Wake Forest, North Carolina Wake Forest, North Carolina Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S.

State of North Carolina; positioned almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh.

Enumeration Bureau estimates the city's populace to be 34,752 as of July 1, 2013. In 2007, the town was listed by Forbes periodical as the 20th quickest burgeoning suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in populace between 2000 and 2006. Wake Forest was the initial home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.

The US Office of Management and Budget also includes Wake Forest as a part of the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill Combined Statistical Area, which has a populace of 1,998,808 as of U.S.

Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought 615 acres (2.49 km2) of forested territory in Wake County, North Carolina.

The sparsely populated region became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest.

Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site.

This improve was incorporated as the "Town of Wake Forest College" in 1880.

The college moved to the much larger town/city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the initial campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire ground when the college instead of its move.

A new town hall facility opened in downtown Wake Forest in September 2010, and was LEED Platinum certified in November 2011. All town departments are homed in the facility, except police (which has its own building nearby) and enhance works.

Wake Forest is positioned at 35 58 24 N 78 31 8 W (35.973289, -78.518789). Wake Forest is positioned in the northeast central region of North Carolina, where the North American Piedmont and Atlantic Coastal Plain regions meet.

Its central Piedmont locale situates Wake Forest about three hours by car west of Atlantic Beach, North Carolina, and four hours east of the Great Smoky Mountains.

The town is served by nine enhance schools which are administered by the Wake County Public School System.

Wake Forest Elementary School Wake Forest Middle School Heritage High School (Wake Forest, North Carolina) (opened August 2010) Wake Forest High School Private schools include Thales Academy, All Saints Academy, and Saint Catherine of Siena Catholic School, serving grades K-8. Wake Forest is also home to two Montessori schools, Wake Forest Montessori and Montessori Children's House of Wake Forest.

Du - Bois School opened in 1926 for the black improve in Wake Forest before ethnic segregation ceased in 1971.

Other listings in or near Wake Forest on the National Register of Historic Places are the Bailey-Estes House, Downtown Wake Forest Historic District, Glen Royall Mill Village Historic District, Lea Laboratory, Oakforest, Powell House, Purefoy-Chappell House and Outbuildings, Purefoy-Dunn Plantation, Rock Cliff Farm, Royall Cotton Mill Commissary, South Brick House, Thompson House, Wake Forest Historic District, Wakefield Dairy Complex, and Wakefields. Wake Forest Historical Museum, also known as the Calvin Jones Historical House, was assembled in 1820 and was the residence of the first president of Wake Forest College and the center of activities that took place at the school.

The exhibition displays the history of the town of Wake Forest as well as Wake Forest University.

The Wake County Public Library System operates a branch in Wake Forest. Wake Forest is home to the Falls Lake State Recreation Area.

Wake Forest is served by ten parks and improve centers.

Holding Park and Wake Forest Community House Air: Wake Forest is served by Raleigh-Durham International Airport, which is positioned 20 miles (32 km) southwest of the town in northwestern Wake County.

Wake Forest is positioned off US 1 (also known as Capital Boulevard in northern Wake County), a primary north-south U.S.

WCPE-FM, positioned in Wake Forest, is a classical music station that provides its programming over the air, via the Internet, and via C-band and Ku-band satellite.

Wake Forest News is the fifth best journal in town and prides themselves in putting an entertaining and hopefully humorous spin on small-town Wake Forest news.

Wake Forest Today is the town's first digital daily news portal.

It is an online news origin that covers small-town news and affairs that are meaningful to Wake Forest and the encircling area and is totally responsive on all digital devices. "Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (DP-1): Wake Forest town, North Carolina".

History - Wake Forest, NC Mayor - Wake Forest, NC Board of Commissioners - Wake Forest, NC Board Members - Wake Forest, NC "Town Hall - Town of Wake Forest".

"Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Wake Forest town, North Carolina".

Schools in Wake Forest - YELLOWPAGES.COM Area Attractions - Wake Forest, NC Wake Forest College Birthplace Society Wake - GOV.com - Wake Forest Branch Library Parks & Facilities - Wake Forest, NC "Wake Forest News - Entertaining Wake Forest with news since 2013.".

Wake Forest News.

"Wake Forest Today - The Community's First Digital Daily News Source".

Wake Forest News - From Wake Forest North Carolina and encircling community.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wake Forest, North Carolina.

Wake Forest Today, digital daily news of the town of Wake Forest The Wake Forest Gazette, small-town web-only journal Wake Forest College Birthplace Society "Wake Forest News", small-town journal Municipalities and communities of Wake County, North Carolina, United States

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Wake Forest, North Carolina - 1820 establishments in the United States - Populated places established in 1820