On August 20, 1775, the Third Provincial Congress, formed to replace the Colonial Assembly dissolved by Royal Governor Josiah Martin the previous April, convened in Hillsborough.
Samuel Johnston of Edenton was selected to preside, and the body declared itself the province’s temporary government and created the Provincial Council to conduct business when the Provincial Congress was not in session and to oversee the Committee of Safety.
For the purpose of organizing a militia and arranging representation in the Provincial Council, the congress determined that the six existing judicial districts would become military districts. The districts contained between four and eight counties and were named for the most prominent towns they contained: Edenton, Halifax, Hillsborough, New Bern, Wilmington and Salisbury.
Each military district was authorized to establish a regiment of minutemen that was to serve within the boundaries of North Carolina. Furthermore, each of the 35 counties was asked to raise a company of militia.
The Third Provincial Congress ordered the enlistment of the first two units of Provincial Troops to join the Continental Army later that year.
Other related resources:
- The minutes of the Congress, available online as part of the Colonial and State Records of North Carolina
- Early North Carolina: Educational Resources Related to the Colonial Era and Revolutionary War
- It’s Revolutionary!, a two-year commemoration of North Carolina’s early history
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