Charlotte, North Carolina Charlotte, North Carolina City of Charlotte Gantt Center for black Arts + Culture, Duke Energy Center, Charlotte's skyline, First Presbyterian Church of Charlotte, Charlotte Main Library and NASCAR Hall of Fame building Gantt Center for black Arts + Culture, Duke Energy Center, Charlotte's skyline, First Presbyterian Church of Charlotte, Charlotte Main Library and NASCAR Hall of Fame building Flag of Charlotte, North Carolina Charlotte's locale in Mecklenburg County in the state of North Carolina Charlotte's locale in Mecklenburg County in the state of North Carolina Charlotte, North Carolina is positioned in the US Charlotte, North Carolina - Charlotte, North Carolina Body City Council of Charlotte, North Carolina Charlotte / rl t/ is the biggest city in the state of North Carolina.

Charlotte is the third-fastest burgeoning major town/city in the United States. In 2014 the estimated populace of Charlotte as stated to the U.S.

The Charlotte urbane region ranks 22nd-largest in the U.S., and had a 2014 populace of 2,380,314. The Charlotte urbane region is part of a sixteen-county market region or combined statistical region with a 2014 U.S.

Enumeration population estimate of 2,537,990. Residents of Charlotte are referred to as "Charlotteans".

Charlotte is home to the corporate command posts of Bank of America and the east coast operations of Wells Fargo, which along with other financial establishments makes it the second-largest cash dealing area in the United States. Among Charlotte's many notable attractions, some of the most prominent include the Carolina Panthers of the National Football League (NFL), the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA), the Charlotte Independence of the United Soccer League (USL), two NASCAR Sprint Cup competitions and the NASCAR All-Star Race, the Wells Fargo Championship, the NASCAR Hall of Fame, the Charlotte Ballet, Carowinds amusement park, and the U.S.

See also: Timeline of Charlotte, North Carolina The Catawba Native Americans were the first to settle Mecklenburg County (in the Charlotte area) and were first recorded in European records around 1567.

The region that is now Charlotte was settled by citizens of European descent around 1755, when Thomas Spratt and his family settled near what is now the Elizabeth neighborhood.

Nicknamed the Queen City, like its county a several years earlier, Charlotte was titled in honor of German princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, who had turn into the Queen Consort of Great Britain and Ireland in 1761, just seven years before the town's incorporation.

A second nickname derives from the American Revolutionary War, when British commander General Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis occupied the town/city but was driven out by hostile residents, prompting him to write that Charlotte was "a hornet's nest of rebellion", dominant to the nickname The Hornet's Nest.

Within decades of Polk's settling, the region interval to turn into "Charlotte Town", incorporating in 1768. The crossroads, perched up on the Piedmont landscape, became the heart of Uptown Charlotte.

While surveying the boundary between the Carolinas in 1772, William Moultrie stopped in Charlotte Town, whose five or six homes were "very ordinary assembled of logs". Charlotte is traditionally considered the home of Southern Presbyterianism, but in the 19th century, various churches, including Presbyterian, Baptist, Methodist, Episcopalian, Lutheran, and Roman Catholic formed, eventually giving Charlotte the nickname, "The City of Churches". Many veins of gold were found in the region throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, dominant to the 1837 beginning of the Charlotte Mint.

North Carolina was the chief producer of gold in the United States until the Sierra Nevada find in 1848, although the volume mined in the Charlotte region was dwarfed by subsequent rushes.

Charlotte's town/city population at the 1880 Enumeration interval to 7,084. Measured by control of assets, Charlotte is the second biggest banking command posts in the United States, after New York City. The town/city was caught unprepared; Charlotte is 200 miles (320 km) inland, and inhabitants from coastal areas in both Carolinas often wait out hurricanes in Charlotte.

In December 2002, Charlotte and much of central North Carolina were hit by an ice storm that resulted in more than 1.3 million citizens losing power. During an abnormally cold December, many were without power for weeks.

Charlotte constitutes most of Mecklenburg County in the Carolina Piedmont.

Charlotte center town/city sits up on a long rise between two creeks, Sugar Creek and Irwin Creek, and was assembled on the gunnies of the St.

See also: List of Charlotte neighborhoods and List of tallest buildings in Charlotte Charlotte has 199 neighborhoods radiating in all directions from Uptown. Biddleville, the major historic center of Charlotte's black community, is west of Uptown, starting at the Johnson C.

