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Early
Plantation Grants
An excerpt from the book, The Beginning and Development of Holden Beach
1756-2000, by John M. Holden.
After some early settlers were located by the Cape Fear River, others
came seeking lands along the Lockwood's Folly River and westward. Here
newcomers were applying for land patents and planning to purchase preferred
acreage. Following the Royal Governor's warrant for survey of a tract,
the applicant was notified to pay for the land within eighteen months.
Upon his payment of fifty shillings for each hundred acres, the warrantee
could then receive a permanent grant from the Royal Governor (Arthur Dobbs
1754-1765; William Tryon 1765-1771).
At this "going rate," Benjamin Holden in 1756 bought four tracts
of land for his mainland plantation. Also, he paid for and was granted
by Governor Dobbs the island between his plantation and the ocean. By
this purchase he acquired the 100-acre island extending from Lockwood's
Folly Inlet to Bacon Inlet for fifty shillings.
In Benjamin Holden's will of February 19, 1778, he bequeathed the eastern
half of "my beach" to his son Amos, and the western half to
his son James. By later transactions the whole island became the property
of another son, Job, from whom it passed to his son John and later to
grandson John, Junior. The lattermost owner made the initial efforts toward
developing a resort.
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