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Asheville
Art Museum | Asheville-Buncombe
Library | UNC
Asheville |
YMI
Cultural Center
Appalachian State University |Appalachian
Cultural Museum |Southern
Highland Craft Guild
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LAKES, RIVERS
& STREAMS |
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| LAKES | |
| Name | Notes |
| Lake Adger | See |
| Lake Fairfield | (1913, Morley, Margaret. In the Carolina Mountains, p.261, 262) (Spalding, Arthur. The Hills O' Ca'liny, 1921.) |
| Lake Fontana | |
| Lake Kanuga | Owned by the Episcopal Church |
| Lake Logan | On the West Fork of the Pigeon River about 7 1/2 miles south of Woodrow, NC. Approximately 120 acres in size. |
| Lake Lure | |
| Lake Norman | |
| Lake Sapphire | (1913, Morley, p.261, 262) |
| Lake Toxaway | (1913, Morley, p.261, 262) |
| RIVERS, STREAMS | |
| Name | Notes |
| Armstrong Creek | (1913, Morley, p.317) |
| Bear Creek | (1913, Morley, p.329) |
| Beetree Creek | |
| Big Laurel Creek | (1913, Morley, p. 229) |
| Broad River | (1913, Morley, p. 94, 98) |
| Bull Creek | |
| Cane Creek | (1913, Morley, p. 94, 333) |
| Catawba River | (1913, Morley, p.31) |
| Cattail Branch | (1913, Morley, p. 313) |
| Christian Creek | |
| Cold Creek | (1913, Morley, p.287) |
| Cowee Creek | (1913, Morley, p.267, 268) |
| Crabtree Creek | (1913, Morley, p.297) |
| Cullasagee River | (1913, Morley, p.258) |
| Davidson's River | (1913, Morley, p.134) |
| Dutch Creek | (1913, Morley, p.360) |
| Estatoe River | See Toe River |
| French Broad River | (1913, Morley, p.93,98,121,124,127,263) |
| Fines Creek | (1883, Ziegler, Wilbur and Ben Grosscup. In the Heart of the Alleghanies... p.30; Also 1914, Arthur, John. Western North Carolina: A History from 1730 to 1913, p. 111), |
| Flat Creek | |
| Gashes Creek | |
| Grandmother Creek | (1913, Morley, p.340) |
| Grassy Branch | |
| Green River | (1913, Morley, p.94, 111) |
| Haw Creek | |
| Hickory Nut Creek | (1913, Morley, p.98) |
| Hogshead Creek | Source for Maidenhair Falls. |
| Horsepasture River | (1913, Morley, p.261, 262, 275) |
| Hiwassee River | |
| Ivy River | (1913, Morley, p.305) |
| Laurel River (Laurel Fork) | (1913, Morley, p.243) |
| Linville River | (1913, Morley, p.243, 338, 341, 342, 374) |
| Little Crabtree Creek | (1913, Morley, p.304, 316) |
| Little Tennessee River | (1913, Morley, p.258) |
| Mill River | (1913, Morley, p.358) |
| Nantahala River | |
| New River | See also the New River web site. |
| Nolichucky River | (1913, Morley, p.315) |
| Oconoalufty River | (1913, Morley, p.235, 237, 238) |
| Pacolet River | (1913, Morley, p.7, 80, 111, 131, 381) |
| Pigeon River | |
| Pisgah Creek | (1913, Morley, p.291) |
| Plumtree Creek | (1913, Morley, p.338) |
| Pool Creek | (1913, Morley, p.98, 99) |
| Plott Creek | (1913, Morley, p.300) |
| Richland Creek | (1913, Morley, p.296) |
| Ross Creek | |
| Sugar Fork Creek | (1913, Morley, p.257) |
| Swannanoa River | (1913, Morley, p.127, 134, 305) |
| Sweeten Creek | |
| Tessentee Creek | (1913, Morley, p.271) |
| Tiger River | (1913, Morley, p.187, 188) |
| Toe River (Estatoa River) | |
| Tomahawk Branch | |
| Toxaway River | (1913, Morley, p.262) |
| Tuckasegee River | (1913, Morley, p.249) |
| Valley River | (1913, Morley, p.278) |
| Vaughn's Creek | (1913, Morley, p.210) |
| Watauga River | (1913, Morley, p.361, 363, 369) |
| Yadkin River | |
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"■■ LAND OF THE SKY." Southwest from Asheville, some two-score miles away, lies the gorge of the Nantahala River, through which the Murphy branch of the Southern Railway passes for more than a dozen miles. By many this gorge is believed to be the most picturesque and beautiful in Western North Carolina ... " The mountains that shield from the rude northern blast — mute monitors, they, of the ages long past — Like sentinels watc'-: o'er the valley below where the swift crystal streams unceasingly flow. The pure, healthful breeze, the life-giving air, the beauteous landscape, oft new, ever fair, Are gifts that have come from the Father on high; to Him be all praise for ' The Land of the Sky.'" In some sentimental verse the Indian, in passing off the earth, is made to say to his white brother : " Our name is on your waters, you cannot wash it out." Nowhere is this more true than in North Carolina, where one finds the Tuckaseegee, Savannah, Tennessee, Elijay, Cartoogajay, Tuskeegee. Oconaluftee, Stekoah, Tusquitta, Nantahala and kindred others."
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The
Western North Carolina Heritage project is 100% supported with
federal LSTA funds made possible through a grant from the Institute of
Museum and Library Services, administered by the State Library of North
Carolina, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources.
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