Alamance Albemarle Alexander Alleghany Anson Archdale [BTH] Ashe Avery Bath Beaufort Berkeley [ALB] Bertie Bladen Brunswick Buncombe Burke Bute Cabarrus Caldwell Camden Carteret Carteret [ALB] Caswell Catawba Chatham Cherokee Chowan Clay Cleveland Columbus Craven Cumberland Currituck Dare
| Davidson Davie Dobbs Duplin Durham Edgecombe Forsyth Franklin Gaston Gates Glasgow Graham Granville Greene Guilford Halifax Harnett Haywood Henderson Hertford Hoke Hyde Iredell Jackson Johnston Jones Lee Lenoir Lincoln Macon Madison Martin McDowell Mecklenburg
| Mitchell Montgomery Moore Nash New Hanover No County Given Northampton Onslow Orange Pamlico Pamptecough [BTH] Pasquotank Pender Perquimans Person Pitt Polk Randolph Richmond Robeson Rockingham Rowan Rutherford Sampson Scotland Shaftsbury [ALB] Stanly Stokes Surry Swain Transylvania Tryon Tyrrell Union
| Vance Wake Warren Washington Watauga Wayne Wickham [BTH] Wilkes Wilson Yadkin Yancey TN Carter TN Davidson TN Eastern District TN Giles TN Grainger TN Greene TN Hawkins TN Jefferson TN Knox TN Maury TN Middle District TN Montgomery TN No County Given TN Robertson TN Sevier TN Smith TN Sullivan TN Sumner TN Tennessee TN Washington TN Western District TN Williamson TN Wilson
| | GRAHAM COUNTY 872 grants issued from 1844 to 1959
NCpedia article Wikipedia article County Seat: Robbinsville
History: Graham County was formed in 1872 from Cherokee County. It was named in honor of William A. Graham, a governor and US senator. For further information see: THE FORMATION OF THE NORTH CAROLINA COUNTIES, 1663- 1943, by David Leroy Corbitt.
Boundary changes: The Newberry Atlas of Historical County Boundaries
Name origin: William Alexander Graham (1804–1875), a United States Senator, governor of North Carolina, and United States Secretary of the Navy
State Archives Code: 043
Bordering Counties Cherokee Macon Swain | | 2 Counties Over Clay Haywood Jackson | Please report any incorrect border counties - it can be tricky! |
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