Aycock Birthplace State Historic Site

Aycock Birthplace State Historic Site A Civil War era farm museum, and the childhood home of North Carolina Governor Charles B. Aycock. Charles B. The house is furnished with pieces from the period.

Aycock was born into a rural home here in Wayne County in 1859. Interested in politics from his youth, Aycock began to practice law and move up in the Democratic Party after graduating from the University of North Carolina. In 1900 he was elected governor and dedicated himself to improving public education in North Carolina. By the time he left office four years later, one school had been built fo

r each day the governor was in office. Today a typical schoolhouse of the period stands on the site. Found off the beaten path, two miles south of Fremont, the historic site features a mid-19th-century farmstead, including a house, kitchen, and outbuildings. A corn barn and stables recall the days when men worked the land. Sheep and fowl, a field crop, and a three-season kitchen garden bring the farm to life. A one-room schoolhouse (1893) moved to the site represents the grassroots educational revival that became statewide after Governor Aycock's election in 1900. An accessible visitor center features exhibits and an audiovisual program.

UNEARTH A STORY with the Wayne County Public Library's summer learning program! With dates from June to July, they are o...
06/12/2026

UNEARTH A STORY with the Wayne County Public Library's summer learning program! With dates from June to July, they are offering opportunities for families to learn and explore together. Join us here on-site on June 25th at 10 AM for a special presentation by the Aurora Fossil Museum, a mock dig for dino bones, and a Mesozoic era craft.

Join us Saturday, June 13th at 10:00AM, for our last Hands on History program in collaboration with the Wayne County Pub...
06/10/2026

Join us Saturday, June 13th at 10:00AM, for our last Hands on History program in collaboration with the Wayne County Public Library! For this program we will explore a variety of 19th-century games and sports. Horseshoes, graces, and Townball, an early version of baseball, will all be on the schedule. Bring your peanuts and cracker jacks!
Please contact the Northern Wayne Library at 919-705-1892 to register.

Thank you to everyone who came out today for our 4th Living History Saturday! Today's demonstration topic was period lau...
06/06/2026

Thank you to everyone who came out today for our 4th Living History Saturday! Today's demonstration topic was period laundry and we are so happy that folks enjoyed! We boiled our summery linen clothes and talked about laundry: who did it, when, and how! We also discussed enslaved labor, "washerwomen" as depicted in contemporary art, and the evolution of machinery and labor laws into the 20th century. From starching shirts, ironing dresses, and to sunning wool, the clothes that we wear each day do more than express our personalities. What we wear often reflects the world around us as much as within, and the layered clothing of the 19th century has a story to tell about who wore it and who cleaned it.

Join us Saturday, June 13th at 10:00AM, for our last Hands on History program in collaboration with the Wayne County Pub...
06/02/2026

Join us Saturday, June 13th at 10:00AM, for our last Hands on History program in collaboration with the Wayne County Public Library! For this program we will explore a variety of 19th-century games and sports. Horseshoes, graces, and Townball, an early version of baseball, will all be on the schedule. Bring your peanuts and cracker jacks!

Please contact the Northern Wayne Library at 919-705-1892 to register.

"A man's rights rest in three boxes. The ballot box, jury box and the cartridge box. Let no man be kept from the ballot ...
06/02/2026

"A man's rights rest in three boxes. The ballot box, jury box and the cartridge box. Let no man be kept from the ballot box because of his color. Let no woman be kept from the ballot box..." -Frederick Douglass, November 15th, 1867.
We will be hosting our site's first virtual event on June 20th! Between 10:00 AM and 3:00PM we will explore voting rights in North Carolina through a series of interactive posts. Starting at 10, we will explore the struggle for suffrage in the United States with our attention focused on the voting process in the American South during the 19th and early 20th centuries, and examine the relationship between violence and political participation. This event is intended to be interactive and we encourage you to engage with the content by commenting and asking questions!

As a status update for our museum's phone: we are still unable to receive calls, and are waiting for the damaged lines t...
06/02/2026

As a status update for our museum's phone: we are still unable to receive calls, and are waiting for the damaged lines to be repaired.

We apologize again for any inconvenience this may cause. We do not yet know when this problem will be resolved. Until then, we request that you contact us by either e-mail ([email protected]) or visit us in person.

Attention educators! Aycock Birthplace is excited to share the opportunity of a professional development workshop happen...
06/02/2026

Attention educators! Aycock Birthplace is excited to share the opportunity of a professional development workshop happening at the site on July 15th from 10:00AM to 4:00PM!

For more details on the workshop and to apply, please visit: https://events.dncr.nc.gov/event/aycock-teacher-workshop.

Further inquiries may be made at [email protected].

We look forward to seeing you then!

Here's the layout of what's planted in the kitchen garden for this summer. Pumpkins, watermelons, summer squash, turnips...
05/19/2026

Here's the layout of what's planted in the kitchen garden for this summer. Pumpkins, watermelons, summer squash, turnips, carrots, and diverse herbs. While these have just been planted, we hope to see everything on this map come up healthy and strong within the coming weeks. A copy of this map is available at the front desk when you visit!

Today is our 3rd Living History Saturday with 10 more to follow, and today's topic is the kitchen garden! Many people in...
05/16/2026

Today is our 3rd Living History Saturday with 10 more to follow, and today's topic is the kitchen garden! Many people in the 19th century chose to keep small kitchen gardens often for the same reasons that we do today: to supplement their diet with homegrown herbs and vegetables, to be eaten fresh or preserved for later through canning or drying. However, how much people relied on homegrown produce varied from region and from person. Certain staples foods that comprised the daily mid-19th century diet such as coffee, sugar, salt, flour, etc. could not be produced at home and would have been store-bought.
The Aycocks farmed as a source of income and would have been producing a lot of food on their land, however it isn't likely they they would have eaten much of their own produce. Among the 25 families that appeared next to them on the census, the Aycocks were the second largest farm in terms of acreage, value, and number of enslaved laborers. Like many wealthy farmers, they likely purchased their own food from outside sources in nearby towns like Nahunta or Goldsboro. However it is not uncommon for enslaved people to have been forced to rely primarily or even entirely upon subsistence gardening for their diet when not supplemented by rations provided by slaveholders. The second source of an enslaved persons diet is through rations, typically corn based, occasionally diversified with salted fish or pork.
Enhanced by technological advancements such as steam printing as well a growing body of work by American naturalists, the 19th century saw an abundance of literature on gardening and other how-to guides in the form of almanacs, seed catalogues, monthly publications, and botanical prints. In our garden, we have planted the three categories often found in a kitchen garden of this era: herbs, vegetables, and flowers. Today we planted herbs that appear commonly in 19th century receipts (that is 'recipes') or were known for their medicinal qualities, such as parsley, chamomile, basil, rosemary, sage, lavender and lamb's ear. Thank you so much to everyone who joined us today!
We hope you will join us next month on June 6th from 10 to 2 for Period Laundry, where we will explore how people washed their clothes, practiced personal hygiene, and how we treat our clothes based off of their construction/care needs.

Address

264 Governor Aycock Road
Fremont, NC
27830

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