|
REDISCOVERING THE LURE OF NORTH CAROLINA'S HICKORY NUT GORGE AREA
By Stephen Schoof
[originally published as a
Backroads Tour in July/August
1999 Blue Ridge Country]
My home community of Fairview, NC, impressed me again last
April. On a warm evening after work, I finished a short run on a
woodsy back road as clouds turned pink in the west. I
jumped in my truck and raced to a pasture,
where I set up my camera for the twilight moon. I suddenly
realized that I was enjoying as fine a setting as any popular recreation area,
just four
minutes from home.
I’ve roamed my local mountains since I was five. Only
recently did I notice how perfectly the area complements the
nearby towns of Montreat, Chimney Rock, and Flat Rock. Unlike
many natural areas, the landscapes here are either privately
owned or preserved to look that way. The unique stamp
of original owners remains on properties they were able to
inhabit without overwhelming.
Eight miles from the Blue Ridge Parkway, US 74-A heads east
into a straightaway where tall peaks with names like Tater Knob
and Buzzard’s Roost rise from the pastures and cornfields of
one of Fairview’s major valleys. After a few switchbacks,
casual travelers can easily overlook the long white house
sandwiched between Ferguson Mountain and a horse pasture. A roadside marker simply reads "Sherrill’s Inn," with
a twenty-word description that hardly does justice to a site
that already brimmed with history in 1916.
Jim and Elizabeth McClure came through Fairview that year on
a spontaneous honeymoon that made them feel more like gypsies
than upper-middle class northerners. As they snaked toward
Hickory Nut Gap, they were smitten by the old inn on the hill.
They took their admiration further than most travelers by
pulling up to the house, finding the owner, and offering a lease
that was finalized in the Buncombe County deed books less than
two months later.
John Ashworth had first bought the property in 1797, building a
cabin and fort before selling everything to stagecoach driver
Bedford Sherrill. Sherrill expanded the cabin for his tired
travelers and later added a stockyard for drovers with herds
bound for South Carolina markets. Sherrill’s Inn survived the
Civil War, changed hands twice, enjoyed more years of tourism,
changed hands twice again, and became a mildly neglected farm by
the time the McClures arrived.
What was intended as a temporary dwelling soon became a home
the couple couldn’t leave. Elizabeth transformed the property
with boxwoods, flower gardens, and outbuildings for hired hands.
Jim pushed the farm to relieve World War I food shortages.
Within four years, he went on to organize a Farmer’s
Federation that merged his disorganized, disheartened, and oft-cheated neighbors into a bold competitive coalition. His natural
gift for making friends and uniting strangers kept his vision
going for the next forty years.
These days, their daughter Elspeth lives in the inn with
husband and former U.S. Congressman Jamie Clarke [Jamie
Clarke died in April 1999, and Elspeth in November 2001]. Any given
day can turn up their own sons and daughters, local friends, or
guests from as far away as France and Kenya. In a time when
trendy people turn to increasingly contrived methods of forcing
leisure into hectic schedules, this family continues a tradition
of generating instant fun in any circumstance. Quaint outdoor square dances, covered-dish suppers, and
Christmas caroling are still common at the inn, even as
community names and faces change. As Jim McClure’s
biographer and grandson-in-law, John Ager, noted, "Life at
Hickory Nut Gap Farm has nothing to do with the search for a
utopia, and everything to do with the acceptance and enjoyment
and encouragement of people in all their variety."
Two miles past
the inn, on a highway that follows roughly the same route as
Bedford Sherrill's stagecoach, Bearwallow Mountain Road heads up
to Bearwallow Gap. Here, hikers can climb a mile on a gated private
road to a USFS fire tower on the 4,232-foot mountain.
Bearwallow makes a great outing on chilly winter days when
the Parkway stays icy and Forest Service roads are closed. Fast walkers
can be on the blustery summit in 15 minutes, without the hassle
of determining which public lands are open and accessible. Clear
air enhances views of Fairview’s farms and forests in the west
and Hickory Nut Gorge in the east.
Back in the valley, 74-A passes through Gerton
and drops into a gorge full of craft shops and fruit stands. In
five miles it enters Bat Cave, the town, below Bat Cave itself.
Here, NC 9 heads left toward Black Mountain and
Montreat, while US 64 turns right toward Hendersonville and Flat
Rock.
