Harnett County: A History
By John Hairr
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Marked by the diversity of its land and the resilience of its people, Harnett County boasts a rich history characterized by military battles and local politics, notable figures and prominent industries, and the commitment of its people to improve their communities for future generations. From the steep hills and swift creeks of the Piedmont to the scrub oaks and barren soil of the Sandhills, from the Mingo Swamp to the Cape Fear River, Harnett County's topography has challenged and inspired newcomers for centuries, strengthening their spirit, hardening their resolve, and shaping each community they created.
In the eighteenth century, stalwart pioneers began to establish settlements in the rough and varied landscape of the region that was one day to become Harnett County. Traveling along old Native American trails or following the watery highways of the Cape Fear River and its tributaries, these mainly European settlers-including a large influx of Highland Scots-made their way into the remote interior of the province, where they constructed modest cabins and set about farming the land. Through the years, the people of Harnett joined in the struggles to win freedom from England, to defend the South, and to battle the forces of evil on the other side of the world, but they also fought to build strong communities, such as Erwin, Lillington, and Dunn, and to enhance the daily lives of all county residents. Plank roads and canals, mills and iron works, railroads and academies, all served to connect citizens to the world beyond their doors and to advance the growing prosperity. Situated between the metropolitan cities of Raleigh and Fayetteville, the county begins the new century with a focus on developing industry and fostering the pride so deeply felt by all who call Harnett County home.
John Hairr
John Hairr is an award winning writer and historian who has written extensively about the history and lore of the southeastern United States and the Caribbean region. His writings have covered a wide range of topics, including wild rivers, shipwrecks and extinct wildlife. A member of the Outdoor Writers Association of America, his work has appeared in numerous publications including Mercator's World, South Carolina Wildlife and Fortean Times.
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Harnett County - John Hairr
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INTRODUCTION
In 1996, Kirsty Sutton of Arcadia Publishing contacted me about putting together a book telling the history of Harnett County, North Carolina through old photographs. The result of this effort was Images of America: Harnett County, released in 1998. This book, its pages filled with historical images and old maps, has been, I am grateful to say, well received by those interested in the history of Harnett.
The Images of America: Harnett County book served its purpose, but still, it had its shortcomings. Since the book was primarily a pictorial work, the content of the written part of the book was extremely limited, and it was virtually impossible to explain many of the incidents of the county’s fascinating past in detail. On numerous occasions, individuals that have perused the Images book have encouraged me to write down the history of the county to accompany the visual presentation.
In the year 2001, Mark Berry, an editor with Arcadia, contacted me with details of a new series of historical books his company was putting together. This series, the Making of America, presents the history of locales across the country using written narratives as well as photographs. Seeing this as a wonderful opportunity to present the written history of the county, I accepted his offer to put together a volume about Harnett for this series.
The book you now hold in your hands, Harnett County: A History, is the result.
1. NATURAL HISTORY AND NATIVE AMERICANS
Harnett County consists of 595 square miles located near the very center of North Carolina. To the north lies the state capital, Raleigh; to the south lies the commercial hub of Fayetteville; while to the southwest is the world’s largest military installation—Fort Bragg. All have influenced the county in one way or another throughout its history, yet Harnett has been able to maintain a distinct identity.
THE LAND
Harnett is geographically diverse, sitting astride the boundary between the Piedmont, Sandhills, and the Coastal Plain. Each portion displays characteristics of these different physiographic regions.
The northwestern portion of the county lies within the Piedmont and is characterized by swift creeks, red soils, and steep hills. The highest elevation in this section near Cokesbury reaches 470 feet above sea level. This is the only portion of Harnett from which iron and coal have been extracted.
The eastern margin of Harnett, along the boundary with Sampson and Johnston Counties, is a region of swamps and lowlands. Mingo Swamp, whose tannic-stained waters creep along the county’s eastern border, is known for its cypress trees and water moccasins.
A region of rolling hills and fertile soils lies immediately west of these swamps. It is bounded on the west by the Cape Fear River from the Cumberland line up to Lillington, then west to Fish Creek and Hector’s Creek, and on the east by the lands drained by Mingo Swamp.
