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1 Carriker. Railroading in the Carolina Sandhills: Volume 1. 63.
2 Carriker. 105.
3 Carriker. 133-135.
[4] Legal History of the Southern Railway. 561-563.
i Sharpe and Pepper. Pages 121 thru 208 (churches), and pages 240 thru
241 (railroads).
ii Ibid. Pages 240-241.
iii Miller and Vaughn, 2.
iv Ibid, 2-5.
v ibid, 7-10.
vi Ibid, 15.
vii Not used.
viii XYZ. Page 25.
ix XYZ. Pages 135 and 152.
x XYZ. Page 142.
xi Burke. Page 362. Incidentally, in this excellent discussion of the
growth and development of the Southern Railway, exactly nothing is
mentioned specifically about Stanly County or Albemarle: Not the purchase
of the Yadkin Railroad, the traffic base in the county, or the effect of
the NS east-west route from Charlotte to Raleigh.
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Brown, Cecil K. A STATE MOVEMENT IN RAILROAD DEVELOPMENT. University of
North Carolina Press. 1928.
Davis, Burke. THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY: Road of the Innovators. University
of North Carolina Press. 1985.
Gilbert, John. CROSSTIES THROUGH CAROLINA. Helios Press. 1969. (Nothing
to do w/Stanly County, per se, but some great, very early photos and
lithos of historic railroad construction and locomotives in North
Carolina.)
Miller, Jeff and Vaughn, Jim. THE WINSTON-SALEM SOUTHBOUND RAILWAY.
Published by the authors (?). 1996. (This is a major update of the earlier
edition, with lots of new photos, including several color photos. If
possible, both editions belong in your reference library, as they are
truly excellent publications. This is the ultimate in how a book about a
specific railroad, or part of a larger one, should be written.)
Sharpe, Ivey L. and Pepper, Edgar F. III. STANLY COUNTY U.S.A. Media
Press, Inc. 1990.
Stanly County Public Library's "Heritage Room".
The vertical file has many clippings relating to railroad-related
topics, which include maps, photos, personal interest stories, and
historical background. There are also several relatively
obscure books dealing with railroad- related history in the
county. The library is on Main Street in the center of
Albemarle; its phone number is (704) 983-7343.
Xyz. This is the NS book, but I can't find it to credit it!
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