No - Da (North Davidson), north of Uptown, is an emerging center for arts and entertainment. Myers Park, Dilworth, and Eastover are home to some of Charlotte's earliest and biggest homes, on tree-lined boulevards, with Freedom Park, arguably the city's favorite, nearby.

Many students, researchers, and affiliated professionals live near UNC Charlotte in the northeast region known as University City.

The large region known as Southeast Charlotte is home to many golf communities, luxury developments, mega-churches, the Jewish improve center, and private schools.

As undeveloped territory inside Mecklenburg has turn into scarce, many of these communities have period into Weddington and Waxhaw in Union County. Ballantyne, far south Charlotte, and nearly every region on the I 485 perimeter, have seen extensive expansion over the past ten years.

Since the 1980s in particular, Uptown Charlotte has undergone massive assembly of buildings, housing Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Hearst Corporation, Duke Energy, a several hotels, and multiple condominium developments. Inspired in part by the San Antonio River Walk, and integral to Charlotte's extensive urban park system, it is "a huge milestone" as stated to Gwen Cook, greenway planner for Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation. Charlotte, like much of the Piedmont region of the southeastern United States, has a humid subtropical climate (Koppen Cfa), with four distinct seasons; the town/city itself is part of USDA hardiness zone 8a, transitioning to 7b in the suburbs in all directions except the south. Winters are short and generally cool, with a January daily average of 40.1 F (4.5 C).

Charlotte is directly in the path of subtropical moisture from the Gulf of Mexico as it heads up the easterly seaboard, thus the town/city receives sizeable rain throughout the year but also many clear, sunny days; rain is generally less incessant in autumn than in spring. On average, Charlotte receives 41.6 inches (1,060 mm) of rain annually, which is somewhat evenly distributed throughout the year, although summer is slightly wetter; annual rain has historically ranged from 26.23 in (666 mm) in 2001 to 68.44 in (1,738 mm) in 1884. In addition, there is an average of 4.3 inches (10.9 cm) of snow, mainly in January and February and rarely December or March, with more incessant ice storms and sleet different in with rain; cyclic snow flurry has historically ranged from trace amounts as recently as 2011 12 to 22.6 in (57 cm) in 1959 60. These storms can have a primary impact on the area, as they often pull tree limbs down onto power lines and make driving hazardous.

Climate data for Charlotte, North Carolina (Charlotte-Douglas Int'l), 1981 2010 normals, extremes 1878 present Enumeration estimate (2014, released in May 2015) showed 809,958 inhabitants living inside Charlotte's town/city limits and 1,012,539 in Mecklenburg County.

The Combined Statistical Area, or trade area, of Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, NC-SC had a populace of 2,537,990. Figures from the more elected 2010 census show Charlotte's populace density to be 2,457 per square mile (948.7/km ).

According to the 2010 United States Census, the ethnic composition of Charlotte was: In 1970, the Enumeration Bureau reported Charlotte's populace as 30.2% Black and 68.9% White. Charlotte has historically been a Protestant city.

The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, Wycliffe Bible Translators' JAARS Center, and SIM Missions Organization make their homes in the Charlotte general area.

The Presbyterian Church (USA) is now the fourth biggest denomination in Charlotte, with 68,000 members and 206 congregations.

The Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America is headquartered in Charlotte, and both Reformed Theological Seminary and Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary have campuses there; more recently, the Religious Studies academic departments of Charlotte's small-town universities and universities have also grown considerably.

The Advent Christian Church is headquartered in Charlotte.

The Western North Carolina Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church is headquartered in Charlotte.

The biggest Protestant church in Charlotte, by attendance, is Elevation Church, a Southern Baptist church established by lead pastor Steven Furtick.

The church has over 15,000 congregants at nine Charlotte locations. Charlotte's Cathedral of Saint Patrick is the seat of the bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte.

Ann, Charlotte, a church under the jurisdiction of the Roman Catholic Bishop of Charlotte.

The Greek Orthodox Church's cathedral for North Carolina, Holy Trinity Cathedral, is positioned in Charlotte.

Charlotte has the biggest Jewish populace in the Carolinas.

Shalom Park in south Charlotte is the core of the Jewish community, featuring two Jewish churchs, Temple Israel and Temple Beth El, as well as a improve center, the Charlotte Jewish Day School for grades K-5, and the command posts of the Charlotte Jewish News. Most African Americans in Charlotte are Baptists affiliated with the National Baptist Convention, the biggest dominantly African American denomination in the United States.

