M-45 WILLIAM SHARPE 1742-1818 - Statesville, North Carolina
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member macleod1
N 35° 54.721 W 080° 57.138
17S E 504303 N 3974190
Another find along a country road while traveling this area this past weekend. This is located on 115 at SR 1903 (Snow Creek Road) northwest of Statesville.
Waymark Code: WM3Y23
Location: North Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 06/03/2008
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member drmellow
Views: 54

WILLIAM SHARPE 1742-1818
Member of Continental & provincial congresses; was first legislator to advocate U.N.C., 1784. Grave is 2 miles east.

William Sharpe was born in 1742 in Cecil County, Maryland, the son of Thomas, Jr. and Elizabeth Sharp. His parents and grandparents spelled their surname without the final “e.” Sharpe’s move to North Carolina is not documented; the first record of his presence is his admittance to the Mecklenburg County bar in 1763. He moved to western Rowan County, what is now Iredell County, in 1768.

Sharpe was appointed to the Rowan County Committee of Safety on 1774 and served as that group’s secretary for two years. His handwritten minutes survived in his family long enough to be published in John H. Wheeler’s Historical Sketches of North Carolina in 1851. They have since been lost. Sharpe represented Rowan County at the Second and Third and Fifth Provincial Congresses and at the Provincial Council of Safety. His service with the Council of Safety gave him the opportunity to accompany General Griffith Rutherford on his campaign against the Cherokee in September 1776. The following year Sharpe, Waightstill Avery, Robert Lanier, and Joseph Winston were appointed to negotiate a treaty with the Overhill Cherokee at the Long Island of Holston. By virtue of the treaty the Overhill Cherokee ceded tribal lands east of the BlueRidge Mountains and a corridor through the Watauga settlements to North Carolina.

William Sharpe was elected to serve as a North Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress in 1779, but resigned in 1981 calling the Congress a “house of bondage.” He was elected to the North Carolina House of Commons in 1782 and 1784. During the 1784 session, Sharpe introduced an unsuccessful bill to establish a state university. It was his last term of public office. Apparently his health was in decline, as he was unable to attend the laying of the cornerstone of the University of North Carolina in 1793. William Sharpe married Catherine Reese, daughter of Mecklenburg County justice David Reece, in 1768. The couple had twelve children. Sharpe died at his home north of Statesville July 6, 1818 and was buried in the Snow Creek Burying Ground.


Above information from:http://www.ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?ct=ddl&sp=search&k=Markers&sv=M-45%20-%20WILLIAM%20SHARPE%201742-1818
Marker Name: WILLIAM SHARPE 1742-1818

Marker Type: Roadside

Related Web Link: [Web Link]

Required Waymark Photo: yes

Local North Carolina markers without State Number Designation: Not listed

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NCDaywalker visited M-45 WILLIAM SHARPE 1742-1818 - Statesville, North Carolina 07/28/2018 NCDaywalker visited it
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