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The first
foreign settlers migrating into the area now known as
Aberdeen were Scottish Highlanders, fleeing their parent
country to the shores of North Carolina and eventually
up the Cape Fear River and its tributaries inland to the
Pine Barrens of Moore County. Early settlement was
often discouraged by the lack of forage for animals and
the poor soil conditions for farming, but the Scottish
community of Blue's Crossing was settled in the mid
1850's in the area of land from the "Head of the
Rockfish" to the "Devil's Gut", two bodies of water
making up the flow to Aberdeen Creek. Although the
land area was more than 10 square miles, only
approximately 300 people inhabited the densely wooded
acreage at the time of settlement.
These proud
Scottish people remained loyal to the British throne
during the Revolution, and were involved in many
skirmishes with other Moore County settlers who
supported the war. As the decade of the 1850's
concluded, success and the promise of future growth
seemed destined for the area. The tar, pitch and
turpentine (naval stores) industry prospered.
Transportation by the wooden, hand-laid Plank Road over
the sandy ridges carried the products to market.
However,
progress came to a halt as the Civil War began.
More than 1500 soldiers served in the Confederate Army,
fighting in most of the major battles. Over 500 were
killed in action or died of wounds, decimating the labor
supply. Following the war, most businesses and
industries were devastated. But the proud Scottish
heritage of the families would not be defeated, and
those soldiers returning to the area began establishing
new businesses.
Soon after the
Civil War, the Raleigh & August Air Line (now owned by
the CSX Transportation System) was completed through the
county and through the struggling community of Blue's
Crossing. In the 1870's the production of
turpentine, resin and tar from the pine trees, and the
cutting of the pine trees for the timber itself,
required better transportation facilities and a unity in
government.
In
1877, a
post office was established with Malcolm J. Blue serving
as postmaster. In 1881, Allison F. Page
established a rail line leading from the Raleigh &
Augusta north westerly from Blue's Crossing through the
magnificent forestlands that were being cleared by the
lumberjacks working for him. In 1888, the name of
Blue's Crossing was changed to Aberdeen, and the native
Scots living in the outlying areas began to centralize
into a closer knit community. In 1892, John Blue
built a rail line from the Raleigh & Augusta in Aberdeen
eastward reaching Fayetteville and the Cape Fear River,
making Aberdeen a central hub for industry and
manufacturing.
Allison F.
Page bought vast tracts of virgin pine forest from
Malcolm McMillian Blue for the timber. The same
land was later sold for $1 an acre, having been stripped
of its virgin pine trees. Mr. James W. Tutts, a
wealthy northern fountain manufacturer, made the
purchase in 1895, and began to design and build a resort
community that he called Tuttown, now known as
Pinehurst.
Prior to 1900,
the economy was shaped for years to come with
agriculture, industry, tourism and retirement.
During the twentieth century, the Sandhills experienced
prosperity, wars, depression and recessions.
Agriculture farming brought forth grain, fruit, cotton
and tobacco. The resort and retirement industries
grew. Today there is a healthy balance among these
major segments of the Sandhills economy, and planning
for the future will continue the balance and enhance the
quality of life in our community.
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