Oxford North
Carolina
Looking for a home in
the friendly town of Oxford NC.
OXFORD
is described as "one of the prettiest towns in all the
country, with wide and well shaded streets, large lawns
and elegant residences." Surrounded by vital, growing
industries housed in state-of-the-art facilities,
Oxford NC nevertheless retains the charm and
friendliness of its historic past. Central business and
residential districts are on the National Register of
Historic Places. Located atop the bustling Research
Triangle in the rolling piedmont of northern
Granville County, Oxford affords both easy access to
metropolitan amenities and a village atmosphere where
neighborly greetings and hometown service are the order
of the day.
Premiere Oxford NC
Real Estate Agents
Oxford NC is conveniently located just north of
the Research Triangle and immediately adjacent to
Interstate 85 at the intersection of US Highways 15 and
158 and NC 96.
Durham
is 25 miles to the southwest and
Raleigh
is 33 miles to the south.
The land known today as Granville
County was once the home of many Indian tribes,
dominated mainly by the Tuscarora. After the Tuscarora
War of 1711, settlers mostly from Virginia began to
populate this area, attracted by the abundant game,
well-watered wood, and rich land.
By 1746, the area had a population sufficiently large
enough to merit becoming an independent county,
separating itself from Edgecombe County's western
frontier. Since most of the land in the northern half of
North Carolina was part of the proprietary domain of
Lord John Carteret (by title known as the Earl of
Granville) the county was named Granville in his honor.
Over the years, Granville yielded areas to new counties
as settlements grew: Orange (1752), Bute (1764, which in
turn became Franklin and Warren in 1779), and Vance
(1881).
Samuel Benton was Granville County's representative to
the State Assembly in 1761, when he purchased 1000 acres
of land and built a plantation home known as "Oxford."
In 1764, the Assembly ordered that this area be known as
the county seat and Benton gave one acre of land where
the courthouse was to be built. Not until 1811 did the
Assembly authorize the county to buy 50 acres around the
courthouse from Thomas Littlejohn and began to lay out
the town, selling lots at public auction in 1812, and
incorporating the town in 1816.
Through the colonial and revolutionary periods, the
county was the home of a number of citizens of
considerable social influence in North Carolina. Most
notable was John Penn, a landowner in present day
Stovall, who was elected in 1775 to be a member of the
Continental Congress. He was one of North Carolina's
three signers of the Declaration of Independence.
By 1860, Granville County plantations and farms had some
of the state's best agriculturists, consistently growing
large crops of tobacco with the help of large slave
population. Oxford had become a sophisticated town and
was famous as a seat of learning by the creation of
several academies and colleges. Although Granville was
one of five counties with as many of 10,000 slaves,
there was also a sizable community of fee blacks
claiming dozens of craftsmen, especially masons who
helped build the grand homes of the more affluent
families.
With the outbreak of the Civil War, several militia
companies were formed, among them the "Granville Grays."
It is estimated that over 1,500 Granville County men
participated vigorously in many battles until the war's
end.
The fall of the plantation economy based on slavery did
not end Granville County's dependence on tobacco
profits. The discovery of Bright Tobacco, which is
cultivated in a sandy soil rather than rich clay soil
and is "flue-dried," provided a greater incentive to
cultivate the golden leaf. with the coming of railroads,
tobacco warehouses and factories were built. Smaller
farms with hired labor, renters, and sharecroppers
increased. New towns of Stovall, Stem, and Creedmoor
were created on these rail lines. Because the sand soil
found in the southern townships was best suited to grow
Bright Tobacco, the shift of the county's economic focus
turned southwards where farm laborers migrated.
Bright Tobacco brought business to Oxford. Businessmen
positioned themselves to take advantage of this new
industry and many merchants, lawyers, and doctors set up
shop in town. New schools, churches, literary societies,
and two orphanages were formed. By the late 19th
century, this thriving local economy resulted in a
beautiful brick commercial district which included as
many as three banks, general and hardware stores, an
opera house, various professional offices, and new types
of businesses.
Two world wars and the Depression brought many changes
to Granville County. Even with revenues from Bright
Tobacco, many Granvillians left the county for larger
cities with more opportunities. The establishment of
Camp Butner at the beginning of World War II engulfed
many of their homes and tobacco fields, but spawned what
is today a thriving community due to the various
hospital and prison facilities situated in the area.
Seeing the need for attracting new industries to the
county, several local business leaders formed
organizations in the 1950s and 1960s to accomplish this
task. By the 1980s, there were 38 major manufacturing
industries in the county, principally around Oxford and
Creedmoor. After more than two centuries, Granville
County no longer has a primarily agricultural economy.
Even though many changes have occurred since 1746, there
is a sense of tradition and place. A visitor once noted
that "the people of Granville County are tops" and in
1830, an advertisement noted "The village of Oxford, in
Granville County, present inducements, whether health,
comfort, or pleasure equal to any in the state. It is
decidedly the most beautiful village in North Carolina."
Granvillians believe these descriptions of one of the
oldest counties in one of the thirteen original states
to still be true.
Source:
Oxford
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