Before European settlement, the
Occaneechi Indians lived in the area of what is now
Hillsborough, north of Carrboro. As part of North Carolina's
piedmont region, European settlement in the area likely did not begin until at least the 1730s. The history of Carrboro is similar to the history of many mill towns in North Carolina and largely parallels the histories of the
State University Railroad and the
Alberta Cotton Mill. Located just west of Chapel Hill, Carrboro was originally known as
West End. It was settled in 1882 near the terminus "in a vacant field" of the
State University Railroad spur from University Station in
Glenn, North Carolina. (State law required that the railway be at least from the university campus "to guard against possible damage to student morals and habits of study," or as it was more cynically put, "to discourage students from leaving on the weekends and spending their money elsewhere.) Settlement in West End increased after 1898 when
Thomas F. Lloyd of Chapel Hill built a steam-powered grist mill near the depot. This would become the
Alberta Cotton Mill, and in 1900 the town briefly called itself
Lloydville in his honor. Durham businessman
Julian S. Carr bought the mill and other nearby buildings in 1909, adding them to the chain of mills that became Durham Hosiery Mills. In 1911, West End was incorporated and named
Venable in honor of chemistry professor and University of North Carolina president
Francis Preston Venable, but only two years later was renamed
Carrboro, after Carr provided electric power for the community and expanded the mill. As a result of the riot, Carrboro and Chapel Hill leadership met to "sum up events and explore methods of suppressing future disorders." "Robert 'Bob' Drakeford, the town's first Black mayor, elected in 1977, recalled when Carrboro was a
sundown town, where people of color knew not to be out after dark." During World War II, Mill No. 7 became the site of a munitions factory. After the war, Pacific Mills bought both Mills No. 4 and 7 and operated them as Carrboro Woolen Mills. When Pacific Mills closed in the mid-1960s - the final activity at the mill was sorting and shipping
BVD underwear - Carrboro was no longer able to depend upon the textile industry to sustain itself. The University of North Carolina and other businesses in the area were growing rapidly and provided work in a wide range of occupations and locations. The mill remained abandoned for nearly a decade and changed hands several times. In 1975 the owner, with the assent of the Carrboro Board of Aldermen, intended to have it demolished. A community petition and fund-raising effort provided for its restoration as
Carr Mill Mall. It has since grown into a bustling hub of activity, hosting many businesses such as
Weaver Street Market. In addition to the Alberta Mill Complex, the
Carrboro Commercial Historic District,
Thomas and Mary Hogan House, and
Thomas F. Lloyd Historic District are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. Carrboro's origin story is closely tied to its historic railroad station, which was built in 1913. Initially known as "West Of" due to its proximity to Chapel Hill, the area around the station developed into a thriving settlement, eventually becoming the town of Carrboro.
Name Carrboro was named for
Julian S. Carr, a UNC alumnus, trustee, honorary degree recipient, industrialist, and philanthropist whose company brought electric power to the town. Carr was also a
white supremacist who opposed Black suffrage, defended the
Ku Klux Klan and
lynchings, and endorsed the
"Lost Cause" interpretation of the Civil War, during which he served as a private in the
Confederate States Army. A 2011 letter to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill student newspaper,
The Daily Tar Heel, called attention to Carr's remarks at the 1913 dedication of the
Silent Sam monument on the University of North Carolina campus. The following passage, quoted in the letter, has become locally famous: As a result of this publication, a petition to change the town's name arose, and former mayor Jim Porto in 2016 asked the Board of Aldermen to rename the town. The Carrboro Board of Aldermen passed a resolution in 2017 calling for the removal of
Silent Sam. ==Geography==