Online Encyclopedia

WILMINGTON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 691 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILMINGTON  , a

city, a
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port of entry and the county-seat of New Hanover county, North Carolina, U.S.A., on the Cape Fear
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river, about 30 M. from its mouth, to m. in
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direct
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line from the ocean, and about 145 M . S.S.E. of Raleigh . Pop . (189o) 20,056; (1900) 20,976, of whom 10,407 were negroes and 467 were
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foreign-born; (1910 census) 25,748 . It is the largest city and the chief seaport of the state . Wilmington is served by the
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Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Air Line
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railways, and by steamboat lines to New York,
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Philadelphia and Baltimore and to ports on the Cape Fear and Black rivers, and is connected by an electric line with Wrightsville
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Beach, a pleasure resort 12 M. distant on the Atlantic Ocean . Below Wilmington the channel of the Cape Fear river is 20 ft. deep throughout and in some parts 22 and 24 ft. deep; the width of the channel is to be made 270 ft. under Federal projects on which, up to the 3oth of
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June 19o9, there had been expended $4,344,029 . Above Wilmington the Cape Fear river is navigable for boats
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drawing 2 ft. for 115 M. to
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Fayetteville . The city lies on an elevated sand ridge and extends along the river front for about 22 M . Among its prominent buildings are the
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United States Government
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Building, the United States marine hospital, the city and county hospital, the county court house, the city hall (which houses the public library) and the masonic temple . The city is the seat of Cape Fear Academy (1872) for boys, of the Academy of the Incarnation (
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Roman Catholic) and of the Gregory Normal School (for negroes) . The city is the see of a
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Protestant Episcopal bishop .

Wilmington is chiefly a commercial city, and

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ships large quantities of cotton,
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lumber,
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naval stores, rice, market-garden produce and turpentine; in 1909 the value of its exports was $23,310,070 and the value of its imports $1,282,724 . The
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total value of the factory product in 1905 was $3,155,458, of which $893,715 was the value of lumber and
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timber products . A settlement was established here in 173u and was named New Liverpool; about 1732 the name was changed to New
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Town; in 1739 the town was incorporated, was made the county-seat and was renamed, this time in honour of Spencer Compton,
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Earl of Wilmington (c . 1673-1743) . In 1760 it was incorporated as a borough and in 1866 was chartered as a city . Some of Wilmington's citizens were among the first to offer armed resistance to the carrying out of the Stamp Act, compelling the stamp-master to take an oath that he would distribute no stamps . During rnost of 1781 the borough was occupied by the
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British, and Lord Cornwallis had his ' headquarters here . Although blockaded by the Union
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fleet, Wilmington was during the
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Civil War the centre of an important intercourse between the Confederacy and foreign countries by means of blockade runners, and was the last important port open to the Confederates . It was defended by Fort Fisher, a heavy earthwork on the peninsula between the ocean and Cape Fear river, manned by 1400 men under Colonel William Lamb . A federal expedition of 150 vessels under
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Admiral D . D . Porter and
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land forces (about 3000) under General B .

F .

Butler approached the fort on the loth of December 1864; on the 24th the "
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Louisiana," loaded with 215 tons of powder, was exploded 400 yds. from the fort without doing any damage; on the 24th and 25th there was a terrific naval
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bombardment, which General Butler decided had not sufficiently injured 'the fort to make an assault by land possible; on the 13th and 14th of
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January there was another bombardment, and on the 15th a combined naval and land attack, in which General A . H . Terry, who had succeeded General Butler in command, stormed the fort with the help of the marines and sailors, and took 2000 prisoners and 169 guns . The Union losses were 266 killed, 57 missing and 1o18 wounded . A
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magazine
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explosion on the
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morning of the 16th killed about loo men in each army . The city was evacuated immediately afterwards .

End of Article: WILMINGTON
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