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The
Market House was built in 1832 on the site of the old State House,
which was destroyed by fire in 1831. It was within the walls of
the State House that North Carolina had ratified the Constitution
of the United States in 1789 and chartered the University of North
Carolina. Also here North Carolina ceded her western lands to form
the state of Tennessee.
The
focal point of downtown Fayetteville, the Market House sits in the
center of the intersection of Green, Gillespie, Person, and Hay
Streets. For decades meat and produce were sold beneath its arches
by local farmers, while the second floor was the town hall. In recent
years the second floor has been used as a public library, chamber
of commerce offices, and an art museum. Many distinguished visitors
have spoken from its balconies.
Architecturally
unique in North Carolina, the Market House is one of the few structures
in America to use this town hall-market scheme found in England.
The clock chimes the hours and the bell in the cupola still rings
at 7:30 AM for breakfast, at 1:00 PM for dinner, at sundown, and
at 9:00 PM, once the curfew hour.
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