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  1. Jul 11, 2020 · In 1807, the ‘great flat rock" gave its name to the pioneer settlement that was growing up around it. The Revolutionary War proved to be a dramatic, and disastrous change of fortune for the Native Americans who frequented the great flat rock.

  2. In 1807, the “great flat rock” gave its name to the pioneer settlement that was growing up around it. By 1827, when the Buncombe Turnpike was completed from Asheville to join the Poinsett Highway in upper South Carolina, Flat Rock was thriving.

  3. The South Carolina colony first made a grant to settlers there in 1752; it included the overhanging mass of rock for which the creek was named. About the time the colony opened up this section, other settlers came in and settled along Lynches Creek, Little Lynches creek, Flat Creek, Beaver Creek, and lower Camp Creek.

  4. Jun 5, 2015 · Daniel Boone and his company of settlers would follow the water ways of Hinkston Creek over to Slate Creek, into Bath County to the Licking River at Wyoming and up to Blue Licks to gather salt. Another route was via Flat Creek to its confluence with the Licking River at Sherburne.

  5. Jul 15, 2020 · The origin of the name Flat Rock” is apparent if one looks around and down. The village is on a huge expanse of flat rock, and the name goes back to pre-Indian territory times we suspect. It wasn’t recorded in a deed until the early 1800s or possibly late 1700s.

  6. Oct 3, 2023 · Flat Rock was first settled in the late 18th century and is considered one of the oldest communities in western North Carolina. Its name originates from a large, flat rock situated atop a hill, which served as a popular gathering place for Native Americans and early settlers.

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  8. Houses, grass, roads and buildings now cover most of the large “flat rock” for which the village takes its name. But the large granite rock can still be seen in places. “I have people ask me constantly where the rock is,” said the late author and Flat Rock historian Louise Howe Bailey.