| << Back 8/14/02 Odd names for unique places in the Smokies By George Ellison About
a year and a half ago I wrote a column titled Mountain Topography
and Language Lend Themselves to Colorful Names that sparked
a number of emails and letters. Obviously, there are other folks out
there who enjoy thinking about the lay of the land. After
all, theres no other place in the world that surpasses the actual
topography of the southern mountains. And theres no place where
the people of a region have utilized a more delightful language to
describe their homeland. Here then are some additional examples. Ive restricted myself to the Smokies region west of Asheville. Unless otherwise noted, my general sources are William S. Powells The North Carolina Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Tar Heel Place Names (UNC Press, 1968) and Allen R. Coggins Place Names of the Smokies (Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association, 1999). I have sometimes added additional commentary: ° ADVALOREM BRANCH in Swain County within Great Smoky Mountains National Park. An advalorem tax is one based on a percentage of assessed value. Land taxes have never been popular in Swain County or in general, but maybe someone just liked the sound of the word. ° AKWETIYI (or AGWEDIYI) is a Cherokee word for a site in the Tuckasegee River at the mouth of Dicks Creek in Jackson County. It means something like the place of the lizard monster as it was believed that a dangerous creature resided therein. ° ANGELICO GAP and ANGELICO MOUNTAIN are Cherokee designations for places in Cherokee County. Angelico is the Cherokee designation for an herbaceous plant used as a cooked green. ° AQUONE is a community in Macon County on the upper Nantahala River. The word is believed to be a corruption of egwanulti (by the river). ° BEAR BRANCH or BEAR CREEK have a combined 36 entries statewide in Powells Gazetteer. ° BEAVER CREEK or BEAVERDAM have a combined 45 entries statewide in Powells Gazetteer. ° BELL CONEY MOUNTAIN is situated on the eastern side of Lizzy Mountain in Jackson County (see the Big Ridge topo). Ive never been to Bell Coney and dont know how it came by that name. Anyone out there know? ° BIG BUTT is situated in Macon County between Mooney Gap and Bearpen Gap. In geographic parlance, butt refers to an abrupt, broken off end of a ridge or mountain. ° BIG FAT GAP is situated in northwestern Graham County at the head of Bear Creek. What does the word fat signify in this sort of geographic context? I should know, but dont. ° BIG HOGBACK CREEK is situated in Jackson County. I assume this creek is associated with HOG BACK MOUNTAIN, so-named because the mountain features jagged rocks along its spine. ° BONE VALLEY CREEK is situated in Swain County in the GSMNP. In 1888 cattle were trapped along this tributary of Hazel Creek in a horrendous blizzard. Named for the bleached bones of these animals that lay in the valley for years. ° BOOGERMAN TRAIL is situated in Haywood County in Cataloochee Valley within the GSMNP. Named for Robert Palmer, whose nickname was Boogerman. As he grew older, Palmer became increasingly reclusive and sported a brushy beard that tended to frighten young folks. ° CATALOOCHE is thought to a corruption of the Cherokee word Gadalutsi, which is variously translated as fringe standing erect or wave upon wave in reference to the trees along the valleys ridge crests. ° CATSTAIRS is a steep trail situated in Macon County along Overflow Creek in Blue Valley. Wildcats supposedly established the route to go from one mountain to another. Or maybe it was so narrow and difficult that it only seemed suitable for wildcats? ° CHATTOOGA RIDGE and CHATTOOGA RIVER in Jackson County are place names derived from the Cherokee word chatawga. ° COWEE or COWEETA are places names for an old village, a modern community, a creek, a mountain bald, gaps, and a hydrologic station in Macon County. The words mean place of the Deer Clan. ° DEVILS TATTER PATCH, situated in Swain County within the GSMNP, is one of the numerous place names that invoke the devil in Western North Carolina. He is associated with DEVILS NEST (a peak), DEVILS PRONG (a creek fork), DEVILS SHOALS FORD (a crossing), DEVILS GARDEN (steep eroded land), DEVILS DEN (rugged terrain), DEVILS COURTHOUSE (high outcrop), and numerous other sites local inhabitants deemed fit for the devil himself. ° EAST LAPORTE is a community in Jackson County east of Cullowhee alongside the Tuckaseigee River. It is named for the site of an 18th century French trading post that the French considered to be the east gate (la port) to the Cherokee country. ° FITTIFIED SPRING is located in Swain County in the GSMNP. The name refers to the intermittent flow of water from the springhead. After an earthquake in 1916, it was said to have a seven-minute on, seven-minute off flow pattern. This curiosity, alas, was disrupted in 1936 by a dynamite blast during some Civilian Conservation Corps trail construction. ° GABBY BRANCH is situated in Cherokee County. What a wonderful name for a mountain stream! Instead of merely babbling away, this one seemed to be talking incessantly. ° HANGING DOG COMMUNITY, HANGING DOG CREEK and HANGING DOG MOUNTAIN are all located in Cherokee County. The Dockery Family Association Inc. website (http://www.tib.com/dfai/dfaihdog.htm) provides an account of How Hanging Dog Got Its Name. An Indian named Running Deer hunted deer in the area with his dog, Wolf. Late one winter day, he wounded a deer with an arrow, and Wolf set out after the wounded animal, which headed into the main stream with the dog close behind. A moment later Running Deer spotted Wolf, who was dangling from a mass of jammed logs, debris, and fox grape vines in the middle of the stream. His entanglement was so severe he was in imminent danger of drowning. Running Deer shouted encouragement to Wolf as he plunged into the icy flooded water, fought his way to the dog, and released him. The two then swam to the bank and resumed the chase of the wounded buck, which was soon captured in a clump of laurel bushes. Well, Ive run out of time and space and have only gotten to H. The next time we consider place names, Ill start in with I and try to make it to Z. George Ellison is a writer who lives in Bryson City. He wrote the biographical introductions for the reissues of two Appalachian classics: Horace Kepharts Our Southern Highlanders and James Mooneys History, Myths, and Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees. Readers can contact him at P.O. Box 1262, Bryson City, N.C. 28713, or at ellisongeorge@cs.com |
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