Results for Goldsboro
Battle of Goldsborough Bridge
December 17, 1862
Nearly 15,000 men clashed on the...
Battle of Goldsboro Bridge
End of Foster’s Raid
(Preface):
Late...
Alfred Goldsboro Mayor
Alfred Goldsboro Mayor, who studied the biology of many se...
Goldsboro
The west Sanford community of Goldsboro, at the turn of th...
Georgetown and Goldsboro
African Americans were first brought to the Sanford area b...
Confederate Line Crossing the Goldsboro Road
Directly in front and to your left, Confederate Maj. Gen. ...
Fighting South of the Goldsboro Road: The “Bull Pen”
You are looking south of the Goldsboro Road at the area wh...
Goldsborough House
Judge Laird Goldsborough lived here 1897-1970. As onetime ...
Site of Goldsborough House
Circa 1798
By that year, a 2-story brick house, meas...
Results for Goldsboro
Battle of Goldsborough Bridge
December 17, 1862
Nearly 15,000 men clashed on these fields December 17, 1862. At stake was the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad bridge which spanned the Neuse River here. Confederate troops, outnumbered five to one, fought bravely to defend the bridge, ...
Battle of Goldsboro Bridge
End of Foster’s Raid
(Preface):
Late in 1862. Union Gen. John G. Foster’s garrison was well entrenched in New Bern and made several incursions into the countryside. On December 11, Foster led a raid from New Bern to burn the ...
Alfred Goldsboro Mayor
Alfred Goldsboro Mayor, who studied the biology of many seas and here founded a laboratory for research for the Carnegie Institution directing it for XVIII years with conspicuous success, brilliant versatile courageous utterly forgetful of self. He was the beloved ...
Goldsboro
The west Sanford community of Goldsboro, at the turn of the 21st century, is home to more than 4,000 people, was the second Florida town incorporated by black citizens. William Clark opened a store in 1886 in the village of ...
Georgetown and Goldsboro
African Americans were first brought to the Sanford area by slave-holding families settling in the Fort Mellon area during the 1840s. Later in the nineteenth century, Henry Sanford welcomed black residents to his city when it was established in 1870 ...
Confederate Line Crossing the Goldsboro Road
Directly in front and to your left, Confederate Maj. Gen. Robert F. Hoke’s division, on loan from the Army of Northern Virginia, blocked the old Goldsboro Road (now Harper House Road) to deflect the oncoming Union advance. The division was ...
Fighting South of the Goldsboro Road: The “Bull Pen”
You are looking south of the Goldsboro Road at the area where Union Brig. Gen. James D. Morgan’s division began a defensive position facing Gen. Robert F. Hoke’s division after being deflected by the main Confederate line. These battle-hardened Union ...
Goldsborough House
Judge Laird Goldsborough lived here 1897-1970. As onetime Adjutant General of the Philippines he authored the Island's first constitution. Part of the house is of pre-revolutionary construction.
Among other members of this Caroline County family distinguished for public service: W. ...
Site of Goldsborough House
Circa 1798
By that year, a 2-story brick house, measuring 40 by 24 feet and described as “not yet fully complete,” was built on a 4-acre lot of “Chesterfield,” deeded in 1792 from Mary Nicholson to her daughter Henrietta. Henritta’s husband, ...