The area of modern-day Buncombe County and its environs was originally populated by the
Anigiduwagi, better known as the Cherokee people. Europeans, primarily of German, Scottish and English descent, began to live in Buncombe in the early 18th century. Some of the earliest permanent European settlers in Buncombe arrived in 1784. These European settlers frequently broke their treaties with the Cherokee, gradually dispelling them from their land in Buncombe County by force. In 1791, Colonel William Davidson and
David Vance petitioned the
North Carolina House of Commons to create a new county in the western part of the state from parts of
Burke and
Rutherford counties. The proposal named the county as "Union County". In January 1792, the proposed new county was officially created and named after
Edward Buncombe, a colonel in the
American Revolutionary War . Locals referred to this area as “the state of Buncombe” due to it being so large. The original county would be split into eleven counties total. The first meeting of the county government took place in April 1792 in Colonel Davidson's barn (located on the present-day
Biltmore Estate). In December 1792 and April 1793, the county seat of Buncombe came under dispute. Commissioner
John Dillard assisted with the resolution. The original documentation for the creation of Buncombe County proposed a committee of five persons to select the county seat. A dispute arose between two factions of Buncombe County residents on opposite sides of the
Swannanoa River, one faction pressing for the county seat to be north of Swannanoa, which is now the center of Asheville, and the other faction demanding it to be at a place south of Swannanoa River, which later became known as the "Steam Saw Mill Place", and is now the southern part of the city of Asheville. In December 1792, seven men met to select a courthouse location for the county. The desire was to have a courthouse closer to the community than Morganton, the closest place to record deeds at the time, due to the travel to Morganton being so laborious. The first courthouse was built at the present-day Pack Square site in Asheville. As the population of Buncombe County increased, parts of the county were reallocated to new counties. In 1808, the western part of Buncombe County became
Haywood County. In 1833, parts of Burke and Buncombe counties were combined to form
Yancey County. In 1838, the southern part of what was left of Buncombe County became
Henderson County. In 1851, parts of Buncombe and Yancey counties were combined to form
Madison County. Finally, in 1925 the Broad River township of
McDowell County was transferred to Buncombe County. That, in turn, is the
etymology of the verb
debunk. On June 16, 2020, Buncombe County Commissioners decided to remove several Confederate monuments including the
Vance Monument which is named after North Carolina governor
Zeb Vance, a slave owner who used convict labor to build the railroad to Western North Carolina. In September 2024,
Hurricane Helene caused catastrophic, record-breaking flooding throughout Buncombe County and
Western North Carolina. 47 deaths were recorded in Buncombe County as a result of the storm, the most of any county in the US. Prior to the storm, the county was classified by FEMA as being at low risk of deadly hurricanes. ==Geography==