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Wayne County, North Carolina: Articles
You Could Be Living in King
County
Reprinted with permission of the
Mt. Olive Tribune and cannot be
reproduced without permission.
You
Could Be Living in King County
"Our Heritage"
April 7, 1989
By Claude Moore
(Editor's note: Oscar Bizzell of Newton Grove is a guest
columnist this week. Bizzell, a local historian,
is editor of the Huckleberry Historian. The
following article recently appeared in the Sampson
County Review.)
If the Civil War had occurred
a few years later, or not at all, the people in
north Sampson, south Johnston, east Wayne & east
Duplin would have been living in King County.
Newton Grove might have been the county seat.
This would have been done in honor of Vice President
William R. (Rufus) King, a native of the Newton
Grove area.
King was born April 7, 1786, &
reared on a plantation near the south bank of
Craddock Swamp, along what is now SR 1711 at its
junction with SR 1713. A part of the old home
still stands southeast of Newton Grove.
Although King County, NC was never established, the
state of Washington did establish a King County,
the home of Seattle. That county honors Mr. King.
As a lad, William R. King attended Grove
Academy, Kenansville & Donaldson Military
Academy, Fayetteville.
In 1799, he entered
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, &
graduated in 1803. Then he went to Fayetteville to
read law under the tuition of William Duffy.
Settling in Clinton, NC, King was admitted to
the bar in 1806 at the early age of 20, and
quickly won a wide popularity in Sampson County.
He was elected to the NC House of Commons in
1808, and again in 1809, & to the US Congress in
1818 where he served until 1816.
King
resigned from Congress in November 1816 to accept
the post of Secretary of Legation to Russia. In
1820 he returned to the practice of law in
Clinton, but shortly thereafter emigrated to Cahaba,
Alabama. Upon the admission of Alabama as a
state, King was elected to the US Senate & was
re-elected three times.
In 1844, King was
appointed Minister to France. In 1848, he was
elected again to the US Senate to represent
Alabama, but resigned January 18, 1853 to run for
Vice President on the Democratic ticket with
Franklin Pierce. They were elected.
But
King was sick with tuberculosis contracted during
his service in Europe. His doctor sent him to
Havana, Cuba for his health & he took the oath of
office there on March 4, 1853. He hurried home only
to die soon after his arrival at his plantation
on April 18, 1853.
In later years he was
honored by Sampson County with a monument at the
north entrance to the Sampson County Courthouse.
Moreover, a state historical marker stands south
of Newton Grove at Monk's Cross Roads, along US
701.
Five years after the death of Vice
President King, a bill was introduced in the NC
Senate to create a county called King, to include
the old King Plantation. In 1758, Dr. J.T. Leach,
NC Senator from Johnston County, introduced
Senate Bill 90 to establish a new county by the name
of King. The bill read as follows: Be it enacted
by the General Assembly of the State of North
Carolina & it is hereby enacted by authority of the
same. That a new county be and the same is hereby
laid off & established, to be composed of parts
of Sampson, Johnston, Duplin & Wayne counties,
bounded as follows:
Beginning at the Bunn
Ford on Mingo Creek in the county of Johnston,
thence to the nearest point on Stone Creek,
thence down the meanders of said creek to the
road leading from William Peacock's to Smithfield,
thence crossing this said creek north, striking
the ridge dividing said Mingo Creek & Hannah
Creek, the said ridge crossing the Smithfield road
from George Snead's at the cross path beyond
Antiock Church. Thence a direct line to Hannah
Creek bridge near Major Nathan Williams, thence with
said Hannah Creek to Mill Creek, to the Neuse
River, thence to Graham's Store, thence to the
Cross Roads, thence to the corner of Sampson, Wayne
& Duplin counties, thence the Duplin line to
Young's Swamp, thence up said swamp to the Darden
place, thence to James Andrews', thence to Benjamin
Bowdens', thence to Harrison's Store, thence to
Jackson & Boys Store, thence to the junction of
Mingo and Black River, thence up the said stream to
the beginning.
And said county of King is
hereby invested with all the rights and
privileges and investitures of the other counties of
this state, Signed: J.T. Leach, Johnston.
The bill was introduced in the Senate on December
14, 1858, read the first time, passed, and
referred with recommendations to committee.
No record was found that the bill was ever brought
up again. Soon thereafter, the state became
concerned with national issues that lead to the
War Between the States in 1861.
However,
William R. King was instrumental in creating the
state of Washington, and they named a county for
him. Moreover, the huge King dome sports arena,
with frequent national television coverage, honors
the memory of William R. King of Sampson County,
NC.
With the NCAA basketball championship
games to be played in the King Dome on April 1-3,
Sampsonians should be reminded of their most famous
& accomplished native son, William Rufus DeVanne
King.
Contributed by Guy Potts of Raleigh, NC
August 2000
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