This small quaint seaport has roots back to April 7, 1730 when Isaac and Jonathan Green Sr. purchased from Ebenezer Harker "a certain plantation and track of land containing by estimation 441 acres situate lying and being in ye Carterett in ye county of province of aforsaid being ye west side of ye mouth off White Oak River." By 1771 Theophilus Weeks started a town on his plantation, laying out a plat and selling lots. Formerly known as Bogue, Week's Point, The Wharf and New Town, the town was officially designated by the North Carolina General Assembly on May 6, 1783. Above photo (from North Carolina State Archives) courtesy Jack Dudley, as included in Swansboro - A Pictorial Tribute
2 comments:
The bridge comes from Cape Carteret and Cedar Point borders to Emerald Isle not from Swansboro. Swansboro is a couple miles down HWY 24 southwest of the bridge.
My mother and Cameron Langston were cousins. My mother told me that his wife Lena gave me my name, Herman Hassell Mc Lawhorn. My older sister and her husband had a home located just off the sound and just a block from where the current bridge was built. They were in the construction business. They were building houses on Emerald Isle before and during the construction of the bridge, they used boats to go back forth to work. All materials had to be transported by truck though Morehead City and down the island to Emerald Isle.
A land surveyer was a client of the CPA company where I worked. While at his office one day, he should me a map of the island that was drawn sometime in early twenties. It had a proposed bridge that was about a hundred yards for it current stands.
Sincerly, Herman H Mc Lawhorn.Kinston,NC
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