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table of contents
The Cape Fear River
Wilmington: The Port City
The 20th Century
Greater Wilmington Today
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Carolina Beach
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Kure Beach
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Fort Fisher
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Wrightsville Beach
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Figure Eight Island
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Masonboro Island
Pender and Onslow Counties
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Topsail Island
Brunswick County
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Southport
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Bald Head Island
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Oak Island
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)South Brunswick Islands
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Calabash
tocspace.gif (49 bytes)Shallotte
Area Chambers of Commerce
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spacer.gif (818 bytes)Greater Wilmington and the Cape Fear region from Topsail Island in the north to Sunset Beach and Calabash in the south are geographically, socially, culturally, economically and historically tied to the water. While the ocean gets top billing in terms of geographical attraction, it was the existence of a relatively narrow river that gave rise to successful European settlement. The Cape Fear River, a deep, often fast-moving body of water begins as a trickle near Greensboro, North Carolina, meanders through Fayetteville and empties into the Atlantic Ocean 30 miles south of downtown Wilmington.

 

 

 

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