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Historic
Information
Person County, as we know it today, was first
part of Edgecombe County in 1746; part of Granville
County from 1746-1752; included in Orange County
until 1778, and even part of Caswell County until
1791/1792. By dividing Caswell County into two
squareseach side measuring approximately
twenty (20) miles in length, two counties of 400square
miles were formed.
The county was named for General
Thomas Person, a Revolutionary War Patriot, who
made significant contributions to Person County
and surrounding areas. He was a trustee of the University
of North Carolina, donating large sums of money
to the institution and being recognized by the
construction of Person Hall.
Person County was a wellestablished
plantation center before the Civil War. Crops
included tobacco, cotton, corn, wheat, oats, fruits,
vegetables, cattle, hogs and sheepmany of
the same crops grown here today.
During the Civil War, Person
County supplied 800 to 1000 soldiers to the Confederate
cause. A granite monument on the Person County
Courthouse lawn honors E. Fletcher Satterfield,
who advanced the Confederate flag at Gettysburg.
After the war, the area's large plantations were
divided into many small farms.
J. A. Long, W.W. Kitchin, A.R.
Foushee, J.S. Bradsher, J.C. Pass, W.F. Reade,
and R.E. Long were key leaders who helped make
a transition to a more diversified economic base
after the Civil War. The Norfolk and Western Railroad
Company was a major influence around 1890, facilitating
the addition of tobacco processing plants and
warehouses. Although the processing plants disappeared
many years ago, a few of the warehouses still
stand.
J. A. Long established Peoples
Bank in 1891 and the Roxboro Cotton Mills in 1899,
later known as Tultex Yarns. Long died in 1915
but was succeeded by his son, J. A. Long, Jr.,
who began attracting new business to Roxboro.
Baker Company opened here in 1923, making textiles
a major contributor to the local economy. Baker
was merged with Collins and Aikman Corporation
(C&A), becoming a major industry in Person
County.
Lake Hyco and Lake Mayo became
major forces in the economic equation here. Person
County contains parts of three major river basins:
the Neuse, the Roanoke and the Tar, providing
essential clean drinking water to the south and
east of the state. Rivers coursing over this scenic
plateau and forming numerous valleys include the
Tar, Little, Flat, Mayo and Hyco. The area's ridges
are not narrow and sharp like those in much of
the Piedmont, and the gullies and ditches are
not as abrupt. The land gathers into strong swells,
small enough to represent the flat plateaus of
the Piedmont yet intersecting with wide meadows.
Person County claims two small mountainsMt.
Tirzah and Hagars Mountain.
Roxboro is the only incorporated
municipality in the county although there nine
townships, many with community centers or postal
offices. The Town or Roxboro was chartered Jan.
9, 1855. An annexation in 1998 brought the town's
population to 8000 and the county's latest census
registers 33,000.
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