About Greensboro
Greensboro History
Saura and Keyauwee Indians were the earliest inhabitants
of Piedmont North Carolina. The first settlers in the Greensboro
area were mostly Germans, Quakers of Welsh and English descent
and Scotch-Irish who came to the Piedmont from Norsthern colonies.
These pioneers worked the land and shaped the future for generations
to come. Permanent settlement began around 1740.
To thwart the invasion of North Carolina by 1,900
redcoats under Lord Cornwallis, American Major General Nathanael
Greene deployed 4,400 rebels in three battle lines at Guilford
Courthouse on March 15, 1781. Cornwallis held the field after
an intense, two-hour fight, but lost one-quarter of his army,
which hastened his eventual defeat at Yorktown seven months later.
In 1807, the residents of the area voted to create
a new, more centrally located seat of government. The following
year, elected officials mapped out a 42-acre tract of land, paid
$98 to purchase it and suggested that it be named Greensborough
after the patriot commander Nathanael Greene.
The new town prospered and it wasn’t
long before it became a center for educational and economic opportunities.
Greensboro was and continues to be a "chosen center."
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