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Johnston County, North
Carolina, (population
136,802 in 2002) has always been a market-driven
agricultural area. Located in the Piedmont Crescent
between Goldsboro and Charlotte, Johnston County
offers balmy summer evenings and a pleasant climate.
Four distinct seasons with very little snow and enough
sun year-round to enable a three-season growing
climate and golf all year.
The Civil War brought agony
and high tragedy to Johnston
County. Almost all of the
eligible men in the county's population fought in the
war, and a third of them died. Most who survived had
physical disabilities, and they returned to a county
that had been sacked, plundered and devastated in the
1865 wake of the Union Army. Johnston's first
townships: Bentonsville, Beulah, Boon Hill, Clayton,
Elevation, Ingrams, Meadow, O'Neals, Pleasant Grove, Selma,
Smithfield, and Wilders, were created in 1869
in an atmosphere of want and deprivation. By 1913,
with the creation of Wilson's
Mills, Cleveland,
Banner, Pine Level, and Micro townships, Johnston
County had ensured survival and was staking a claim on
prosperity.
History buffs will love Atkinson's Milling
Co., (240 years old and still operating), Alamance
Battleground, SELMA UNION DEPOT (originally built in
1924 - restored and operational), Bentonville
Battleground, and the Tobacco Farm Life Museum are
only a few of the Historic Properties in this area.
Visit the Johnston County Visitors Bureau website when
planning your trip here and do not miss the American
Music Jubilee.
Golfers enjoy the local pleasures of
Neuse Golf Club, Pine Hollow Golf
Club, and Riverwood
Golf Club, as well as the easy access to most of North
Carolina's championship golf courses.
Shoppers will be
amazed at the variety and quality of the Johnston
County merchants. From Carolina Premium Outlets, an
83-store outlet center, to North Carolina's furniture,
local crafts and food products, and Selma's
world-renowned uptown antique stores, there is
something for everyone here.
Johnston County is the
birthplace of Ava Gardner and the home of the Ava
Gardner Museum. Located in Smithfield, North Carolina,
this extensive collection of artifacts representing
Ava Gardner's life and career, was predominately
assembled by one man. In 1939, while enrolled in
secretarial school in Wilson, NC, Ava Gardner kissed
Tom Banks (age 12) on the cheek - beginning a
life-long devotion on the part of Mr. (later, Doctor)
Banks. Dr. Banks, with the aid of his wife, even
bought the house where Ava lived from age 2 to 13, for
his museum.
Dr. Banks suffered a stroke at the Ava
Gardner Museum in 1989 and died within days; Ms Garner
died five months later and was buried in Johnston
County in The Town of
Smithfield. Mrs. Banks donated
the collection to the Town of Smithfield. "Grabtown
Girl" is a book about Ava Gardner's childhood in
rural "Grabtown" (Smithfield) and Johnston
County.
Johnston County Schools and the
Johnston Community
College have excellent reputations, and Duke
University, and North Carolina State University in
Raleigh are within easy commuting distance. Job
Opportunities abound here. Nearby Research Triangle
Park is the largest planned research park in the
United States, and corporate giants in Johnston
County, such as Bayer, Andrew, Eaton and Caterpillar,
employ over 25,000 county residents.
Transportation is excellent with Johnston County's
excellent road system, Johnston County
Airport, and
Amtrak available.
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