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NC History

Presidential Past Creates Backdrop for 2012 Convention

From George Washington to Barack Obama, U.S. presidents have slept, studied and taken their first steps in North Carolina. They’ve vacationed here, played golf and visited must-see attractions. Depending on whom you believe, as many as four native sons have held the nation’s highest office.

As the state awaits a new moment in history with the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, political junkies of all persuasions can dig into our presidents’ pasts at places across North Carolina.

 

President James K. Polk State Historic Site (Credit: North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources)

President James K. Polk State Historic Site (Credit: North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources)

James K. Polk
Our 11th president was born on a 150-acre farm south of Charlotte in 1795. The oldest of 10 children, he lived there until 1806, when his family moved to Tennessee. Nine years later, Polk transferred from a Tennessee academy to the University of North Carolina, where he graduated with honors in 1818.

Sites to see

 

Andrew Johnson
In 1808, our 17th president was born in downtown Raleigh in a kitchen at Casso’s Inn, a bustling business where both of his parents worked. After apprenticing as a tailor, he traveled the South, returned to Raleigh, then moved with his family to Tennessee in 1826.

Sites to see

Johnson House

Johnson House

 

Andrew Jackson
About 30 miles south of Charlotte, a historic marker in Waxhaw places the birth of our seventh president “a few miles southwest of this spot” in 1767. That could land you in South Carolina, which is consistent with Jackson’s own account, but North Carolina has yet to give up its claim. In any case, Jackson studied law in Salisbury with prominent attorney Spruce Macay and was admitted to the Rowan County bar in 1787. He moved to Tennessee while it was still part of North Carolina.

“Three Presidents North Carolina Gave the Nation”

“Three Presidents North Carolina Gave the Nation”

Sites to see 

 

Woodrow Wilson
Our 28th president was the son of a minister who was pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Wilmington from 1874 to 1885. The future Nobel Peace Prize winner attended Davidson College, a top liberal arts college about 20 miles north of Charlotte, during the 1873-74 academic year. He withdrew because of illness and spent the next year convalescing at his family’s home in Wilmington. Future Congressman John D. Bellamy was among his local friends.

Sites to see

 

Abraham Lincoln
The official story places the birth of our 16th president in a log cabin in Kentucky. An alternate story suggests that Nancy Hanks gave birth to the future president in the North Carolina foothills of Bostic, about an hour’s drive from Charlotte.

Site to see

 

Educational experiences

Read more about presidential visits to North Carolina and the state's presidential namesakes.

added: May 21, 2012
updated: May 23, 2012

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