North Carolina Facts and Trivia

Fun Facts about North Carolina State’s Geography

  • North Carolina map outline
  • Know as “Fish Town” in the early 1700’s when Blackbeard frequented the coast, “Beaufort Town” was established as a seaport with the right to collect customs, in 1722.
  • City Guide: Visit North Carolina City Guide for a look at geography, local history, architecture, and culture.
  • North Carolina is the largest producer of sweet potatoes in the nation. Students at a Wilson County school petitioned the North Carolina General Assembly for the establishment of the sweet potato as the official state vegetable.
  • Harker’s Island hosts the annual Core Sound Decoy Festival in December.
  • Morehead City is home to the North Carolina Seafood Festival, held the first weekend in October every year.
  • The World War II battleship ‘North Carolina’ is permanently berthed on the Cape Fear River at Wilmington. She was saved from the scrap heap in the 1960’s by public subscription, including donations of dimes by schoolchildren.
  • The first English colony in America was located on Roanoke Island. Walter Raleigh founded it. The colony mysteriously vanished with no trace except for the word “Croatoan” scrawled on a nearby tree.
  • Mount Mitchell in the Blue Ridge Mountains is the highest peak east of the Mississippi. It towers 6,684 feet above sea level.
  • Grandfather Mountain as part of the Appalachian Mountain Range, highest peak in the Blue Ridge, is the only private park in the world designated by the United Nations as an International Biosphere Reserve.
  • The Mile-High Swinging Bridge near Linville is 5,305 feet above sea level. The bridge actually hangs about 80 feet above the ground.
  • Beech Mountain is Eastern America’s highest town at 5,506ft above sea level.
  • North Carolina has 1,500 lakes of 10 acres or more in size and 37,000 miles of fresh water streams.

North Carolina State Symbols Trivia

  • North Carolina State Bird is called the Red Cardinal
  • The official state flower of North Carolina is American Dogwood
  • Longleaf Pine is the official state tree of North Carolina
  • The Outer Banks of NC hosts some of the most beautiful beaches in the country.
  • North Carolina’s flag was officially adopted on March 9, 1885 but it was updated in 1991 with some minor changes
  • On Nov. 21, 1789 North Carolina was the 12th state to enter the union.
  • The official state motto of North Carolina is ‘Esse quam videri’ which translates to ‘To be, rather than to seem’
  • Whitewater Falls in Transylvania County is the highest waterfall in the eastern United States.
  • The official state seal of North Carolina was officially adopted in 1971 and revised to its present-day form in 1983.
  • Cape Hatteras is the largest lighthouse ever to be moved due to erosion problems.
  • The official song of the state of North Carolina is called ‘The Old North State’
  • The University of North Carolina’s mascot, the Tarheels, is a nickname for North Carolinians that supposedly came from the days when NC produced a lot of tar, and someone saw a set of footprints made by someone who had stepped in the tar.
  • North Carolina was the first state in the nation to establish a state museum of art.
  • Find out the interesting facts about the famous people born in North Carolina
  • North Carolina was one of the first states in the U.S. to establish a state symphony. The North Carolina Symphony, founded in 1943, currently performs nearly 185 full-orchestra concerts each year.
  • North Carolina has the largest state-maintained highway system in the United States. The state’s highway system currently has 77,400 miles of roads
  • The General Assembly of 1987 adopted milk as the official state beverage.
  • The oldest town in the state is Bath, incorporated in 1705.
  • The state nickname is known as “The Tar Heel State.”

Historical Facts about the State of North Carolina

  • The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill is the oldest State University in the United States.
  • NC is the Two-letter or Postal Abbreviation and N.C. is the Traditional or Standard Abbreviation for the State of North Carolina.
  • In 1903 the Wright Brothers made the first successful powered flight by man at Kill Devil Hill near Kitty Hawk. The Wright Memorial at Kitty Hawks now commemorates their achievement.
  • High Point is known as the Furniture Capital of the World.
  • Havelock is home of Marine Base “Cherry Point.” It is the largest air base in the Marine Corps.
  • Charles Karault was born and raised in Wilmington.
  • Krispy Kreme Doughnut was founded in Winston-Salem.
  • The Venus Fly-Trap is native to Hampstead.
  • The first miniature golf course was built in Fayetteville.
  • Babe Ruth hit his first home run in Fayetteville on March 7, 1914.
  • Winston-Salem was created when the two towns Winston and Salem combined.
  • The Biltmore Estate in Ashville is America’s largest home, and includes a 255-room chateau, an award-winning winery and extensive gardens.
  • The first English child born in America was born in Roanoke in 1587. Her name was Virginia Dare.
  • The Lost Colony Outdoor Drama in Albemarle commemorates the birth of Virginia Dare. Scheduled to run just one year, it proved so successful that it has played for nearly sixty consecutive summers.
  • The first state owned art museum in the country is located in Raleigh.
  • Fontana Dam is the tallest dam in the Eastern United States, at 480 feet high.
  • Many people believe that North Carolina was the first state to declare independence from England with the Mecklenburg Declaration of 1775.
  • North Carolina quarter was issued on March 12, 2001.
  • Pepsi was invented and first served in New Bern in 1898.
  • Andrew Jackson, seventh President of the United States, was born in the Waxsaws area on the border of North and South Carolina.
  • Arnold Palmer recognized as the player whose aggressive play and winning personality raised golf to national attention, honed his skills on the championship golf team of Wake Forest University.
  • James K. Polk, born in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, was the eleventh President of the United States.
  • Hiram Rhoades Revels, born in Fayetteville in 1822, was the first African-American member of the United States Congress.
  • Andrew Johnson started his career as a tailor’s apprentice in Raleigh, North Carolina and rose to lead in the reuniting of the nation as the seventeenth President of the United States.
  • North Carolina leads the nation in furniture, tobacco, brick, and textile production.
  • Saluda, North Carolina is located at the top of the Saluda Grade. The crest of the steepest standard gauge mainline railroad in the United States.
  • The town of Wendell town was named for the American writer, Oliver Wendell Holmes.
  • The Swiss and German settlement of New Bern was named in honor of the founder’s home, Bern, Switzerland. When Bern, Switzerland was founded, it was named by a group of hunters. They named the city for the first animal they came upon on their hunting expedition. It was a bear. “Bern” is the old Germanic word for Bear, and the bear became the symbol of the city. It has been adopted by New Bern, as well.
  • Located in northeastern North Carolina on the Albemarle-Pamlico peninsula, Columbia is on the eastern shore of the Scuppernong River. The Indians called the area “the place of the sweet bay tree.”
  • Babe Ruth hit his first professional home run in Fayetteville on March 7, 1914.
  • White Lake near Elizabethtown is very unique in that it has a white sandy bottom and is blessed with crystal clear waters. It has also been labeled as the “Nation’s Safest Beach.” It is truly a child’s paradise in that there are no currents, no tides, no hazardous depressions or real dangers of any kind to swimmers.

Thanks to: Rhonda G. Moore, Doreen Rearick, Dione Willis, Waf518205, Jeff Rickert, Stuart Laue, Jresce, Paula Toppings, RHEMC