Soils are productive here, having been farmed for more than 250 years with great success. In addition, all of the county’s major commercial and manufacturing centers are located here, including the incorporated municipalities of Erwin, Dunn, Coats, Angier, and Lillington.
Just west of this section is a region known as the Flatwoods. This region derived its name from the fact that the relief of the land is generally level and was once covered by a vast pine forest. The Flatwoods cover the portion of the county south of Lillington to Linden, then up Little River to Elliott’s Bridge, north to Flat Branch Church, thence back to Lillington.
The southwestern portion of the county lies within the Sandhills of North Carolina. This region is characterized by large sandy ridges that are often separated by swamp-filled valleys. At one time, these sandy hills were covered with longleaf pines, but the turpentine industry depleted the supply of these trees, so today the predominant vegetation is scrub oak, wiregrass, and slash pine.
Though an unnamed peak approximately 1,000 feet southeast of Mount Moriah Church off N.C. Route 27 is the highest point in the county at 490 feet above sea level, the most famous of these sandy hills in Harnett is Cameron’s Hill. Located just east of Johnsonville, Cameron’s Hill was long regarded as the highest point in Harnett, with some old accounts giving it an elevation greater than 650 feet. In actuality, it is only about 485 feet above sea level.
Until the last decade of the twentieth century, the Sandhills were the most sparsely settled section of Harnett County. This was due to the barrenness of the soil and the reliance of the inhabitants on the products of the forests for their sustenance. Small settlements grew up along the major transportation arteries: Spout Springs, Olivia, Pineview, and Mamers along the railroads, and Johnsonville along the Fayetteville and Western Plank Road.
This is a view of the Cape Fear River from the Duke Bridge in 1910. (Courtesy Coastal Piedmont Leader.)
This map of the river basins of North Carolina shows the importance of waterways to Native Americans and early settlers.
CLIMATE AND WEATHER
The Southeast Regional Climate Data Center contains records of observations made at official weather stations across the southeastern United States. The only station within Harnett County is located on the Black River south of Dunn. According to this data, collected between 1962 and 1999, the average maximum temperature in summer is 87 degrees, while the average low temperature in winter is 31 degrees.
The average annual precipitation is 47.2 inches, over half of which usually falls between April and September.
It should be pointed out that the weather in Dunn is usually a few degrees warmer and the town normally receives more annual rainfall than do the northern and western portions of the county.
The hottest temperature ever recorded in Dunn was 108 degrees on August 22, 1983. The coldest day was -4 degrees on January 21, 1985. Bear in mind that these temperatures are for the 37 years of the end of the twentieth century, and it is likely that these extremes have been exceeded in times past before records were officially kept in the county.
Certainly the county has known cold conditions and harsh winters in the past. For example, it is known that the Cape Fear River froze over in 1893, 1899, and 1917.
The largest rainfall events recorded in Dunn each coincided with hurricanes. The largest one-day rainfall occurred on September 16, 1999, when 7.4 inches of rain fell during the bombardment of Hurricane Floyd. The second largest occurred during Hurricane Fran on September 6, 1996, when 6.5 inches fell. As with the temperature, it should be remembered that the official rainfall measurements were more than likely exceeded in times past when records were not officially maintained. The tremendous rains that fell on the area during at least three major events—Charlie Teigen’s Hurricane in 1856, the Freshet of 1908, and the 1945 Freshet—produced floods in Harnett of much greater magnitude than anything experienced in the late twentieth century.
Harnett has also seen several large snowfalls. These would include notable snowstorms in 1856, 1899, 1927, and 2000. The most fierce of these likely occurred during the brutal winter of 1856, but the greatest twentieth century snowstorm occurred in March of 1927. The snowstorm of January 2000 is noteworthy for dropping nearly two feet of snow in some parts of the county.
WATER RESOURCES
Harnett County is a land of rivers. In fact, four different rivers flow across the county. In addition, there are numerous creeks, branches, and streams. The waters from all of these watercourses eventually enter the Cape Fear River and make their way to the Atlantic Ocean.
