The Cape Fear region is never short on fascinating tales to tell, so this week we are launching a new recurring episode called the Cape Fear Classics.
Each season, we will produce one episode that shares three short stories from the area's history books. This week, we're starting out with the legendary ancient Dram Tree that welcomed mariners into Wilmington's harbor for centuries, the peculiar mystery of the Seneca Guns and the origin of Monkey Junction's namesake.
Cape Fear Unearthed is written, edited and hosted by Hunter Ingram.
Additional editing by Adam Fish. Recorded at WHQR in downtown Wilmington.
A StarNews Media Production. This season is sponsored by Northchase Family Dentistry.
Sources:
"Stories Old and New of the Cape Fear Region" by Louis T. Moore
"What is the Dram Tree?" by Ben Steelman, StarNews MyReporter
"Legend of the Dram Tree," by Paige Brown, Cape Fear Living Magazine
"Land of the Golden River," by Lewis Philip Hall
"Earthquake Booms, Seneca Guns, and Other Sounds," U.S. Geological Survey
Various articles, StarNews Archives
"Beginnings of familiar people and places," StarNews, April 2007
Enduring mystery: The fire that destroyed Hemenway Hall
Unearthing history, literally, with the Cape Fear Explorers
The once and future queens of the N.C. Azalea Festival
Wilmington's rock of ages: Remembering The Mad Monk
Goodbye, Farewell and Hello
U.S. Colored Troops and the Battle of Forks Road
Ellerbrock and Boss: Faithful Unto Death
Black Thursday: The Exodus of Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
The World's Largest Living Christmas Tree
Unearthing 1898, Part 3: The Aftermath
Unearthing 1898, Part 2: The Massacre
Unearthing 1898, Part 1: The Campaign
Legend and Liquor: The Haunting of Lula's Pub
A Murder Etched in Stone
Washington, Taft and Wilmington's Presidential Visits
One Night at Frying Pan Tower
A View of History from the Bellamy Mansion
The Crusade of Women's Suffrage in North Carolina
How Smithville Became Southport
The History Behind Wilmington's Confederate Statues
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