Online Encyclopedia

FAYUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 219 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FAYUM  , a mudiria (

province) of Upper
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Egypt, having an
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area of 490 sq. m. and a population (1907) of 441,583 . The capital, Medinet-el-Fayum, is 81 m . S.S.W. of Cairo by
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rail . The Fayum of
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Wilmington . Pop . (189o) 4222; (1900) 4670, including 2221 proper is an oasis in the Libyan
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Desert, its eastern border being negroes; (1910) 7045 . It is served by the
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Atlantic Coast
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Line about 15 M. west of the Nile . It is connected with that
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river railway and the short Raleigh &
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Southport railway, and by by the
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Bahr Yusuf, which reaches the oasis through a
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gap in steamboat lines to Wilmington . A scheme was set on
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foot for the improvement by canalization of the Cape Fear river above Wilmington under a Federal project of 1902, which provided for a channel 8 ft. deep at low
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water from Wilmington to
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Fayetteville . Below Wilmington the improvement of the river channel, 270 ft. wide and 16 ft. deep, was completed in 1889, and the project of 1889 provided for an increase in
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depth to 20 ft . Pine forests surround the
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town, and oaks and elms of more than a century's growth shade its streets . Fayetteville has two hospitals (each with a training school for nurses), and is the seat of a state coloured normal school and of the Donaldson military school .

Several creeks and the upper Cape Fear river furnish considerable water-

power, and in or near Fayetteville are manufactories of cotton goods,
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silk,
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lumber, wooden-
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ware, turpentine, carriages, wagons, ploughs, edge tools and
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flour . In the earlier
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half of the 19th century Fayetteville was a
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great inland market for the western
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part of the state, for eastern
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Tennessee and for south-western Virginia . There is a large vineyard in the vicinity;
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truck-gardening is an important industry in the surrounding country; and Fayetteville is a
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shipping centre for small fruits and vegetables, especially
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lettuce, melons and berries . The
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municipality owns its water-
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works and its electric-
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lighting plant . The vicinity was settled between 1729 and 1747 by Highlanders, the settlement called
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Cross Creek lying within the
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present limits of Fayetteville . In 1762, by an act of the assembly, a town was laid out including Cross Creek, and was named Campbelltown (or "
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Campbeltown "); but in 1784, when
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Lafayette visited the town, its name was changed in his honour to Fayetteville, though the name Cross Creek continued to be used locally for many years .
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Flora McDonald, the famous Scottish heroine, came to Campbell-town in
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April 1775 with her
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husband and children, and here she seems to have lived during the remainder of that
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year . The general assembly of the state met at Fayetteville in 1787, 1788 and 1789 (
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Newbern, Tarboro, Hillsboro and Fayetteville all being rivals at this time for the honour of becoming the permanent capital) ; and in 1789 the Federal constitution was here ratified for North Carolina . In 1831 most of the town was burned . At the outbreak of the
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Civil War, the state authorities seized the
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United States
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Arsenal at Fayetteville,. which contained 37,000 muskets and a
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complete equipment for a battery of
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light artillery . In March 1865 General W . T .

Sherman and his army took possession of the town, destroyed the arsenal, and did consider-able damage to
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property . Fayetteville was chartered as a city in 1893 . A serious flood occurred in August 1908 .

End of Article: FAYUM
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SIR JOSEPH FAYRER
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