African American Methodists are largely affiliated with either the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, headquartered in Charlotte, or the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

As of 2013, 51.91% of citizens in Charlotte were religiously affiliated, making it the second most theological town/city in North Carolina after Winston-Salem.

The biggest religion in Charlotte is Christianity, with Baptists (13.26%) having the biggest number of adherents.

Financial center and the second biggest banking center in the United States (after New York City). The nation's second biggest financial institution by assets, Bank of America, calls the town/city home.

Charlotte has nine Fortune 500 companies in its urbane area.

The Charlotte region includes a diverse range of businesses, including foodstuffs such as Chiquita Brands International, Harris Teeter, Snyder's-Lance, Carolina Foods Inc, Bojangles', Food Lion, Compass Group USA, and Coca-Cola Bottling Co.

Consolidated (Charlotte being the nation's second biggest Coca-Cola bottler); motor and transit companies such as RSC Brands, Continental Tire the Americas, LLC., Meineke Car Care Center, Carlisle Companies (along with a several other services), along with a wide array of other businesses. Charlotte is the primary center in the U.S.

One Wells Fargo Center behind the Latta Arcade in Uptown Charlotte The Charlotte Region has a primary base of energy-oriented organizations and has turn into known as "Charlotte USA The New Energy Capital." The University of North Carolina at Charlotte has a reputation in energy education and research, and its Energy Production and Infrastructure Center (EPIC) trains energy engineers and conducts research.

The Charlotte Center town/city has seen remarkable expansion over the last decade.

In 2013, Forbes titled Charlotte among its list of Best Places for Business and Careers. Charlotte was listed as the 20th biggest city in the US, and the 60th quickest burgeoning city in the US between 2000 and 2008. According to Charlotte's 2014 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the top employers in the town/city are: 3 Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools 18,143 the biggest urbane region in the United States without a zoo." The Charlotte Zoo initiative is a proposal to allocate 250 acres (101 ha) of natural North Carolina territory to be dedicated to the zoological foundation, which was incorporated in 2008.

The zoo will cost roughly $300 million, and will be completely privately-funded." The Charlotte Observer references two other zoos, the Riverbanks Zoo and Garden and the North Carolina Zoological Park as two "great zoos" that are accessible from the Charlotte-Mecklenberg area, both roughly more than 70 miles away. Charlotte is also served by the Sea Life Charlotte-Concord Aquarium in the close-by city of Concord.

Main article: Sports in Charlotte, North Carolina Charlotte is home to two primary experienced sports franchises: the Carolina Panthers of the National Football League (NFL) and the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA).

The Panthers have been positioned in Charlotte since the team's creation in 1995, and the current Hornets charter has been positioned in Charlotte since its creation in 2004.

The initial Hornets NBA charter was established in 1988 as an expansion team, but it relocated to New Orleans, Louisiana in 2002 after animosity interval between the team's fans and principal owner George Shinn. The NBA quickly granted Charlotte an expansion charter following the departure of the Hornets, and the new franchise, the Charlotte Bobcats, began to play in 2004.

The team retook the Hornets name when the New Orleans-based team retitled itself the New Orleans Pelicans in 2013. The name change became official on May 20, 2014, along with the revelation that the charter would reclaim the history and records of the initial 1988 2002 Hornets. Charlotte is represented in ice hockey and baseball at the 'AAA' experienced level by the Charlotte Checkers and the Charlotte Knights, and in experienced ultimate by the Charlotte Express of the American Ultimate Disc League.

Charlotte Hornets Basketball 1988 National Basketball Association Spectrum Center Charlotte Independence Soccer 2015 United Soccer League Mecklenburg County Sportsplex Charlotte Express Ultimate 2015 American Ultimate Disc League Dick Williams Stadium See also: Mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina and City Council of Charlotte, North Carolina While the town/city council is responsible for passing ordinances, many policy decisions must be allowed by the North Carolina General Assembly as well, since North Carolina municipalities do not have home rule.

Charlotte was chose in 2011 to host the 2012 Democratic National Convention, which was held at the Spectrum Center.

Emergency medical services for the town/city of Charlotte are provided by MEDIC, the Mecklenburg EMS agency.

Forty-two fire stations are strategically scattered throughout Charlotte to furnish a reasonable response time to emergencies in the town/city limits.

The CMPD has law enforcement jurisdiction in both the town/city of Charlotte and the several unincorporated areas left in Mecklenburg County.

