Native Americans first inhabited the eastern Forsyth County area, a
natural watershed and source of six rivers and creeks. About 1756,
Irishman Caleb Story settled here on 400 acres of wooded land. Years
later, Story sold his land to David Morrow for a purported four gallons
of rum. About 1771, William Dobson purchased the original acreage and
additional tracts and built an inn near what is now Mountain Street and
Main Street. He named this junction Dobson's
Crossroads. On June 2, 1791, President George Washington ate breakfast
at Dobson's Tavern. On November 14, 1817, German-born Joseph Kerner
(also spelled K¶rner) purchased the land and renamed the area Kerner's
Crossroads. This begins the story of Kernersville. The same roads, still
graced with historic churches, stores, and homes, crisscross at the
heart of this community. K¶rner's Folly, which contains 22 rooms, housed
the first private little theater in America.