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Even before what is now
Martin County was first visited by English explorers, it
was inhabited by Native Americans who were adept at
satisfying their needs from the richly supplied forests
and streams.
In 1774, Martin County
was formed from Tyrrell and Halifax Counties in the
midst of one of the most turbulent periods of American
history. It was less than three years after the Battle
of Alamance near Hillsborough, between the "Regulators"
and North Carolina militia called up by Royalist
Governor Tryon - generally considered one of the first
skirmishes of the American Revolution -and only a few
months before the first meeting of the North Carolina
Provincial Congress independent of royal authority in
August, 1774.
Attempts to establish a
new county for the territory which eventually became
Martin had been launched more than four years
previously. Residents of the area had been experiencing
some difficulty and considerable expense in attending to
their affairs at the seats of government for the two
counties in which they were then living.
William Slade, a
representative from the section in the Colonial House of
Commons, made several efforts to have the new county
created from upper Tyrrell and lower Halifax and
co-sponsored a number of bills to that effect during
1769, 1770 and 1771. He succeeded in getting the bills
passed by the lower chamber several times, but they
evidently failed to secure approval of the governor or
council, as none of them ever became law while he was in
the General Assembly.
Some of this
information was excerpted from the "Martin County
History, Volume l", which may be purchased at the Martin
County Travel and Tourism Office. |