This content is from the North Carolina Gazetteer, edited by William S. Powell and Michael Hill. Copyright © 2010 by the University of North Carolina Press. Used by permission of the publisher. For personal use and not for further distribution. Please submit permission requests for other use directly to the publisher.

Some place names included in The North Carolina Gazetteer contain terms that are considered offensive.

"The North Carolina Gazetteer is a geographical dictionary in which an attempt has been made to list all of the geographic features of the state in one alphabet. It is current, and it is historical as well. Many features and places that no longer exist are included; many towns and counties for which plans were made but which never materialized are also included. Some names appearing on old maps may have been imaginary, but many of them also appear in this gazetteer.

Each entry is located according to the county in which it is found. I have not felt obliged to keep entries uniform. The altitude of a place, the date of incorporation of a city or town, may appear in the beginning of one entry and at the end of another. Some entries may appear more complete than others. I have included whatever information I could find. If there is no comment on the origin or meaning of a name, it is because the information was not available. In some cases, however, resort to an unabridged dictionary may suggest the meaning of many names."

--From The North Carolina Gazetteer, 1st edition, preface by William S. Powell

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Place Description
Honeycutt Mine

former gold mine on Little Buffalo Creek, NE Cabarrus County.

Honeycutts Township

central Sampson County.

Honolulu

community in N Craven County.

Hood Creek

rises in NE Brunswick County and flows N into Cape Fear River.

Hood Gap

E Haywood County at the NE end of Buck Cove.

Hood Swamp

community in E Wayne County near West Bear Creek. Formerly called Aaron for Aaron Parks (d. 1845), a local farmer and lay religious leader. Renamed for local Free Will Baptist church, of which Parks was a member. Name appeared in nineteenth-century records as Wood Swamp.

Hoods

or community in E Mecklenburg County. Morning Star Lutheran Church organized there in 1775.

Hoods Pond

E Wake County on Marks Creek.

Hoodsville

See Chesterfield.

Hoof Inn

an early nineteenth-century tavern in W Washington County located on what is now the Plymouth-Pinetown road approx. midway between Ausbon and Hinson.