Washington
Washington, city, seat of Beaufort county, eastern North Carolina, U.S., along the Pamlico-Tar estuary just east of Greenville. Founded by Colonel James Bonner in 1771 and originally known as Forks of Tar River, it was one of the first places in the United States to be named (December 7, 1776) for George Washington. During the American Civil War it was occupied by Union troops (1862–64), who burned it as they left. Fighting took place at Hills Point, 7 miles (11 km) downriver, where the Union steamer Louisiana was sunk by the Confederates. The city suffered another disastrous fire in 1900, which forced it to rebuild again.
Washington’s basic market economy (tobacco, peanuts [groundnuts], vegetables, and cotton) is supplemented by light manufacturing and mining (phosphates). Beaufort County Community College (1967) is located in the city. Tourism and recreation are also important, and Lake Mattamuskeet and Swanquarter National Wildlife Refuge on Pamlico Sound, on the north-south Atlantic Flyway of migratory birds, are a short distance to the east. To the southeast are Goose Creek State Park and the historic town of Bath. Inc. 1782. Pop. (2000) 9,583; (2010) 9,744.