The Gorge’s most remarkable feature looms two miles past
this junction. Chimney Rock, a 315-foot granite remnant of 500
million year-old igneous rock, stands like a medieval watchtower
over the Rocky Broad River. On clear mornings, first light turns
gray cliffs golden before dropping into green forest.
Four-hundred-foot Hickory Nut Falls, the tallest in the East,
hangs over the Rocky Broad like a lesser Yosemite Falls over the
Merced.
The rock and 1,000 surrounding acres are preserved as a
private attraction that owes its existence largely to one man’s
vision. Born in Missouri in 1871, Lucius B. Morse was a
practicing physician before contracting tuberculosis and seeking
a healthier climate in North Carolina. He loved the
mountains, especially Chimney Rock. The original owner opened a
public trail and stairs, but Morse had bigger plans, and with
the help of two brothers he purchased the mountain for $5,000 in
1902.
By 1916, the men had bridged the river and cut a three-mile
road to the Rock. The great flood of the same year destroyed
parts of the project, but they rebuilt quickly, eventually
adding a gatekeeper’s lodge, 3-story dining hall, and offices
and parking lots. Perhaps the most exotic feature was a 258-foot
elevator shaft that now whisks visitors to the summit in less
than a minute, shortcutting an alternate system of stairs from
the base.
At least in superficial ways, Morse’s life parallels
Jim
McClure’s. Morse sought in the mountains a reprieve from TB;
McClure hoped for a cure of the stress-related "congestion
of the brain" he’d suffered up North. The 1916 flood
wiped out Morse’s early park developments; across the Gap,
McClure was fighting his way on washed-out roads to secure his
lease on Sherrill’s Inn. Morse visualized the potential of his
mountain as a popular park just as McClure saw the financial
possibilities of local farmland. Chimney Rock is a bit more
commercial than most public parks, but the natural beauty
remains as surely as both McClures’ amiable personalities
survive at Hickory Nut Gap Farm.
The main road continues into Lake Lure, a ritzy resort town
clustered around a reservoir of the same name. High
cliffs make an impressive backdrop for fishing and paddle
boating, but more traditional Appalachian experiences await
elsewhere. Back in Bat Cave, State Highway 9 winds north through
18 miles of fine mountain scenery before entering one of the
classiest little towns in western North Carolina.
Named for the highest peaks in the East, Black Mountain was
traditionally a tourists’ gateway to Mt. Mitchell. A Mrs. S.
P. Taber Willets, of New York City, described her 1901
"tour" in terms that sound considerably more adventurous than
the hikes of today's hardy backpackers. After riding the train partway from Asheville,
Mrs. Willets followed a rough path among "towering mountains" and
the North Fork of the Swannanoa River before finally reaching a
farmhouse at twilight. Her generous host led her to Mitchell’s
base in the morning, where she followed a wiry, elderly guide on
a trail that "became more steep and obscure, [curving] like
a snake in and out among the broken rocks . . . a tortuous path
it was, climbing upward for miles." After a
chilly night on an evergreen-bough bed under an overhang near
the summit, Mrs. Willets contentedly descended through Black
Mountain to Asheville.
The valley was never the same after thirsty Asheville dammed
the North Fork for a water supply. Locals born under the
tall peaks found themselves unable to even visit the family
lands from which they were evicted. In 1954, F. Bascombe Burnette ended a piece for
the Black Mountain News by resigning that, "It
surely grieves me to look up old North Fork . . . Such is life.
There is nothing we can do about it."
Now, the Blue Ridge Parkway skirts the valley at 5,000 feet.
"No Stopping" signs between mileposts 355 and 370 keep
human impact to a minimum, protecting the 15,000-acre watershed’s
rare WS-1 water quality rating (reserved for natural and
undeveloped areas only). All around is an
alpine paradise matched only in the Balsam Mountains farther
south, while at night, the lights of Black Mountain twinkle beyond a
bowl of darkness above the Burnette Reservoir. The old property
rights argument is placed in bold relief here, but it is no easier to
grapple with. Despite any sympathies for original owners,
this wild pocket of
uninhabited land is plenty refreshing.
From Highway 9, Black Mountain itself seems
busier than ever. The "Front Porch of Western North Carolina" includes
a downtown chock full of art and craft galleries, music clubs,
and antique and factory stores. Beautiful scenery, a pleasant climate,
and easy accessibility has made the area popular for summer
camps and religious conference centers.