Black River rises in the northeast near the Wake County line north of Angier and flows south by southeast, separating the towns of Dunn and Erwin before crossing into Cumberland County. Beyond Rhodes Pond, Mingo Swamp flows into Black River, which thereafter becomes South Black River. The designation South
was added by Sampsonians, who refer to another tributary as Black River. The folks in Cumberland and Sampson commonly refer to South Black River simply as South River, while Harnett residents cling to tradition and call the stream by its original name: Black River.
Upper Little River begins near Lemon Springs in Lee County at the junction of Little Juniper Creek and Mulatto Branch. A short distance downstream from the community of Carolina Trace, Upper Little River flows into western Harnett County. The river flows over several gravel shoals, and joins the Cape Fear River opposite Erwin. A set of rapids located just downstream of the N.C. Route 210 bridge south of Lillington was long known as Great Falls of Upper Little River
and served as a mill site for nearly two centuries.
Lower Little River rises in western Moore County and flows east through the Sandhills of Moore, Cumberland, and Harnett to its junction with the Cape Fear near Linden. This watercourse is significant to the county as it forms much of Harnett’s southern boundary with Cumberland County.
Lanier’s Falls are on the Cape Fear River near Raven Rock.
This view from the Erwin Bridge shows the Freshet of October 1929.
The most important river in Harnett is the Cape Fear, which flows across the county dissecting it into two roughly equal halves. All of the creeks, branches, streams, swamps, and rivers of Harnett eventually join the Cape Fear and enter the ocean beyond Bald Head Island.
In the early days of settlement, the Cape Fear was the main transportation artery for people and goods. In the days before bridges were constructed, it was an obstacle to travel that divided the county and created an intense rivalry among the inhabitants of the respective sides. Since the middle of the twentieth century, the inhabitants have looked to the Cape Fear as their primary source of drinking water.
As it flows through Harnett, the Cape Fear drops nearly 85 feet and passes over the Fall Line, the rocky transition zone between the Coastal Plain and the Piedmont. Plunging across this line, several sets of rapids and falls are created. The most significant set of these are Smiley’s Falls, a series of rapids near Erwin where the river drops 25 feet in 1.5 miles.
There are numerous springs scattered across Harnett. In the old days, the county’s inhabitants often utilized these springs as a source of drinking water. Some of the more noteworthy springs include Gourd Springs near Anderson Creek, Spout Springs in western Harnett, Chisolm Springs south of Johnsonville, Blacksmith Spring at Summerville, and the spring near the Spring Hill Methodist Church near Mamers.
One of the most widely known of these old springs is the Flora MacDonald Spring on Cameron’s Hill, where the famed Scottish heroine gathered water while living nearby with her sister Annabella.
Legend maintains that Flora would sit on a rock by the spring, whiling away the hours waiting for her husband and son to return from their trip west in search of land on which to settle.
The most famous of all these springs in Harnett is Chalybeate Springs, located between Lillington and Fuquay-Varina. These mineral waters were known at least as early as the War for Southern Independence and became the focal point for a popular health resort in the early twentieth century. Though no longer a tourist attraction, the spring still flows, and a community in northern Harnett still carries the name.
MINERAL RESOURCES
Harnett County has never been known as a source of great mineral wealth like some of its neighboring counties to the west. But from time to time minerals have been extracted from the ground with some profitability.
Iron was once mined from the Buckhorn Hills in the northwestern portions of the county. The Buckhorn Mine, Douglas Mine, Pegram Mine, Battle Mine, McNeill Mine, and Dewar Mine all yielded the red rocks that were smelted into iron at the Buckhorn Furnace along the Cape Fear near the mouth of Parker’s Creek.
Ore was extracted from these mines from the 1850s through the 1880s, and Harnett was an important source of iron for the Confederate arsenal at Fayetteville during the War for Southern Independence. According to former state geologist Jasper Stuckey, Harnett has the distinction of being the site of the first modern blast furnace erected within North Carolina to process iron.
Gravel has been an important mineral extracted from Harnett. Large-scale operations have extracted the rocks from the terraces along the Cape Fear and Upper Little Rivers since the 1920s when the gravel was first identified as being in such abundance that