Viewing entries by Summer Stevens

Learn To Read Old Property Surveys With The Latest From Graham Historical Museum!

With the help of our partners at Graham Historical Musuem we are excited to announce the addition of new property records to DigitalNC. These materials include land grants, land surveys, property deeds and correspondences ranging from the late 18th century to the mid-19th century. Additionally, a military map from the 1960s and a photograph from 1923 are also included in this latest batch from Graham Historical Museum. The land grants, surveys, and property deeds are among some of the oldest records on DigitalNC and document land ownership in Orange County and present-day Alamance County. While most of these records are from Orange County, which was founded in 1752, Alamance County was formed in 1849 from parts of Orange County that may be represented in these Orange County land documents.

Understanding Land Surveys:

In the United States, most land east of the Ohio River (ie. North Carolina) that was surveyed in the 18th century was done so using the metes and bounds system. The systems primary unit of measurement was a chain, which was measured by standardized 66-foot chain. 1/4 of a chain was known as a pole and 1/100 of a chain was called a link. An acre was comprised of 10 square chains.

Since things like GPS technology and Apple Maps did not yet exist to conveniently tell one where they were located at any given time, land surveys of private property were usually not drawn in a manner that situated the property in relation to a broader mapped land area like a county. Instead this survey method used numerous markers (composed of both natural and man-made features) and the distances between them to measure the boundary of the property. What was ultimately produced as a result of these property surveys were hand-drawn shapes that represented a property’s spatial area. The context about where a piece of property was geographically located was given through a written explanation of the numerous monuments chosen as markers of the property’s boundary and the distances and directions between each of them.

Units of measurement in the metes and bounds system:

  • Chain (sometimes abbreviated Ch.): 66 feet
  • Pole: 16.5 feet or 1/4 of a chain
  • Link: 7.92 inches or 1/100 of a chain
  • Acre: 43,560 square feet or 10 square chains
  • Direction: the direction one must travel to reach the next marker along the boundary line which is expressed by the degrees between cardinal directions
  • Markers: natural or man-made features like trees, river banks, tributaries, existing properties, or roads that serve as visual markers of a property’s boundary

Featured below is an annotated close-up of the land survey from the Land Survey and North Carolina Land Grant (No. 1321) to John Walker, which is featured in full to the above right. This annotated version below is marked to show the different elements of a land survey like this one and how to read it. The survey begins with a marker (underlined in magenta) that serves as a starting point. In the survey below, a “hickory” on the Hughes property line is chosen as the starting spot. From here the direction to the next marker is denoted by the degrees between two cardinal directions (underlined in orange). In this instance, the survey says to go “north thirty nine deg. west.” Following the directions & degree is the length of distance that one must go to reach the next marker, which is denoted by chains (underlined in green) and sometimes smaller units like links (underlined in blue). In this survey one must travel “thirteen chains” and “twenty five links”, which together is about 1,056 feet, to the next marker which is identified as a “Birch on the N[orth] Bank of Stags Creek”. With the description of this next marker, the process begins all over again and the marker + direction + distance formula continues until the boundary formed by these markers finally leads back to the beginning marker. The total area confined by this boundary, as expressed by acres, commonly concludes the written land survey.

More information about our partner, Graham Historical Museum, can be found on their website here

More materials including yearbooks, scrapbooks, and maps, can be found on Graham Historical Museum’s contributor page, which is linked here.


North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812 Keep History Alive With Latest Scrapbooks

With the help of our partners at the North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812, we are excited to announce the addition of three new scrapbooks to DigitalNC. The North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812 was founded in 1912 and currently maintains five chapters throughout the state. These chapters include the Cherokee (Greensboro, N.C.) chapter, the Chief Junaluska (Hendersonville, N.C.) chapter, the Snap Dragon Chapter (Lumberton, N.C.), the Captain Johnston Blakeley Chapter (Raleigh, N.C.), and the Commissioner Charles Gause (Wilmington, N.C.) chapter.

These three latest scrapbooks document the activities, affiliations, awards, and members of chapters of the North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812. Included in these scrapbooks are newspaper clippings, photographs, chapter newsletters, digital correspondences, and more. With their addition to DigitalNC, they join the twelve other scrapbooks that document the history of North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812 as far back as 1940. These newest scrapbooks, ranging from 2019 to 2024, are the latest records of this well-documented organization. Be sure to take some time to browse through the North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812’s most recent scrapbooks, which are listed below!

More information about our partner, North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812, can be found on their website, linked here.

More scrapbooks can be found on North Carolina Society Daughters of 1812’s contributor page, linked here.


