HILLSBORO HISTORY. It would require a volume to do justice to the his tory centering about Hillsboro. Accordingly, this article comprises mere glances at it. For more than a century the citizens the old village' frequently dominated the policies of the State, were powerful in National councils, and even won international fame. The opinions of Chief Justice Thomas Ruffin are of internatiopal renown. A roll of th? citizens of Hillsboro who. have figured: prominently in §tate and Nation itself would be impressive, several of whom would each require an article as long as this can be to sef forth their services to the State and Nation, and to reveal their exalted characters. Hie. Geographical Setting. Orange County Jiao been whittled down till it is. only a mere slice of its original area. In its earlier history it embraced a great area in the northern cen tral section of . the State; Chatham and Alamance which we now eonceive to have been the scene of the Regulator activities were parts of Orange. The Battle of Alamance gets its .name from that of the Creek near which it was fought, as does the county. The Regulator trouble became a reason for the close trimming of the county’s size, Chatham, for instance, being cut off the very year of the Battle of the Ala mance. Orange was formed in 1751 from parts of Johnston, Granville, and Bladen. It was the first of the truly ; piedmont counties. It will intrigue the reader, to attempt to picture the virgin forests into which the settlers.of the first half;? of the loth century had penetrated to mate their homes. They had trekked from eastern North Caro lina and Virginia, leaving behind all means of water transportation and all touch with the old. country and the p-, or along the ha ime: ;af>l> gp^noFs? -This ^pas governor Burke,. a yeUEtgSjb* 5 of eiily 30 or 31 yedrs^ lCaptja^Od,, by David fanning,.; he was imprisoed in Wilmington, but escaped; an^.t' • contrary to an oath of parole he had. given, return* ed to Hillsboro and resumed the governorship. . ; Constitutional Convention of 1788 When the constitution of the* United States had ..been formulated it was offered to the states for rat* ideation. North Carolina’s convention to consider th© matter was held at Hillsborough in 1788. That convention declined to ratify till a bill of rights, in cluding religious freedom, should be inserted. Thus it was that North Carolina had no part in the first several months of the history of the United States— no part in the first election of ■George Washington as, president The convention held in Fayetteville later, given assurance of the requisite amendment of the constitution, did ratify. Rhode Island held out even longer. Through the act of that Hillsr borough convention, North Carolina set a precedent which it is still willing to follow. She canhot bo stampeded into secession, or other attitudes toward the constitution by the stampede of other states. No vember 7 last furnished the latest example of ,thls State’s determination to stand alone, if necessary, + for principle’s sake. Hillsborough, thus it is seen. played a considera ble role as capital of the State before Raleigh was even conceived, as did Halifax, New Bern, and Fay etteville. . • - •• • - : Hillsboro’s Worthies* If North Carolina should make a- roster of its worthies, as King David did of his^citisens, if not natives, of Hillsboro, would form no inconsiderable portion of. the whole list. William Hooper, one of North Carolina's three signers of the Declaration of Independence, lived there and wap clerk of the courts of several coun ties comprising the judicial district. Records in his : hand may be seen at Pittsboro, of which court he was the first clerk. Blooper was originally from New Hanover, and one of his sons seems to have remain ed down there, becoming the father of the youngster who married Edward Jdhes’ daughter, who in turn became the father of the second president of Wake Forest CoUege, who is the grandfather of Mry Graves, mother of Louis Graves of the Chapel Hitt Weekly* ' r, ri':r”^V --}?■ ■'w Here lived Governor Aimer -Nfshjrhere renuuned:! part of his descent to become useful and worthy (Continued on pace two£ ■ v*-J-: • .r