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==History== {{more citations needed section|date=May 2017}} <!--Expand - location? Native Americans? first settlement by European Americans? --> [[File:Union Presbyterian Church.jpg|thumb|left|Union Presbyterian Church]] The town was the home of the Tyson & Jones Buggy Company, a predominant cart and buggy manufacturer in the late 1800s. A common local story is that after the closing of the Tyson Buggy Company, [[Henry Ford]] was interested in buying the old plant and converting it into a car assembly line. According to the legend, the owners refused to let Ford buy the plant. He moved on and built his first plant in [[Detroit]], making it the center of auto manufacturing. This story is often repeated despite a lack of evidence, and it runs contrary to the life of Ford, who was born and raised in Detroit and started his businesses there. A few years after being closed, the former Tyson Buggy plant burned down. Another common local story is that the town was originally selected as the site for the [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill|University of North Carolina]]. Supposedly, city leaders did not want the university built there. City leaders purportedly told the state that Carthage was on too steep of a hill for locomotives to climb and that access to the university would be limited if built there. This often-repeated story does not account for the fact that locomotives were not invented until two decades after the university had been built in [[Chapel Hill, North Carolina|Chapel Hill]]. The town has an annual event in spring called the Buggy Festival. This event is used to showcase the history of the town and features music, hot rods, old tractors, old buggies made by the Tyson Buggy Company, and crafts from potteries in the surrounding areas. The festival is held in the town square around the Old Court House, recognized as a historic landmark. Tyson & Jones buggy factory partner William T. Jones was born the son of a slave and her white owner in 1833. By the time of his death in 1910, William T. Jones was one of the prominent business owners in Carthage. He rubbed elbows with the elite, white, upper class in Moore County during the 1880s, dined with them, threw elaborate holiday parties where most of the guests were white, and even attended church with them. Both of his wives, Sophia Isabella McLean and Florence Dockery, were white. Dockery was the daughter of a well-to-do [[Apex, North Carolina|Apex]] family. James Rogers McConnell (March 14, 1887 β March 19, 1917), a resident of Carthage, flew as an aviator during World War I in the [[Lafayette Escadrille]] and authored ''Flying for France''. He was the first of 64 [[University of Virginia]] students to die in battle during that war.{{cn|date=March 2025}} McConnell was flying in the area of St-Quentin when two German planes shot him down on March 19, 1917. He was the last American pilot of the squadron to die under French colors before America entered the war in April 1917. Both the plane and his body were found by the French, and he was buried at the site of his death at the edge of the village of Jussy, and was later reinterred at the Lafayette Escadrille memorial near Paris upon his father's wishes. McConnell was commemorated with a plaque by the French government and a statue by [[Gutzon Borglum]] at the [[University of Virginia]], as well as an obelisk on the court square of his home town of Carthage. The [[Carthage Historic District (Carthage, North Carolina)|J.F. Cole House]] in the Carthage Historic District, [[J.C. Black House]], [[Daniel Blue House]], [[Bruce-Dowd-Kennedy House]], [[Carthage Historic District (Carthage, North Carolina)|Carthage Historic District]], [[Alexander Kelly House]], and [[Moore County Courthouse]] are listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]].<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|version=2010a}}</ref>
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