According to the Congressional Quarterly Press; '2008 City Crime Rankings: Crime in Metropolitan America,' Charlotte, North Carolina rates as the 62nd most dangerous town/city larger than 75,000 inhabitants. However, the entire Charlotte-Gastonia Metropolitan Travel Destination ranked as 27th most dangerous out of 338 metro areas. The city's enhance school system, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, is the 2nd biggest in North Carolina and 17th biggest in the nation. In 2009, it won the NAEP Awards, the Nation's Report Card for urban school systems with top honors among 18 town/city systems for 4th undertaking math, 2nd place among 8th graders. An estimated 144,000 students are taught in 164 separate elementary, middle, and high schools. Charlotte is home to a number of universities and universities such as Central Piedmont Community College, Charlotte School of Law, Johnson C.

Smith University, Johnson & Wales University, Queens University of Charlotte, and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

Additional universities in the region include Belmont Abbey College in the suburb of Belmont, North Carolina, and Wingate University in the suburb of Wingate, North Carolina.

UNC Charlotte is the city's biggest university.

It is positioned in University City, the northeastern portion of Charlotte, which is also home to University Research Park, a 3,200 acres (13 km2) research and corporate park.

With more than 28,000 students, UNC Charlotte is the third biggest university in the state system.

Central Piedmont Community College is the biggest improve college in the Carolinas, with more than 70,000 students each year and 6 campuses throughout the Charlotte-Mecklenburg region. CPCC is part of the statewide North Carolina Community College System.

The Charlotte School of Law opened its doors in Charlotte in 2006 and was fully accredited by the American Bar Association in 2011.

Charlotte School of Law is the biggest law school in the Carolinas.

Pfeiffer University has a satellite ground in Charlotte.

Wake Forest University, with its chief campus in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, also operates a satellite ground of its Babcock Graduate School of Management in the Uptown area. The Connecticut School of Broadcasting, De - Vry University, and ECPI University all have chapters in Charlotte.

The Universal Technical Institute has the NASCAR Technical Institute in close-by Mooresville, serving the Charlotte area.

Montreat College (Charlotte) maintains a School of Professional and Adult Studies in the city.

The North Carolina Research Campus, a 350-acre biotechnology core located northeast of Charlotte in the town/city of Kannapolis, is a public-private venture including eight universities, one improve college, the David H.

Partnering educational organizations include UNC Charlotte and Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, from the Charlotte region, as well as Appalachian State University, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Duke University, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University and North Carolina State University. The research ground is part of a larger accomplishment by leaders in the Charlotte region to attract energy, health, and other knowledge-based industries that contribute to North Carolina's strength in biotechnology.

The Charlotte Mecklenburg Library serves the Charlotte region with a large compilation (more than 1.5 million) of books, CDs and DVDs at 15 locations in the town/city of Charlotte, with chapters in the encircling towns of Matthews, Mint Hill, Huntersville, Cornelius and Davidson.

Although the library's roots go back to the Charlotte Literary and Library Association, established on January 16, 1891, the state-chartered Carnegie Library, which opened on the current North Tryon site of the Main Library, was the first non-subscription library opened to members of the enhance in the town/city of Charlotte.

The philanthropist Andrew Carnegie donated $25,000 dollars for a library building, on the condition that the town/city of Charlotte donate a site and $2,500 per year for books and salaries, and that the state grant a charter for the library.

All conditions were met, and the Charlotte Carnegie Library opened in an imposing classical building on July 2, 1903.

The 1903 state charter also required that a library be opened for the disenfranchised black population of Charlotte.

This was instead of in 1905 with the opening of the Brevard Street Library for Negroes, an autonomous library in Brooklyn, a historically black region of Charlotte, on the corner of Brevard and East Second Streets (now Martin Luther King Boulevard). The Brevard Street Library was the first library for African Americans in the state of North Carolina, and some sources say in the southeast. The library was closed in 1961 when the Brooklyn neighborhood in Second Ward was redeveloped, but its part as a cultural center for African-Americans in Charlotte is continued by the Beatties Ford and West Boulevard chapters of the library system, as well as by Charlotte's black Cultural Center.