One "center" deserves special mention. Straight
ahead on 9, the town of Montreat was envisioned in the late
1890s as an interdenominational assembly of houses, schools,
libraries, orphanages, and other facilities for "Christian
work and fellowship." Now affiliated with the Presbyterian
Church and boasting its own college, it remains a model
community. Narrow roads curl among shady creeks and houses
nestle in rhododendrons. Buildings made from local rock and
timber harmonize with the forest. Reverend R. C. Anderson summed
up the community’s spirit in his 1947 The Story of Montreat
from its Beginning:
When we see the majestic oak or the chestnut or the pine, we
think of Him who put the life in the little acorn or the
chestnut. We think of the soil into which the seed found
nourishment, the properties or the elements of the atmosphere
and the ingredients and the fertility of the ground that caused
the little germ to sprout. . .until it becomes the hardened wood
that makes the temple in which we worship, the house in which we
dwell.
Much of the land remains forested, and hikers are welcome on
miles of strenuous trails that climb high peaks like Greybeard
Mountain (5,360'), Big Slaty Mountain (4,855'), Brushy Mountain
(3,855'), or Lookout Rock (3,760'). Viewed from craggy outcrops,
the Montreat properties blend perfectly with huge tracts of
Pisgah National Forest, the Asheville watershed, and the Parkway
corridor. Visually, at least, the area may be better off than at
Montreat’s beginning, when logging trains occasionally set
fire to the woods as they carried fresh Mt. Mitchell timber over
the property to Black Mountain.
Instead of Highway 9, drivers can take US 64 east from Bat
Cave along Reedypatch Creek. Here, fields, orchards, and an
array of produce stands hint of the 52,000 acres that put Henderson
County 5th in the state's agricultural cash receipts. A few
of the dozen miles from Bat Cave to Hendersonville look more
like Midwest farm country than the southern Appalachians.
Highway 64 junctions with US 25 in Hendersonville, where
brown signs lead 6 miles to the Carl Sandburg Home in Flat Rock.
Now a National Historic Site, "Connemara" belonged to
the secretary of the Confederate treasury and a textile baron
before the Sandburgs moved in in 1945. The spacious grounds
satisfied the famous writer’s need for solitude, while the big
house kept his 12,000 books within easy reach.
Sandburg’s granddaughter, Paula Steichen, offers a personal
view of the man who won Pulitzer Prizes, worked with Presidents,
kings, and movie stars, and suffered criticism for his Socialist
leanings. In My Connemara, she remembers Grandfather
"Buppong" talking to trees, singing with children, and
making light of his own poem, "Fog," during the height
of its popularity: "De fog come on itti bitti kitti
footsies. . .".
She also reveals the Sandburg who took walks in the dead of
night and collected acorns and bits of wood for the house. A
mile away on Big Glassy Mountain, he could look out on
Hendersonville, the Blue Ridge, and beyond. Surely his mountains
were on his mind when he said, "A man must find time for
himself. . .to go away by himself and experience loneliness; to
sit on a rock in the forest and to ask of himself, ‘Who am I,
and where have I been, and where am I going?’"
For all Sandburg’s popularity, Connemara was more than a
home for a famous writer. His wife Lilian and daughter Helga
built reputations on their Chikaming goats, selling milk
throughout the Southeast and shipping animals to breeders.
Lilian pored over lineages and planned breeding strategies at
her desk, eventually producing a Toggenburg doe that became the
all-breed American champion in milk production. Her
success led at least one would-be admirer to ask, "And what
does your husband do?"
The Park Service has preserved the house to look as if the
family went out walking only minutes ago. Each room still
reveals personalities: Carl’s simple tastes are evident in the
crate he used for a living room end table, and Lilian’s orderliness is
displayed in the tidy work space that greatly contrasts her husband’s
office pigsty.
Mostly, the woods and trails of Connemara make it clear this
family appreciated their mountains. Certainly anyone with their
energy and imagination could have turned the quiet woods into
some profitable enterprise. Thankfully they chose forest over
finances, and the Sandburg’s Connemara joins the McClure’s
Hickory Nut Gap Farm, Lucius Morse’s Chimney Rock, and the
Presbyterian Church’s Montreat in testifying of owners who
recognized the value of leaving some of their lands unaltered
long before environmentalism was in
vogue.
_____________________________________________________________
|