Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pamlico_River> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 73 of
73
with 100 triples per page.
- Pamlico_River abstract "The Pamlico /ˈpæmlɪkoʊ/ River is a tidal river that flows into Pamlico Sound, in North Carolina in the United States. It is formed by the confluence of the Tar River and Tranters Creek.The historic Tuscarora tribe, an Iroquoian-language group originally from western New York, had been well established in North Carolina, including along the Pamlico River, before European contact. The encroachment of settlers and their selling Tuscarora into slavery increased tensions between the groups. These led to the Tuscarora War (1711-1715), in which the Tuscarora led by Chief Hancock were defeated. Most Tuscarora migrated to New York, where they were sponsored by the Oneida and by 1722 were admitted to the Iroquois Confederacy as the Sixth Nation. Most of the survivors in North Carolina were removed to a reservation in Bertie County, North Carolina in 1718. Since European contact, they had lost much population due to lack of immunity to new infectious diseases, followed by the casualties of war. English, Irish, and Scottish settlers moved to the region from Virginia for larger tracts of cheaper land. A cluster of German and Swiss settlers also moved to the region from the southeastern settlement of New Bern, North Carolina. They established such towns as Washington and Bath. The latter was home and operating base for the pirate Blackbeard, who was finally pardoned by Governor Charles Eden. Most settlers engaged in tobacco farming in the Pamlico/Tar River basin, importing numerous enslaved Africans to work on the labor-intensive crop. For years the river corridor remained somewhat of a lawless backwater.The Pamlico River was a key strategic position during the American Civil War. The river is the site of the sunken Union battleship, the USS Picket. The U.S. Route 17 Bridge, which connects Washington, North Carolina with nearby Chocowinity, splits the river. That portion heading westward upstream is called the Tar River.".
- Pamlico_River thumbnail Pamlicorivermap.png?width=300.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageExternalLink boating.php.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageID "4496475".
- Pamlico_River wikiPageLength "4015".
- Pamlico_River wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- Pamlico_River wikiPageRevisionID "677696178".
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Africans.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink American_Civil_War.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Bertie_County,_North_Carolina.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Blackbeard.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Category:Rivers_of_North_Carolina.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tributaries_of_the_Pamlico_Sound.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Eden_(politician).
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Chocowinity,_North_Carolina.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Cultivation_of_tobacco.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink English_people.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Ethnic_groups_of_Africa.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Fish_kill.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Germans.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Infection.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Infectious_diseases.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Irish_people.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Iroquoian.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Iroquoian_languages.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink New_Bern,_North_Carolina.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Nitrogen.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink North_Carolina.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Pamlico_Sound.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Pfiesteria.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Phosphate.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Scottish_people.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Slavery.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Swiss.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Switzerland.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Tar_River.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Tidal_river.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Tobacco_farming.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Tuscarora_War.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Tuscarora_people.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Tuscarora_tribe.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink U.S._Route_17.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Virginia.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink Washington,_North_Carolina.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLink File:Pamlicorivermap.png.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pamlico River".
- Pamlico_River wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pamlico".
- Pamlico_River hasPhotoCollection Pamlico_River.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPAc-en.
- Pamlico_River wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Pamlico_River subject Category:Rivers_of_North_Carolina.
- Pamlico_River subject Category:Tributaries_of_the_Pamlico_Sound.
- Pamlico_River hypernym River.
- Pamlico_River point "35.318333333333335 -76.43277777777777".
- Pamlico_River type River.
- Pamlico_River type SpatialThing.
- Pamlico_River comment "The Pamlico /ˈpæmlɪkoʊ/ River is a tidal river that flows into Pamlico Sound, in North Carolina in the United States. It is formed by the confluence of the Tar River and Tranters Creek.The historic Tuscarora tribe, an Iroquoian-language group originally from western New York, had been well established in North Carolina, including along the Pamlico River, before European contact. The encroachment of settlers and their selling Tuscarora into slavery increased tensions between the groups.".
- Pamlico_River label "Pamlico River".
- Pamlico_River sameAs Памлико_(юханшыв).
- Pamlico_River sameAs Pamlico_River.
- Pamlico_River sameAs Pamlico.
- Pamlico_River sameAs Pamlico_(rivière).
- Pamlico_River sameAs m.0c5k6c.
- Pamlico_River sameAs Памлико_(река).
- Pamlico_River sameAs 4483904.
- Pamlico_River sameAs Q841766.
- Pamlico_River sameAs Q841766.
- Pamlico_River lat "35.318333333333335".
- Pamlico_River long "-76.43277777777777".
- Pamlico_River wasDerivedFrom Pamlico_River?oldid=677696178.
- Pamlico_River depiction Pamlicorivermap.png.
- Pamlico_River isPrimaryTopicOf Pamlico_River.