fbpx
Wikipedia

Valley River

The Valley River is a tributary of the Hiwassee River. It arises as a pair of springs in the Snowbird Mountains of Cherokee County, North Carolina and descends 2,960 feet (900 m)[5] in elevation in approximately forty miles (64 km) to enter the Hiwassee embayment at present-day Murphy, North Carolina.

Valley River
Tributary to Hiawassee River
Old railroad bridge over the Valley River in Murphy, North Carolina, in July 2023
Location of Valley River mouth
Valley River (the United States)
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNorth Carolina
CountyCherokee
CityAndrews
Murphy
Physical characteristics
SourceTulula Creek divide
 • locationabout 2 miles northwest of Tipton, North Carolina
 • coordinates35°15′24″N 083°42′42″W / 35.25667°N 83.71167°W / 35.25667; -83.71167[1]
 • elevation3,520 ft (1,070 m)[2]
MouthHiawassee River
 • location
Murphy, North Carolina
 • coordinates
35°05′33″N 084°02′22″W / 35.09250°N 84.03944°W / 35.09250; -84.03944[1]
 • elevation
1,525 ft (465 m)[2]
Length29.57 mi (47.59 km)[3]
Basin size117.13 square miles (303.4 km2)[4]
Discharge 
 • locationHiawassee River (in Hiawassee Lake)
 • average295.62 cu ft/s (8.371 m3/s) at mouth with Hiawassee River[4]
Basin features
ProgressionHiawassee RiverTennessee RiverOhio RiverMississippi RiverGulf of Mexico
River systemHiawassee River
Tributaries 
 • leftPowder Burnt Branch, Long Branch, Watkins Creek, Beetree Branch, Jenkins Cove, Turnpike Creek, Harris Creek, Puncheon Branch, Worm Creek, Junaluska Creek, Tatham Creek, Town Branch, Whitaker Branch, Brown Creek, Sharp Branch, Taylor Creek, Parker Branch, Laurel Branch, Parsons Branch, Vengeance Creek, Highfall Branch, Sam Branch, Long Branch, Pole Bridge Branch, Sam Newton Branch, Rogers Creek, Sales Branch, Rattler Branch, George Martin Branch, Wesley Martin Branch, Palmer Branch
 • rightTrim Cove, Wright Branch, Nelson Creek, Millseat Branch, Bryson Branch, Brady Branch, Tank Branch, Mill Branch, Melton Creek, Doctor Branch, Tom Thumb Creek, Stillhouse Branch, Flat Branch, Mill Branch, Burnt Shanty Branch, Gipp Creek, Stewart Branch, Pile Creek, Britton Creek, Don Holland Creek, Webb Creek, Ricket Branch, Morris Creek, Welch Mill Creek, Hyatts Creek, Bettis Branch, Magazine Branch, Mason Branch, Stillhouse Branch, Morgan Creek, Mary Branch, Colvard Creek, Hayes Mill Creek, Moose Cove, Stillhouse Branch, Marble Creek, Brittain Branch
WaterbodiesHiawassee Lake
BridgesCampbell Terrace (x3), Kadie Lane, Woodhaven Lane, Old US 19, US 19 (x2), Nelson Road, Patterson Lane, US 19-US 129 (x3), Driftwood Lane, Gipp Creek Road, Stewart Road, US 19, Robbinsville Road, Locust Street, Main Street (US 19), NC 141, US 19 (x4), Casino Parkway, Snap On Road, US 19-US 129, Black and Gold Drive, Bulldog Drive, US 19, Tennessee Street
U.S. Route 19 bridge over the Valley River at Murphy, North Carolina in 1937

The Valley River flows generally southwest. US 19 runs parallel to it between Topton and Murphy, North Carolina, where it crosses the river via a small bridge. The river has a total watershed of 120 m2 (11.15km2)[6]

Variant names edit

According to the Geographic Names Information System, it has also been known historically as:[1]

  • Konchete River

Geology edit

The Valley River formed in the uplifting of the Appalachian chain during the Paleozoic Era, Devonian Period, in an event known as the Alleghenian orogeny. Earlier in the Paleozoic, the area was the site of shallow seas which resulted in large limestone deposits. The Alleghenian orogeny caused both uplift and the metamorphism of rock at the highest pressure points within the various Appalachian mountain chains. The Snowbird and Unicoi Mountains, which border the Valley River, contain silver, gold, copper, limestone, sandstone, marble, brown iron ore in economically recoverable quantities.[7] During the erosion of the mountains over a 480 million-year period, the Valley River carved a broad, flat valley and deposited rich fertile soil.