Main article: Media in Charlotte, North Carolina There are five waste water treatment plants directed by Charlotte-Mecklenburg Utility Department (CMUD Charlotte has a biosolids program Some Chester inhabitants spoke out against the program on Feb 26, 2013. Charlotte's sludge is handled, transported, and spread on farm fields in Chester by a business called Synagro, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Carlyle Group Charlotte's sludge is of the "CLASS B" range, which means it still contains detectable levels of pathogens. Main article: Transportation in Charlotte, North Carolina The Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) is the agency responsible for operating mass transit in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

In 2011, the town/city of Charlotte and CATS staff conducted enhance forums to present the final Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and gather enhance input from residents, property owners, and company owners positioned in northeast Charlotte, which is where the LYNX light rail is proposed to be extended from uptown Charlotte to UNC Charlotte campus. Construction on this portion is expected to end in August 2017. A 2011 study by Walk Score ranked Charlotte the 49th most walkable of the 50 biggest cities in the United States. Charlotte's central locale between the populace centers of the northeast and southeast has made it a transit focal point and major distribution center, with two primary interstate highways, I-85 and I-77, intersecting near the city's center.

Within the city, the I-277 loop freeway encircles Charlotte's uptown (usually referred to by its two separate sections, the John Belk Freeway and the Brookshire Freeway) while Charlotte Route 4 links primary roads in a loop between I-277 and I-485.

The Crescent joins Charlotte with New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, D.C.; Charlottesville, and Greensboro to the north, and Greenville, Atlanta, Birmingham, Meridian and New Orleans to the south.

The Carolinian joins Charlotte with New York; Philadelphia; Baltimore; Washington, D.C.; Richmond; Raleigh; Durham; and Greensboro.

It is expected to home the future LYNX Purple Line, the new Greyhound bus station, and the Crescent line that passes through Uptown Charlotte.

List of sister metros/cities of Charlotte, designated by Sister Cities International: Official records for Charlotte kept October 1878 to August 1948 at downtown and at Charlotte-Douglas Int'l since September 1948.

"Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places of 50,000 or More, Ranked by July 1, 2014 Population: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2014 United States Places Over 50,000 Population".

"US Airways defying US trends with healthy expansion at its chief Charlotte hub".

"Question the Queen City: Who were the Native Americans that lived here before Charlotte was colonized?".

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

"Welcome to Charlotte, a City of Quirks".

"Mecklenburg County, North Carolina USGen - Web Project".

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

"The Charlotte Branch Mint".

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

Grande DIsco Charlotte, NC Abstract Public Sculptures on.

Hello - Charlotte: Best Tennis Parks in Charlotte Charlotte Observer: Little Sugar Creek Greenway section is done[dead link] "Station Name: NC CHARLOTTE DOUGLAS AP".

"North Carolina Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places: Earliest Enumeration to 1990".

Foundation of Shalom Park Charlotte.

"Charlotte, North Carolina Religion".

"Charlotte Soars to Become the Nation's Second Largest Financial Center".

Charlotte Chamber of Commerce.

"Metropolitan Charlotte North Carolina | Met - Terrace Townhomes | Met - Loft Condos | Met - Club Resort | Residential Urban Living North Carolina".

"Charlotte vs.

"City of Charlotte CAFR" (PDF).

"About the Charlotte Zoological Park Initiative | Bringing Animal Conservation & Research to the Carolinas".

"Charlotte Zoological Park Initiative ready to move forward News 14".

NBA owners give Bobcats OK to change name to Charlotte Hornets, The Charlotte Observer, July 19, 2013 "Charlotte Hornets on Twitter".

Jennifer Roberts defeats Edwin Peacock for Charlotte Mayor a b "Charlotte, North Carolina (NC) profile: population, maps, real estate, averages, homes, statistics, relocation, travel, jobs, hospitals, schools, crime, moving, homes, sex offenders, news, sex offenders".

Charlotte, NC Auto Theft Statistics, retrieved 2014-06-06 "Charlotte NC- Three Big Wins for the City".

"Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County: A century of service".

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

"Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County: A century of service".

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

"Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County: A century of service".

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.

"Charlotte Utilities Home".

"Charlotte's Class B Sludge".

"Class B sludge whats in Charlotte's waste streams".

Charlotte Area Transit System.

"Charlotte International Cabinet".

Charlotte, NC: The Global Evolution of a New South City (University of Georgia Press; 2010) 320 pages.

Essays that use Charlotte to explore how globalization and small-town forces combine to transform Southern cities.

Sorting Out the New South City: Race, Class, and Urban Development in Charlotte, 1875 1975.

Charlotte: Spirit of the New South.

Remembering Charlotte: Postcards from a New South City, 1905 1950.

New South Women: Twentieth Century Women of Charlotte, North Carolina.

Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County in Association with John F.

Charlotte, North Carolina Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) Visit Charlotte, from the Charlotte Regional Visitor's Authority Charlotte, North Carolina at DMOZ Articles relating to Charlotte, North Carolina

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