Category Archives: In the News

Museum Shop Offers Special Father’s Day Gifts

Are you having trouble finding a different type of gift for that special dad for Father’s Day? Look no further than the colorful shelves of the Museum Shop at the N.C. Museum of History in downtown Raleigh.
 
A new addition to the gift selection this year is the travel book Homegrown Handmade: Art Roads and Farm [...]

‘Homegrown Handmade’ Launches

 New Guidebook Promotes
“Agri-Cultural Tourism”
Eclectic sites abound in Homegrown Handmade: Art Roads and Farm Trails, a new travel guide to authentic arts and agricultural experiences, unique places and people in North Carolina.  The 400-page book of 16 self-directed driving trails with ideas for affordable travel includes almost 1,300 sites in 76 North Carolina counties. 
 
The trails are [...]

Fossilized Whale Found in Lake Waccamaw

The remains of a fossilized whale, estimated to be 1 million years old have been found in Lake Waccamaw.
Follow the links below to read more about this interesting discovery.
Whale of a find in Lake Waccamaw 
Digging for prehistoric whale bones on Lake Waccamaw

Community Colleges, Symphony to Partner in Expanded Music Education Project

Congressman David Price Sponsors Successful Appropriation
The North Carolina Symphony has announced a major new initiative of its renowned statewide music education program in partnership with the North Carolina Community Colleges.
 David Chambless Worters, President & CEO of the Symphony, remarked, “Thanks to the good work of Congressman Price and the leadership of President Lancaster, the Symphony [...]

West Craven Middle School Wins N.C. History Bowl Championship

RALEIGH  - A hard-fought battle for the 2008 N.C. History Bowl championship came to a blazing finish late this afternoon with West Craven Middle School of New Bern winning the consistently tough competition against finalist McDougle Middle School of Chapel Hill.
Students from seven middle schools across the state (including two from the Craven County/New Bern [...]

Eighth Graders to Vie in 28th Annual N.C. History Bowl Finals

RALEIGH - “Who was North Carolina’s longest serving governor?”  “Name the two women pirates who served on the crew of Captain “Calico Jack” Rackham.”  “The bloodiest slave revolt in American history occurred along the Virginia-North Carolina border in 1831.  Who led this slave uprising?”   (Answers: Gabriel Johnston, Anne Bonny and Mary Read, and Nat Turner.)   [...]

Literary Pen-Pals

RALEIGH  — North Carolina students are talking back to authors.  As participants in the 2008 “Letters About Literature” contest, 1,483 middle and high school students communicated with an author about how reading the writer’s book has made a significant difference in the student’s life.  In an age of iPods and wii, these students find that [...]

History Day April 26

Students perform for History Day
RALEIGH – More than 250 middle and high school students will bring alive lessons from the past during a statewide history competition on Saturday, April 26, at the N.C. Museum of History in Raleigh. Competitors were identified in regional contests throughout the state.

New Web Site Tells Raleigh’s Early Story

The State Library of North Carolina and the North Carolina State Archives have unveiled the Web site, “From Crossroads to Capital: The Founding and Early History of Raleigh, NC.”  Through books, maps, manuscripts, and illustrations, the collection documents Raleigh’s founding in 1792 and takes viewers through the capital’s first 50 years.

N.C. Transportation Museum “Stars” in “Leatherheads” Flick

SPENCER - When rail fans and residents of Spencer and Salisbury flock to see the George Clooney movie “Leatherheads” opening today, they might keep their eyes peeled for glimpses of the N.C. Transportation Museum.  Known for evoking America’s bygone romance with trains, the site was used by Universal Pictures for the film.  Leatherheads’” final scene even features [...]