| Attracted
by the waterways and longleaf pine forests,
the first European and English settlers
arrived here in 1713 in what was originally
part of the colonial precincts of Carteret
and New Hanover. Onslow County was formed
in 1734 and was named for the Honorable
Arthur Onslow, Speaker of the British
House of Commons. After a lethal 1752
hurricane, the county courthouse was relocated
from Town Point to Wantland’s Ferry;
this settlement was eventually incorporated
in 1842 and named Jacksonville after President
Andrew Jackson. Largely a collection of
sparsely populated agrarian and maritime
communities, Onslow County dramatically
changed in the early 1940s with the establishment
of the Army’s Camp Davis near Holly
Ridge (now defunct), and the creation
of Camp Lejeune in 1941.
Onslow County’s flat, gently rolling
terrain covers 767 square miles and is
located in the southeastern coastal plain
of North Carolina, approximately 120 miles
east of Raleigh, and 50 miles north of
Wilmington. The city of Jacksonville is
the county seat, and the areas surrounding
the city constitute the major population
centers and growth areas in the county.
The county is home to more than 150,000
people and includes the incorporated towns
of Holly Ridge, Richlands, Swansboro,
North Topsail Beach, part of Surf City,
and unincorporated Sneads Ferry. Approximately
156,000 acres comprise the U.S. Marine
Corps Base, Camp Lejeune and more than
43,000 marines and sailors are stationed
there.
The structure of local government in
Onslow County was established in the late
19th century and consists of a five-member
Board of Commissioners, elected at large
for four-year terms. The Board establishes
policies and ordinances implemented by
the County Manager and his staff. Commissioners
are, Delma G. Collins, Chairman, Martin
Aragona Jr., Vice Chairman, Paul Buchanan,
Joseph R. McLaughlin and Lionell Midgett.
Onslow County offers the ultimate in
outdoor coastal recreation and sports
with over 30 miles of beautiful beaches,
rivers and ocean teeming with an abundance
of marine life, and forests filled with
diverse wildlife. The scenic 40 mile long
New River is the only large river in the
continental United States with headwaters
and mouth in the same county. Onslow County
also remains an important agricultural
force, its rich farmland still yielding
bountiful crops. Today the abundance and
beauty found in scenic terrain, shoreline,
and seascape continue to define Onslow
County, attracting industry, tourism,
and families to our distinctive community.
Area links
of interest
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