state government, and protect the Protestant religion.

In the end their plot was discovered and the ring's leader, John Lewelling, was the first man ever granted clemency by the State of North Carolina.

The Gourd Patch Conspiracy began as a religious organization dedicated to the ideals of preserving Protestantism, something Albemarle farmers thought their new patriot leaders were trying to attack.

Engraving of colonial men harvesting wheat by hand



"Sign of a Secret:" Recruiting to the Plot

The Gourd Patch Conspiracy's leadership used a variety of secret codes and signs to identify one another and convince more men to join their movement.



A patroller holds a lantern and inspects enslaved people's passes

Gunpowder, Treason, & Plot: First Arrests

As membership grew, Lewelling and others formed a more radical plan. They planned to seize ammunition and assassinate the governor in Halifax, but it was not long before their secret got out.


Map of the Albemarle Sound, North Carolina

Fight or Flight

When the State Government discovered the conspiracy, the group's leadership was faced with the choice of continuing the fight, or trying to flee from authorities to avoid punishment.

Historic Chowan County Courthouse, located in Edenton, NC
After the conspiracy's leading members were arrested, they were tried in the Edenton District Court of Oyer and Terminer. State officials had to decide: what was the cost of treason?



Richard Caswell's family bible

Aftermaths & Legacies of the Gourd Patch Conspiracy

What happened to the former members of the Gourd Patch Conspiracy? And what lessons did the state learn from John Lewelling's attempt?

 
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