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Agenda 02-03-2026; 8-i - National Register Recommendation for Moorefields
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Agenda 02-03-2026; 8-i - National Register Recommendation for Moorefields
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8-i
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Agenda for February 3, 2026 BOCC Meeting
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30 <br /> United States Department of the Interior <br /> National Park Service/National Register of Historic Places Registration Form <br /> NPS Form 10-900 OMB Control No.1024-0018 <br /> Moorefields (Additional Documentation) Orange County, N.C. <br /> Name of Property County and State <br /> such a plantation would be eligible as a summer residence. It contains 206 acres of tillable <br /> land tolerably good and well watered, about three quarters of a mile from Pittsborough. There <br /> is a snug log-cabin in which he now lives, with a small dairy, kitchen, stable and corn-crib; <br /> also a new framed house, only shingled and weather-boarded, about 31 feet by 21, ten feet <br /> pitch. Very good springs convenient.48 <br /> Hillsborough was not merely a summer resort, however. By 1800,the inhabitants of Hillsborough <br /> had grown modestly to 474 persons,but among them were men of property and prestige, including <br /> Moore, who had been elevated to the state's Supreme Court by 1798 and then appointed an <br /> Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court in 1800.49 This coterie of privilege, however, belied <br /> the general condition of the backcountry in the early 19th century, which was one of economic <br /> stagnation and perpetuation of the status quo. <br /> The Eastern section of the State with a concentration of large planters was satisfied with <br /> their situation.The planters,who dominated the legislature,preferred to keep things as they <br /> were and generally opposed making changes and investing heavily in new ideas and <br /> technology. ...Without the introduction of new farming methods to renew soils' fertility, <br /> the soil of the Piedmont was eroding and becoming less and less productive with time. The <br /> lack of reliable transportation also encouraged retention of the Piedmont farmer's <br /> conservative way of life. The rivers were too shallow and the roads too undependable to <br /> provide a guaranteed way to get extra produce to market, and so subsistence farming was <br /> rather entrenched." <br /> In the early 19th century, the majority of Orange County landholders were subsistence farmers <br /> cultivating corn, wheat, oats, peas, and potatoes alongside cattle, pigs, and sheep for their own <br /> families' consumption. Landholdings were small on average (less than 500 acres) in Orange <br /> County in 1790, and only 5% of Orange County landowners between 1752 and 1800 owned more <br /> than 1,000 acres. Moore, as a Senator representing Brunswick County with a rice plantation in the <br /> lower Cape Fear region and over 1,200 acres in Orange County, was an eastern elite. Moore, <br /> presumably,would have been considered the creme de la creme of Hillsborough society and likely <br /> out-of-step with the majority of poorer, yeoman farmers who populated the backcountry during <br /> the Federal period.sl <br /> From Summer Retreat to Family Home under Alfred Moore, Jr. (1810-1837) <br /> That Moorefields was only a seasonal, second home during Moore's lifetime is evidenced by his <br /> being enumerated only in Brunswick County in the 1790 and 1800 federal censuses as well as his <br /> wish to be buried in Saint Philip's Episcopal Church cemetery in Brunswick County. Moore's <br /> second son, Alfred Moore, Jr., inherited both Buchoi and Moorefields upon his father's death in <br /> October 1810. For the first decade of Moore, Jr's ownership, Moorefields was still used as a <br /> seasonal home for him and his family.52 This is perhaps best evidenced by family correspondence <br /> and the obituary of Rebecca C. Moore, who died of a pulmonary complaint while traveling from <br /> Wilmington to Hillsborough in late May of 1816.53 <br /> Section 8 page 28 <br />
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