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    Cedarock Park

    4.7 (15 reviews)

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    Historic garage
    Natika G.

    We love a good hike! This park is more than a park. It's a place you can take the entire family. They have hiking trials, a water fall, a farm, lots of open space to have picnics, shelters and grills and so much more! It's a big park so dress comfortably and wear good shoes. There is plenty of parking and bathrooms. If you have a fishing license you can fish in the pond! We had a great time exploring the park. We didn't get to see all of it because it's so large, but we will definitely return!

    Cedarock Park Map
    Jnonymous N.

    Cedarock Park is a great place to have picnics, hike, walk, run, play sports, fish, have cookouts and host events. They even have an equestrian trail!

    Winter morning at Wellspring
    Lauren P.

    One of my favorite parks in the area. It has two full courses, one in the woods and one in the open. You can play them in a figure eight pretty easily. And if the day is nice I really suggest doing it. This is the oldest disc golf course in North Carolina. The whole park is beautiful i think it was left to the state after a landowner left it in a will. The caveat in the will was that the land had to be kept as a park. So that's cool. There are two parking lots and a pro shop. If you want to do the woods course go past the first two areas you want to pull over at and on to the third lot. Every once in awhile there'll be a hole that's difficult to find but mostly the course is identified really well. There are benches and a great hideout on the open course at hole 6. You could sit in this tiny hideaway for awhile without realizing it!

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    4 months ago

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    3 years ago

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    3 years ago

    Beautiful local park with plenty to offer: disc golf, trails, picnic areas, play grounds... ands it's just gorgeous!

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    5 years ago

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    11 years ago

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    Review Highlights - Cedarock Park

    They have hiking trials, a water fall, a farm, lots of open space to have picnics, shelters and grills and so much more!

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    Charlotte Hawkins Brown Memorial State Historic Site - Piano played by Ms. Brown and her family members 09/27/2023

    Charlotte Hawkins Brown Memorial State Historic Site

    3.5(2 reviews)
    11.4 mi

    I came across this museum by accident. I'm glad I did. It has a fascinating history: founded by a…read moreyoung woman, herself educated, who began the Palmer Institute in the early 1900s as a school for African American children. She not only served as its president for 30 years until her death, she also believed so strongly in what the school represented, she arranged housing, a dorm, in a local house she bought. There's much more to the story of how this became an accredited preparatory school but it's an extraordinary story that's worth discovering. If you're on the back roads between durham and charlotte, or want to be, this museum should be a must visit.

    The Charlotte Hawkins Brown Memorial is filled with rich history of a black woman who started a…read moreschool solely for blacks in order for them to receive equal education at the Palmer Memorial Institute. Unfortunately, you can tell that many of the points of interest and homes are in need of a refresh. You can only go into the Canary Cottage if you payed for the $2 guided tour. No other NC historic sites have done something like this, and we feel that you should still be able to go into ALL of the homes and points of interest if you are giving yourself a tour, because most do not purchase a guided tour. The staff were alright. Most were nice, but did not do a good job at explaining things. They kind of left us to figure it out for ourselves. Their kindness felt fake, especially the woman who rushed us out of the Canary Cottage even though no one told us that we couldn't go in it. That is unfortunate, but there is nothing we can do about it. Enjoy your time here, but be weary of the condition of the historic site and the staff.

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    Charlotte Hawkins Brown Memorial State Historic Site - Piano played by Ms. Brown and her family members 09/27/2023

    Piano played by Ms. Brown and her family members 09/27/2023

    Charlotte Hawkins Brown Memorial State Historic Site - Piano played by Ms. Brown and her family members 09/27/2023

    Piano played by Ms. Brown and her family members 09/27/2023

    Charlotte Hawkins Brown Memorial State Historic Site - Sheet music written by Ms. Charlotte Hawkins Brown 09/27/2023

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    Sheet music written by Ms. Charlotte Hawkins Brown 09/27/2023

    North Carolina Railroad - North Carolina Railroad Historical Marker, Burlington

    North Carolina Railroad

    3.0(1 review)
    7.0 mi

    Across from what is now the Burlington Amtrak station, this marker points out some of the earliest…read morehistory of trains in North Carolina. The marker is high on the post but in excellent condition. The marker reads, "Company Shops built here in 1857 for maintenance and repair of the North Carolina Railroad. Closed in 1866." Online, there is more information. "Progressive leaders of North Carolina led by former Governor John Motley Morehead organized the North Carolina Railroad in July 1850. The first rails were laid in Greensboro in 1851 and by 1856 the railway was open for traffic between Goldsboro and Charlotte, passing through many of the state's prominent piedmont towns along its 223 miles of track. The new railway opened a new era of transportation in the state and created new markets for goods and products throughout the region. The railway served as the backbone of future railroad growth and led to the expansion of towns along its corridor. "One town that grew out of the railroad boom was Company Shops, now Burlington. Soon after construction was complete on the new railway and trains began their east-west travels, officials realized that centralized repair and maintenance operations were needed. After some deliberation, they decided that the offices and shops should be placed along the railroad corridor in an area roughly at the center of the laid track, in Alamance, a rural county. The North Carolina Railroad Company contracted with local families to purchase almost 632 acres of land for repair shops, offices and railroad employee homes. The company intended to control the growth of their new town, called Company Shops, by owning all land associated with the track repair shops. Brick buildings were constructed to house repair operations including two repair shops, a carpentry shop and a blacksmith shop. Company Shops grew into a bustling town until the start of the Civil War and, during the war, the town was a hub of activity as North Carolina's railroads were vital to the Confederate war effort. At the end of the war the shops were targets of both retreating Confederates and advancing Union forces. "The railroad industry struggled through Reconstruction and slowly rebuilt its network to meet the growing needs of the state. Despite post-war financial troubles, the shops and the town that grew up around them and Company Shops flourished until the 1880's. In 1886, after changes in the management of the railroad industry, officials moved the maintenance and repair operations to Manchester, Virginia, effectively cutting off the town's major source of employment and local business (NOTE: the marker incorrectly indicates the year of the closure as 1866). Following the devastation of losing the shops to Virginia, the townspeople changed the name of the town to Burlington in 1887." This is marker number G-89 and it was erected in 1972 by the Office Of Archives And History. [Review 58 of 2025 - 4033 in North Carolina - 23626 overall]

    Cedarock Park - parks - Updated May 2026

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