Wendell Historical Society Brings New Yearbooks to DigitalNC

With the help of our partner Wendell Historical Society, we are excited to announce that three new yearbooks from Wendell, N.C. are now available on DigitalNC. These newest additions include yearbooks from Vaiden Whitley High School (Wendell, N.C.) and Wendell High School (Wendell, N.C.). These latest yearbooks are detailed below:

More information about our partner, Wendell Historical Society, can be found on their website, linked here.

To view more materials from Wendell Historical Society, visit their contributor page linked here.


Lillington’s Tea and Topics Book Club Dazzles in Club Scrapbooks

With the help of our partners at Harnett County Public Library we are excited to announce that 7 yearbooks and over 75 years of records from the Tea and Topics Book Club are now available on DigitalNC. 3 new years of Footprints, Lillington High School’s annual yearbook, are included in this latest batch. Furthermore, with the addition of 4 years of the Sand Spur, Benhaven High School is now represented in DigitalNC’s vast yearbook collection. The Lillington Tea and Topics Book Club was founded by a group of twelve women in December of 1932, and has become a longstanding organization in the community since. Apart from organizing monthly meetings to discuss books, genres, and literary themes, the Tea and Topics Book Club has also played an important role in supporting local public libraries through regular book donations and fundraising efforts. Across five scrapbooks, the history of the Tea and Topics Book Club unfolds through handmade annual yearbooks, correspondence, photographs, bylaws, and newspaper clippings.

The scrapbooks from the Tea and Topics Book Club now available on DigitalNC are:

More information about our partner, Harnett County Public Library, can be found on their website here

Materials from the Harnett County Public Library are featured in the Talbott McNeill Stewart Photograph Collection exhibit, which can be found here.

More materials, including yearbooks, newspapers, scrapbooks, and photographs can be found on Harnett County Public Library’s contributor page, which is linked here.


Hundreds of New Photographs Available in Latest Materials from Lee County Libraries’ Sanford Herald Photographic Print Collection

We are excited to announce that a new batch of photographs from Lee County Libraries’ The Sanford Herald Photographic Print Collection, along with four pre-1925 issues of newspapers, are now available on DigitalNC.

In November 2023, The Sanford Herald (1930-present) donated thousands of images, spanning from the 1930s to the 2000s, to our partner Lee County Libraries. This latest batch of 346 images joins a growing collection of photographs taken by The Sanford Herald (Sanford, N.C.) that are now accessible online through DigitalNC. The new photographs span from January 1950 to December 1952 and provide a visual history of Lee County during the early 1950s. The entire collection of new photographs can be found here, while select images can be previewed below!

The four newspaper issues from this batch are: The Advertiser (Raleigh, N.C.) – July 15, 1893; The Democrat (Rutherfordton, N.C.) – March 6, 1896; The Sanford Express (Sanford, N.C.) – June 23, 1898; The Carolina Banner (Sanford, N.C.) – August 22, 1922.

Visitors can browse even more photographs documenting Lee County’s history, here.

More information about our partner, Lee County Libraries, can be found on their website here

Information about Lee County Libraries Local History and Genealogy Room can be found here.

More materials, including yearbooks, directories, maps, and a newspaper title, can be found on Lee County Libraries’ contributor page, which is linked here.


New Issues of Seven Newspapers Now Available in Latest Batch from Granville County Public Library

With the help of our partners at Granville County Public Library, we are pleased to announce that new issues from seven different newspaper titles are now available on DigitalNC. This batch of newspapers includes local newspapers, like The Granville Enterprise (Granville, N.C.), school newspapers like The Deaf Carolinian (Morganton, N.C.), and speciality publications like the North Carolina White Ribbon (Greensboro, N.C.) which was published by the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. Also in this latest batch is a newspaper that is brand new to DigitalNC, the Littleton High School Student Newspaper, which was published under the title The School Visitor (Littleton, N.C.). Be sure to check out these latest additions from Granville County Public Library, which are detailed and linked below!

These newspapers, along with 11 other newspaper titles contributed by Granville County Public Library, can be found here.

More information about our partner, Granville County Public Library, can be found on their website, linked here.

More materials, including yearbooks, scrapbooks, maps, and ledgers can be found on Granville County Public Library’s contributor page, linked here.


