Incoming Resources
- High Point, N.C, a brief summary of its manufacturing enterprises, together with sketches of those who have built them, issued by J.J. Farriss
- Western North Carolina, a history (1730-1913), by John Preston Arthur
- "The houses of peace", being a historical, legendary, and contemporary account of the Moravians and their settlement of Salem in North Carolina, by E.M. Eller ; with illustrations by W.F. Pfohl
- A history of Mary Potter School, Oxford, North Carolina, by Owena Hunter Davis
- Life and travels of Addison Coffin, written by himself
- Old days in Chapel Hill, Being the life and letters of Cornelia Phillips Spencer, by Hope Summerell Chamberlain ; with illustration by the author
- Greensboro, 1808-1904, facts, figures, traditions and reminiscences, collated by Jas. W. Albright
- A history of Alamance Church, 1762-1918, by E.C. Murray
- Biographical sketches of the early settlers of the Hopewell section, and reminiscences of the pioneers and their descendants by families, with some historical facts and incidents of the times in which they lived ..., written at the request of Revolutionary descendants by J.B. Alexander
- A short history of Cabarrus County and Concord, yesterday and today, by pupils of sixth grade, Corbin St. School, 1932-1933
- The Germans in colonial times, by Lucy Forney Bittinger
- Index to War of 1812 pension files, transcribed by Virgil D. White
- A Description of the Natural Bridge of Virginia, and its history
- National Society of Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America index 3, Lineage books 35-40, Donna Chilton Derrick...[et al.]
- History of southwest Virginia, 1746-1786, Washington County, 1777-1870, by Lewis Preston Summers
- History of Surry County, or, Annals of northwest North Carolina, by J.G. Hollingsworth
- Wise County, her industries, resources and prominent men
- Genealogical abstracts of Revolutionary War pension files, abstracted by Virgil D. White
- Guide to the manuscripts in the archives of the Moravian Church of America, Southern Province, prepared by the North Carolina Historical Records Survey, Division of Community Service Programs, Work Projects Administration
- Descendants of Micum McIntire, a Scottish Highlander, deported by Oliver Cromwell after the battle of Dunbar, September 3, 1650, and settled at York, Maine, about 1668, compiled and published by Robert Harry McIntire
- Historical sketch of Poplar Tent Church, read before Concord Presbytery, April 22nd, 1872, by Wm. S. Harris
- Hillsboro, colonial and revolutionary, by Francis Nash
- A historical sketch of New Hope Church, in Orange County, N.C, by D.I. Craig
- The Greensboro bar, pictures and biographical sketches of its members, including practicing attorneys and judges, 1939
- History of the Free Will Baptists of North Carolina, T.F. Harrison and J.M. Barfield
- Roster of the North Carolina volunteers in the Spanish-American War, 1898-1899, prepared under the direction of the Adjutant-General
- Topographical dictionary of 2885 English emigrants to New England, 1620-1650., Edited and indexed by Elijah Ellsworth Brownell
- Dark days of the rebellion, or, Life in Southern military prisons, giving a correct and thrilling history of unparalled [sic] suffering, narrow escapes, heroic encounters, bold achievements, cold blooded murders, severe tests of loyalty, and patriotism, written from a diary kept while in Libby and Salisbury prisons in 1864-5, and now in possession of the author, by B.F. Booth
- History of Wachovia in North Carolina, the Unitas fratrum or Moravian church in North Carolina during a century and a half, 1752-1902, from the original German and English manuscripts and records in the Wachovia archives, Salem, North Carolina, by John Henry Clewell
- Historical papers on Cabarrus County, North Carolina, by Committee of North Carolina Colonial Dames
- The town builders, by Adelaide L. Fries
- The beginnings of the Pennsylvania-German element in Rowan and Cabarrus Counties, North Carolina, by William H. Gehrke
- A history of Grassy Creek Baptist Church, from its foundation to 1880, with biographical sketches of its pastors and ministers, by Robert I. Devin
- History and directory of Yates County, containing a sketch of its original settlement by the Public Universal Friends ... including church, school and civil history, and a narrative of the Universal Friend, her society and doctrine, by Stafford C. Cleveland
- Guilford's Scotch-Irish, compiled by William C. Rankin
- The German and Swiss settlements of colonial Pennsylvania, a study of the so-called Pennsylvania Dutch, by Oscar Kuhns
- Life at Oxford, by Nettie Nichols Bemis
- Cabarrus reborn, a historical sketch of the founding and development of Cannon Mills Company and Kannapolis, by James Lewis Moore and Thomas Herron Wingate
- A brief history of St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church of Cabarrus County, N.C, from its earliest settlement to the present time, by Sidney D. Steffey
- Reminiscences of the Guilford Grays, Co. B., 27th N.C. Regiment, by John A. Sloan
- Address of Gen. Rufus Barringer at the Luther Commemoration in Concord, N.C., Nov. 10th, 1883, on the early German settlers in eastern Cabarrus
- AGLL catalog
- North Carolina schools and academies, 1790-1840, a documentary history, by Charles L. Coon
- North Carolina Disciples of Christ, a history of their rise and progress, and of their contribution to their general brotherhood
- A history of Cabarrus County in the wars, Cabarrus County War Records Collection Committee
- Cyclopedia of eminent and representative men of the Carolinas of the nineteenth century, with a brief historical introduction on South Carolina by General Edward McCrady, and on North Carolina by Samuel A. Ashe
- Lineages of members of the National Society of the Sons and Daughters of the Pilgrims, compiled from the original applications
- The German settlers in Lincoln County and western North Carolina, by Joseph R. Nixon
- Springfield, 1773-1940, a history of the establishment and growth of the Springfield Monthly Meeting of Friends, by Sara Richardson Haworth
- Index to the names of 30,000 immigrants--German, Swiss, Dutch and French--into Pennsylvania, 1727-1776, supplementing the I. Daniel Rupp, ship load volume, by M.V. Koger