Developed in the early 1910s to attract upper-middle-class residents, Cameron Park is one of the Raleigh’s most prominent neighborhoods. Residents have until Thursday, Sept. 23, 2021 to cast their vote on whether to change its name referencing the family that once was one of the largest holders of enslaved people in North Carolina.

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Depending on who someone asks, one Raleigh neighborhood could have two names.

The area — sandwiched between downtown, N.C. State University and The Village — is labeled on Google Maps and by the city of Raleigh as Forest Park.

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But some residents still call it by its old name: Cameron Park. They argue that although the Camerons were slaveholders, changing the name would erase history.

The Cameron Park name is derived from the slave-owning Cameron family, who owned significant land in and around Raleigh in the 19th century, including the land where the neighborhood now lies.

Residents of the neighborhood voted to change the name in 2021, and in 2024, chose Forest Park as the area’s new name.

After the vote in 2024, some residents filed a lawsuit, saying it wasn’t held properly, according to the bylaws of the neighborhood association.

They’ve since voluntary dismissed the suit, according to online court records. But they may refile the suit to better reflect new information, wrote Robin Tatum, an attorney for the suing neighbors in a May 27 letter to the neighborhood association.

Myrick Howard, one of the people who sued the neighborhood association, says he and neighbors “paused” the suit for now, but they still have the intent of getting a judge to say “no, the name is Cameron Park.”

The 2024 suit argued because the name of the association legally remains the Cameron Park Neighborhood Association, according to filings with the state of North Carolina, that the neighborhood’s name never actually changed.

Neighborhood groups are given funds by the city for festival equipment as well as neighborhood projects and programs, according to the city.

The neighborhood association has been doing business as the Forest Park Neighborhood Association, but it has acknowledged in legal filings that it never changed its actual name from the Cameron Park Neighborhood Association.

The suit also argued that the neighborhood association never went through the proper process for renaming, according to the organization’s bylaws.

That would require a two-thirds vote of neighborhood association members at a called meeting of the organization, the suit said.

But because the neighborhood association admitted in court documents and a hearing that it did not legally change its name, the group who filed the suit may need to refile it to better reflect the facts and its goals in the case.

Howard, a historic preservationist, said slavery was very wrong. But he also said that Duncan Cameron, a prominent North Carolinian through the mid-19th century, was an important figure in the area around Raleigh.

Cameron owned multiple plantations and more than 900 enslaved people, making him among the biggest slavers in the state at the time, Howard said. But he also played a part in the construction of the state capitol by serving on its building committee.

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Cameron also donated land for St. Mary’s School, the private all-girls school next to the Forest Park neighborhood.

Howard said he was a very prominent North Carolinian, and that’s not history that people should try to erase.

He added that he believes the neighborhood is still split almost evenly on the issue.

The neighborhood association’s attorney, Neil Riemann, wrote that “A neighborhood is not a legal construct … and the Association cannot govern what people choose to call their neighborhood.”

And in court fillings, the neighborhood association said that because they weren’t changing the legal name of the neighborhood association, which itself requires changing the association’s bylaws, they didn’t have to follow the rule calling for a two-thirds vote.

“We could have voted to change our bylaws, but we were told that it required more paperwork,” former neighborhood association President Michael Lindsay told neighbors in a virtual meeting on Thursday.

What the organization did do is ask the city to change the neighborhood name in its list of neighborhoods. It also asked the city to change the name of its neighborhood conservation overlay district (NCOD) to the Forest Park NCOD

An NCOD is a zoning tool Raleigh uses to preserve the physical form of older neighborhoods. NCODs set rules for things like minimum lot size, lot width, setbacks, building height, and how far a home must sit from the street, The News & Observer previously reported.

The name was also changed on social media platforms and Google Maps. And the association went through the relatively simple process to change its “doing business as” name with the state, Lindsay said. A doing business as name is not the exact legal name, but rather a kind of legally recognized nickname.

The movement to change the name of the neighborhood occurred in 2021, a year after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis by local police and shortly after the Village District shopping area, originally called Cameron Village, changed its name.

Residents at the time called for the renaming to reaffirm the community’s commitment to diversity and inclusion and mitigate the hurtful impact on new neighbors of color, The N&O previously reported.

The neighborhood voted 240 to 201 in favor of a name change. Lindsay said that voter eligibility was checked. Howard said he believed students who should not have been eligible to vote did.

The Camerons were not the only owners of enslaved people with a neighborhood named after them. The Mordecai family also owned enslaved people and operated a plantation in the neighborhood just north of downtown, according to the city of Raleigh.

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This story was originally published June 30, 2026 at 8:13 AM.

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