From the county of Buncombe, Henderson County was formed in 1838.
Following a three-year dispute concerning the placement of a county
seat, the town of Hendersonville was established in 1841. Situated in
the eastern Blue Ridge escarpment of the Southern Appalachian range in
Western North Carolina, Henderson County, known as Land of the Sky,
supports a diverse geography, climate, and populace. From its inception,
the county has been a vibrant melting pot of cultures, talents, and
disciplines. Denizens of the county have included all from Revolutionary
War patriots, renowned architects, and tycoons to moonshiners, granny
doctors, inventors, and even a famous hog. Henderson County hosts the
annual North Carolina Apple Festival and boasts top-producing orchards,
floriculture, wineries and breweries, world-class golf courses, and
master-planned communities amid accessible natural resources and four
seasons of color and clime. The county's spectrum of historic
architecture has ranged from log dwellings to Victorian, Romanesque,
Neoclassical, and Greek Revival motifs.