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- Alice Aycock Poe Center for Health Education
- "Specializes in developing programs for youth to address health concerns like childhood obesity, physical inactivity, unhealthy food choices, tooth decay, drug and alcohol abuse, unintentional injuries, and teen pregnancy."
- Format: article/field trip opportunity
- Antebellum North Carolina
- Primary sources and readings explore North Carolina in the antebellum period (1830–1860). Topics include slavery, daily life, agriculture, industry, technology, and the arts, as well as the events leading to secession and civil war.
- Format: book (multiple pages)
- Barning the tobacco

- Two men "barning" tobacco, packing it for storage in a barn.
- Format: image/photograph
- Bonsack cigarette rolling machine

- Format: image/photograph
- The Bonsack machine and labor unrest
- In North Carolina in the New South, page 3.7
- When the Duke tobacco company adopted the Bonsack machine for rolling cigarettes, workers who had rolled cigarettes by hand were thrown out of work, and their replacements made less money.
- Format: article
- Border Belt Farmers Museum
- Not only will students learn about the history of tobacco farming, they will discover other important industries to this southern North Carolina county.
- Format: article/field trip opportunity
- Bright leaf tobacco
- In Antebellum North Carolina, page 2.10
- Tobacco had always been a major crop in North Carolina, but not until the accidental development of the “bright leaf” variety in 1839 did the market for the product really start booming.
- Format: article
- Bright leaf tobacco

- Bright leaf tobacco grows on a farm in North Carolina's Piedmont. Pilot Mountain stands in the background to the right.
- Format: image/photograph
- Child labor in North Carolina's textile mills
- The photographs of Lewis Hine show the lives and work of children in North Carolina's textile mill villages in the first decades of the twentieth century.
- Format: slideshow (multiple pages)
- Colonial North Carolina
- Colonial North Carolina from the establishment of the Carolina in 1663 to the eve of the American Revolution in 1763. Compares the original vision for the colony with the way it actually developed. Covers the people who settled North Carolina; the growth of institutions, trade, and slavery; the impact of colonization on American Indians; and significant events such as Culpeper's Rebellion, the Tuscarora War, and the French and Indian Wars.
- Format: book (multiple pages)
- Comparing and contrasting colonial rice and tobacco agriculture
- This graphic organizer will help students understand the processes of growing rice and tobacco in colonial North Carolina after reading two related articles from the North Carolina digital history textbook — "The...
- Format: document/worksheet
- Duke Homestead and Tobacco Museum
- Visit Duke Homestead or take an online tour, which not only features the history of the Duke family, their tobacco endeavors, and their homestead, but also contains a collection of original cigarette commercials and a movie of the tobacco bagging process.
- Format: article/field trip opportunity
- The Dukes of Durham
- In North Carolina in the New South, page 2.7
- After the Civil War, Orange County farmer Washington Duke put everything he had into growing tobacco. From farming he quickly expanded into manufacturing, and by the end of the nineteenth century, his son controlled the largest tobacco industry in the world.
- Format: article
- Excavating Occaneechi Town: An archaeology primer
- Republished with permission from the Research Laboratories of Archaeology, the Archaeology Primer uses photographs of the excavations at Occaneechi Town to introduce fundamental concepts of archaeology. The primer provides an introduction to the methods of archaeology and to some common types of artifacts, and prepares students to participate in an electronic archaeological dig.
- Format: slideshow (multiple pages)
- Factory at Duke Homestead

- Second tobacco factory at Duke Homestead.
- Format: image/photograph
- A faded advertisement on a barn in Greene County, North Carolina

- This is a faded advertisement on a tobacco barn in Greene County, North Carolina.
- Format: image/photograph
- The founding of Virginia
- In Colonial North Carolina, page 1.1
- In North Carolina History: A Sampler, page 2.3
- England planted its first successful North American colony at Jamestown in 1607, but settlers fought Indians and disease, and the colony grew slowly. By the end of the seventeenth century, Virginia had established tobacco as its main crop, a representative government, and slavery as a dominant system of labor.
- Format: article
- By L. Maren Wood.
- General statement of Sherlock Bronson
- In Tobacco bag stringing: Life and labor in the Depression, page 1.6
- Virginia-Carolina Service Corporation General Office 1413-15-17 East Franklin Street Richmond, Virginia April 13, 1939. Hon. Graham A. Barden, House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. Barden: Upon my return to Richmond after my interview with you...
- Granville County Historical Society Museum
- Learn about the rich heritage of Granville County through the exhibits at this museum in Oxford, North Carolina.
- Format: article/field trip opportunity
- The Great Depression and World War II
- Primary sources and readings explore the history of North Carolina and the United States during the Great Depression and World War II (1929–1945).
- Format: book (multiple pages)