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| Aerial View 1940s . Image Courtesy North Carolina State Archives 
This page is a transcription from the application to nominate  
Swansboro to the NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES 
Prepared and written in 1989 by architectural historian Daniel Pezzoni  | 
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE
Swansboro,   a tiny port established in  1770 on Bogue Sound at the mouth of the   White Oak River in Onslow  County, is a remarkably unaltered waterfront   village of approximately  150 densely-clustered houses and commercial   buildings. The historic  district includes the town’s surviving   antebellum building stock of five  houses and two store buildings as   well as several virtually intact  blocks of frame houses dating to the   period of the town’s lumber boom,  between the years 1880 and 1925.   These lumber boom houses display a  distinctive local variation of   typical late Victorian exterior and  interior milled ornament.
Swansboro’s   major commercial and  industrial role as Onslow County’s foremost port   from the eighteenth  through the early twentieth centuries is  documented  in the Onslow County  Multiple Property Documentation Form:  Naval  Stores and Lumber  Production in Onslow County, 1754-1938. The  town  served as a center for  fishing, boatbuilding, and naval stores   processing and shipment before  the Civil War. After the war, the town   hosted a succession of large  lumber mills. Unlike the coastal towns of   Beaufort and Morehead City in  adjacent Carteret County, which grew   large owing to fine harborage and  rail connections, Swansboro remained   isolated and tied to its immediate  hinterland. Consequently, Swansboro   represents one of the smallest and  most traditional maritime   communities surviving on the North Carolina  coast. MUCH MORE 
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