North Carolina Events

NCSSAR
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< 2026 >
February 22 - February 28
  • 22
    22.February.Sunday

    Race to Wilmington at Harmony Hall

    1:00 PM-2:00 PM
    February 22, 2026
    1615 River Rd, White Oak, NC 28399, USA

    As part of the inaugural NC First in Freedom Festival, the NC SAR Le Marquis de Lafayette Chapter will conduct a SAR Ceremony to educate the public how Bladen County was the Pathway to Moore’s Creek, at A Colonial Faire at Harmony Hall Village, on February 22, featuring:

    – An opening ceremony and the presentation by the Le Marquis de Lafayette Chapter from the North Carolina Society Sons of the American Revolution
    – Period music by the Huckleberry Brothers Band and dancing by all in the Chapel throughout the day
    – Crafts and games for children
    – Traditional craft vendors and demonstrations
    – Food offerings
    – Musket firing
    – Reenactors that bring history to life
    Event is free, however, a kindly $10 per person donation is gently requested to offset the costs for this event, operational expenses and property upkeep.

     

  • 23
    23.February.Monday
    No events
  • 24
    24.February.Tuesday
    No events
  • 25
    25.February.Wednesday
    No events
  • 26
    26.February.Thursday
    No events
  • 27
    27.February.Friday
    CG at Moores Creek

    The Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge 250th Anniversary Celebration

    10:00 AM-4:00 PM
    February 27, 2026
    200 Moores Creek Dr, Currie, NC 28435, USA

    Please join us as we celebrate the 250th Anniversary of the Battle of Moores Creek Bridge, the 1st Patriot victory during the War for Independence.  Activities will include musket and cannon demonstrations, as well as demonstrations of colonial trades such as blacksmithing, candle dipping, spinning, cooking, gardening, powder horn making, colonial toys and games, live music, and much more.  For up-to-date information, please follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/moorescreeknps.

    The combined North Carolina SAR Color Guard and North Carolina DAR, C.A.R., and SR chapters will commence a memorial walk on Friday, February 27, starting at the Visitor Center at 10:00 AM.  There will be wreaths displayed at the Women’s Monument, at the Moore Monument, at the Loyalist Monument, and finally at the Patriot John Grady Monument.  Senior representatives of the SAR and DAR will present wreaths for their respective chapters.  The event is FREE and additional activities will continue on Saturday and Sunday, February 28-Mar 1, 2026 from 10:00 AM-4:00 PM.

    RSVP to get your wreath properly recognized in the program.  Deadline February 1, 2026
    Please plan to drop off your wreath early; parking will be at a premium.  Overflow parking will be in the parking lot of the Moores Creek Missionary Baptist Church.

    Suggested accommodations in Wilmington
    Hampton Inn Wilmington-University Area/Smith Creek Station
    124 Old Eastwood Rd, Wilmington, NC 28403-1861  855-605-0317

    Holiday Inn Express & Suites Wilmington – University Center
    160 Van Campen Blvd, Wilmington, NC 28403-1621  877-859-5095

    Wingate by Wyndham Wilmington
    5126 Market St, Wilmington, NC 28405-3445  800-337-0070

     

    March to the Monuments

     

    Firing “Mother”

    Vendors will be available for lunch at the Battleground.

    The Battle of Moores Creek Bridge — February 27, 1776

    The Battle of Moores Creek Bridge, fought between North Carolina Patriot and Loyalist militia forces, demonstrates the bitter internal divisions that marked the American Revolution.  The Loyalists, mostly Scottish Highlanders wielding broadswords, charged across a partially dismantled Moores Creek Bridge, as nearly a thousand North Carolina Patriots waited quietly with cannons and muskets poised to fire.  Expecting to find only a small Patriot force, the Loyalists advanced across the bridge.  Shots rang out and 30 to 70 Loyalists lay wounded or dead, including Lt. Col. Donald McLeod, who led the charge.  Stunned, outgunned, and leaderless, some of the Loyalists surrendered, while others retreated in confusion.

    Moores Creek is the site of the first Patriot victory in the American Revolution and the site of the last Scottish Highland broadsword charge.  The victory ended British authority in the Colony and stalled a full-scale British invasion of the South for nearly four years.   The resulting Halifax Resolves of April 12, 1776, instructed North Carolina’s delegates to the Continental Congress to vote for independence; it was the first American Colony to take such action in writing.

  • 28
    28.February.Saturday

    Color Guard Training

    10:00 AM-12:00 PM
    February 28, 2026

    The Colonel Alexander Erwin chapter will be holding a color guard training session. 

    February 28th at the Fort Defiance located at 1792 Fort Defiance Dr, Lenoir, NC 28645

Annual NCSSAR Events

See the map below for the locations of annual commemorations that occur throughout the state on or around their anniversary date.

 

1 February 1781 Battle of Cowan’s Ford Huntersville, NC
27 February 1776 Battle of Moore’s Creek Bridge Currie, NC
15 March 1781 Battle of Guilford Courthouse Greensboro, NC
12 April 1776 Adoption of the Halifax Resolves Halifax, NC
16 May Battles of Alamance County Burlington, NC
20 May 1775 Signing of the Mecklenberg Declaration of Independence Charlotte, NC
20 June 1775 Adoption of the Liberty Point Resolves Fayetteville, NC
20 June 1780 Battle of Ramsour’s Mill Lincolnton, NC
21 July 1780 Battle of Colson’s Mill Norwood, NC
29 July 1781 Attack at the House in the Horseshoe Deep River, NC
2 August 1781 Battle of Rockfish Creek Wallace, NC
14 August 1775 Issuance of the Tryon Resolves Bessemer City, NC
25-27 August 1774 Issuance of the New Bern Resolves New Bern, NC
1 October 1780 Crossing of the Catawba at Greenlee Ford Morganton, NC
7 October 1780 Battle of Kings Mountain Blacksburg, SC
14 October 1780 Battle of Shallow’s Ford Huntsville, NC