The Town of Benson, which derives its name from early settler
Alfred Monroe ("Mim") Benson, owes much of its historical
development to the railroad line which passed through the
present location in town in 1886 on its route between Fayetteville
and Contentnea.
Mr. Benson's purchase of a 402 acre tract along the Smithfield-Fayetteville
Road in 1874 initiated the settlement of the area now known
as Benson. During the 1880's Benson sold portions of his original
tract to incoming settlers, many of whom were farmers. Benson
was incorporated in 1887 and soon attracted a number of entrepreneurs
wishing to take advantage of this new town along an important
transportation route.
In 1924, an article appearing in a local paper describing
the physical appearance of the town, stated:
"within the past decade (Benson) has made rapid strides
in different phases of improvements and now presents to
the visitor a neat, clean little town sprinkled about with
a goodly number of lovely homes, handsome churches and school
buildings, a modern brick hotel, (and) two large banks,
the Farmers Commercial occupying one of the most expensive
and up to date buildings in the state."
Although the "modern brick hotel" is gone, much
of the Benson of 1924 remains today. And, because of that,
in 1984, 54 acres of the town, the center of which is the
downtown business district, was placed on the National Register
of Historic Places. This historic district is comprised of
the entire downtown business district and several blocks of
surrounding residential neighborhoods.
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