Greensboro
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Greensboro, city, Guilford county, north-central North Carolina, U.S. Situated about 25 miles (40 km) east of Winston-Salem, Greensboro forms a triangular metropolitan area, the Piedmont Triad, with that city and High Point.
The first settlers arrived from the Northern colonies in the early 1700s and established a permanent settlement by about 1740. It became the county seat in 1808, named for Gen. Nathanael Greene, who commanded the American forces that defeated British troops led by Lord Cornwallis at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse (March 15, 1781) during the American Revolution. In 1865, toward the end of the American Civil War, Greensboro was the temporary capital of the Confederacy, and proposals were made there to end the war. The first sit-in demonstration of the civil rights movement was staged at a lunch counter in Greensboro in 1960.
The city is a large wholesale distribution point, an agricultural market, and an important insurance centre. Textiles dominate its diversified industries. Greensboro is the home of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University (1891), Bennett College (1873), Greensboro College (1838), Guilford College (1837), and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro (1891); the Weatherspoon Art Gallery at the latter institution has a notable collection of modern American art. Guilford Courthouse National Military Park (established 1917), northwest of the city centre, preserves the site of the battle. The Greensboro Historical Museum has exhibits on local history. Nearby historical sites include Charlotte Hawkins Brown Memorial State Historic Site, Blandwood Mansion and Carriage House, and Chinqua-Penn Plantation.
Dolley Madison (wife of U.S. Pres. James Madison), the short-story writer O. Henry (William Sydney Porter), and the news broadcaster Edward R. Murrow were natives of the Greensboro area. Inc. town, 1810; city, 1870. Pop. ((2010) 269,666; Greensboro–High Point Metro Area, 723,801; (2020) 299,035; Greensboro–High Point Metro Area, 776,566.