Halifax, town, seat of Halifax county, northeastern North Carolina, U.S., on the Roanoke River about 70 miles (113 km) northeast of Raleigh. Settled about 1723, it was made a colonial borough in 1760, named for George Montagu Dunk, 2nd earl of Halifax. It thrived as a river port, and between 1776 and about 1782 it was an important political and social centre and a site of the provincial congress. It was there that the Halifax Resolves, the first formal sanction of American independence, were adopted on April 12, 1776. Political activity declined after 1783, when the state assembly moved to Hillsboro (now Hillsborough). Constitution House, where tradition holds that the state constitution was drafted, and other colonial-era and 19th-century structures have been restored. The town was designated a state historic site in 1965 and has become a popular tourist attraction. Pop. (2000) 344; (2010) 234.