Scrapbooks Detail Wake Forest University History

With the help of our partner, Wake Forest University, we are excited to announce five new scrapbooks have made their way to DigitalNC! Spanning from July 1951 to August 1959, these scrapbooks chronicle Wake Forest University’s move from Wake Forest to Winston-Salem. Wake Forest College, as it was known at the time, was founded in Wake Forest, a town northeast of Raleigh, in the early 19th century. After operating in the area for over a century, the college moved to Winston-Salem following a donation of land and funding from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation. The construction of Wake Forest College’s new home began in 1952 and the school officially moved to its new campus in Winston-Salem in 1956. The college assumed its current name, Wake Forest University, in 1967.

These five latest scrapbooks from Wake Forest University are filled with newspaper clippings related that cover student life, campus issues, and the move to Winston-Salem. Some highlights include pictures of campus construction and coverage of President Truman’s appearance at the groundbreaking ceremony for the new campus.

More information about our partner, Wake Forest University, can be found on their website here

Information about Wake Forest University’s Z. Smith Reynolds Library can be found here. Z. Smith Reynolds Library’s Digital Collection can be viewed here.

More materials including yearbooks, magazines, catalogs, and 20 newspaper titles, can be found on Wake Forest University’s contributor page, which is linked here.


The Ocracoke Observer Makes A Splash Debut On DigitalNC

Ocracoke Observer title design

Thanks to the owners and publishers, we are excited to announce that the Ocracoke Observer (Ocracoke, N.C.) is now available on DigitalNC! This latest addition includes 154 issues, spanning from May 1999 to May 2025. The island newspaper is published monthly from March to December, and covers news about Ocracoke Island and its residents. Featured below is an example of the exciting stories that can be found in the Ocracoke Observer, but DigitalNC visitors should be sure to check out more issues, linked here, to discover more stories making waves across the island.

To search through all available issues of the Ocracoke Observer (Ocracoke, N.C.), click here.

Information about the Ocracoke Observer (Ocracoke, N.C.) can be found on their website here.


Student Writing and Dorm Room Decorating Featured in the Latest Materials From William Peace University

With the help of our partners at William Peace University, we are excited to announce the addition of new literary magazines from William Peace University and early 20th century photographs taken at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The four latest literary magazines, Prism [2018], Prism [2019], Prism [2022], and Prism [2025], join 97 additional literary magazines that were already on DigitalNC. For over a 100 years of student art and literature, be sure to check out William Peace University’s literary magazine collection available on DigitalNC.

This newest batch also includes some old images of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Taken just 30 miles up the road from William Peace University, these five photographs show the campus environment of William Peace University’s collegiate neighbor. In addition to pictures of still-standing campus buildings like the South Building, this latest batch also includes pictures of bygone structures, like Swain Memorial Hall, which was the predecessor of present-day Memorial Hall. Perhaps most interesting of these pictures are two from around 1903 that show dorm interiors at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In one, a close up of a dormitory mantle shows dozens of pictures fastened to the wall and stacked on top of each other above a mantle. In another, the sitting area of a student’s dorm room is decorated with pictures and flags across the walls and door. Above the array of portraits adhered to the door is a small horizontal sign that reads “Pretty Girls Wanted!!”

More information about our partner, William Peace University, can be found on their website here

More materials including over 100 years of the campus yearbook The Lotus can be found on William Peace University’s contributor page, which is linked here.


A New Partner, the Mary Potter Alumni Club, and New Yearbooks Hit DigitalNC in Our Latest Records!

With the help of our brand new partner, Mary Potter Alumni Club, we are excited to announce the addition of six yearbooks to DigitalNC. These yearbooks join the company of several other yearbook issues and one periodical from Mary Potter High School (Oxford, N.C.), a historic African American school in Granville County.

Built in 1889, Granville County’s first African American school was established with George Clayton Shaw, an educator and son of formerly enslaved parents who were staunch advocates of education hired as the school’s first principal. Originally referred to as Timothy Darling, the school was renamed Mary Potter Academy shortly after its opening in honor of its primary benefactor, Mary Potter. For decades Mary Potter Academy operated as a private school before becoming public and changing its name to Mary Potter High School in the 1950s. The school was eventually turned into an integrated middle school that served Oxford students well into the 21st century.

DigitalNC visitors can now browse the following years of The Ram:

These yearbooks and more can be viewed in DigitalNC’s exhibit North Carolina African American High Schools, which is linked here.

More information about our partner, Mary Potter Alumni Club, can be found on their Facebook page, linked here

Materials from Mary Potter Alumni Club can also be browsed through their contributor page, linked here.

Information about Mary Potter High School is from the NCDNCR’s Mary Pottery Academy highway marker page, linked here.


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This blog is maintained by the staff of the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center and features the latest news and highlights from the collections at DigitalNC, an online library of primary sources from organizations across North Carolina.

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