Horace Kephart

Our Southern Highlanders


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href="#ulink_1c6f6dc3-3c31-57f2-84ab-67347a0eb284">72 “What soldiers these fellows would make under leadership of some backwoods Napoleon” 80 “By and by up they came, carrying the bear on the trimmed sapling” 88 Skinning a frozen bear 96 “… Powerful steep and laurely. …” 104 Mountain still-house hidden in the laurel 112 Moonshine still, side view 120 Moonshine still in full operation 128 Corn mill and blacksmith forge 136 A tub-mill 152 Cabin on the Little Fork of Sugar Fork of Hazel Creek in which the author lived alone for three years 160 A mountain home 176 Many of the homes have but one window 192 The schoolhouse 208 “At thirty a mountain woman is apt to have a worn and faded look” 216 The misty veil of falling water 232 An average mountain cabin 240 A bee-gum 248 Let the women do the work 264 “Till the sky-line blends with the sky itself” 288 Whitewater Falls 312 The road follows the creek—there may be a dozen fords in a mile 320 “Dense forest and luxuriant undergrowth” 336

      APPALACHIA

      The wavy black line shows the outer boundaries of Southern Appalachian Region.

       The shaded portion shows the chief areas covered by high mountains, 3,000 to 6,700 feet above sea-level.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      In one of Poe’s minor tales, written in 1845, there is a vague allusion to wild mountains in western Virginia “tenanted by fierce and uncouth races of men.” This, so far as I know, was the first reference in literature to our Southern mountaineers, and it stood as their only characterization until Miss Murfree (“Charles Egbert Craddock”) began her stories of the Cumberland hills.

      Time and retouching have done little to soften our Highlander’s portrait. Among reading people generally, South as well as North, to name him is to conjure up a tall, slouching figure in homespun, who carries a rifle as habitually as he does his hat, and who may tilt its muzzle toward a stranger before addressing him, the form of salutation being:

      “Stop thar! Whut’s you-unses name? Whar’s you-uns a-goin’ ter?”

      Let us admit that there is just enough truth in this caricature to give it a point that will stick. Our typical mountaineer is lank, he is always unkempt, he is fond of toting a gun on his shoulder, and his curiosity about a stranger’s name and business is promptly, though politely, outspoken. For the rest, he is a man of mystery. The great world outside his mountains knows almost as little about him as he does of it; and that is little indeed. News in order to reach him must be of such widespread interest as fairly to fall from heaven; correspondingly, scarce any incidents of mountain life will leak out unless they be of sensational nature, such as the shooting of a revenue officer in Carolina, the massacre of a Virginia court, or the outbreak of another feud in “bloody Breathitt.” And so, from the grim sameness of such reports, the world infers that battle, murder, and sudden death are commonplaces in Appalachia.

      To be sure, in Miss Murfree’s novels, as in those of John Fox, Jr., and of Alice MacGowan, we do meet characters more genial than feudists and illicit distillers; none the less, when we have closed the book, who is it that stands out clearest as type and pattern of the mountaineer? Is it not he of the long rifle and peremptory challenge? And whether this be because he gets most of the limelight, or because we have a furtive liking for that sort of thing (on paper), or whether the armed outlaw be indeed a genuine protagonist—in any case, the Appalachian people remain in public estimation to-day, as Poe judged them, an uncouth and fierce race of men, inhabiting a wild mountain region little known.

      The Southern highlands themselves are a mysterious realm. When I prepared, eight years ago, for my first sojourn in the Great Smoky Mountains, which form the master chain of the Appalachian system, I could find in no library a guide to that region. The most diligent research failed to discover so much as a magazine article, written within this generation, that described the land and its people. Nay, there was not even a novel or a story that showed intimate local knowledge. Had I been going to Teneriffe or Timbuctu, the libraries would have furnished information a-plenty;