Marble, North Carolina is the site of high-quality white, gray, pink and blue marble. It has been known by European Americans since the removal of the Cherokee in 1838–1839. They have quarried here intermittently ever since.

Near Rhodo, North Carolina is Silvermine Creek, said to be the location of a small silver deposit. Silvermine Creek is a tributary of the Valley River. The following account was dated 1849.

"In the counties west of the Blue Ridge, there has been as yet no exploration to any depth beneath the surface of the ground, with perhaps the single exception of the old excavations in the county of Cherokee. According to the most commonly received Indian tradition, they were excavated more than a century ago, by a company of Spaniards from Florida. They are said to have worked there for two or three summers, to have obtained a white metal, and prospered greatly in their mining operations, until the Cherokees, finding that if it became generally known that there were valuable mines in their country, the cupidity of the white men would expel them from it, determined in solemn council to destroy the whole party, and that in obedience to that decree no one of the adventurous strangers was allowed to return to the country whence they came. Though this story accords very well with the Indian laws which condemned to death those who disclosed the existence of mines to white men, yet I do not regard it as entitled too much credit".[8]

Talc has been mined in Cherokee County since at least the 1850s.[9]

At Tomotla, the river has a mean annual discharge of 247 cu ft/s (7.0 m3/s)[10]

History of settlement edit

Indigenous settlement edit

Indigenous peoples have been proven to have settled here between 8000 and 1000 BC.[11] Two miles (3.2 km) east of the terminus of the Valley River lies the Peachtree Mound, an Archaic period earthwork mound. It was excavated in 1933 by the Smithsonian.[12]

Successive indigenous cultures continued to arise here. During the Pisgah phase (1000 to 1500) of the South Appalachian Mississippian culture, the Valley River was known as Gunahita or “Long River”. Later the Cherokee called it Konehetee (or Konnaheeta), meaning Valley River.[13][14]


Another ancient mound is known as the Andrews Mound; it is located on private property along the Valley River near Andrews, North Carolina. It is believed to have been built in the Qualla Phase (1500 to 1850). The earliest years were during the South Appalachian Mississippian culture period in this region. The Iroquoian-speaking Cherokee people are believed to have reached this area later. [15]


Settlements along the Valley River and the larger Hiwassee River were classified among what English colonists referred to as the Valley Towns. The traders and colonists of South Carolina classified six (6) regions of Cherokee villages in 1700 by geographic groupings, based on their relation to the colonial settlements at the Atlantic coast.[16] The Cherokee towns of Conoske, Tomatly, Little Telliquo and Nayowee were located along the Valley River.[17]

The Cherokee called the confluence of the Valley River at the Hiwassee River Tlanusi’yi, or ‘The Leech Place’. They said that it was the home of a legendary giant leech that ate the ears and noses of Cherokee victims.[18]

European settlement edit

Hernando De Soto was the first European to enter the area on May 25 to 30, 1540. De Soto’s march paralleled the Valley River on an old Indian trail (today US 19) from the Cherokee town of Xuala (modern Tryon, NC) to the Cherokee town of Gauxule (modern Asheville, North Carolina). Although no clear record exists, De Soto probably passed near the Cherokee Valley Towns of Conoske, Tomatly, Little Telliquo and Nayowee.[19]

Juan Pardo followed in 1567 traversing the area on the way to building a fort on the Catawba River near Charlotte, North Carolina[20]

The first permanent settlement of Europeans in the area was a Baptist missionary outpost near Peachtree, North Carolina on the Hiwassee River in 1817.[20]

The Valley River saw a succession of administrative and political changes as the counties of western North Carolina were formed and subdivided. In 1753 the Valley River was part of the as yet unsurveyed western end of Anson County, North Carolina. Jacques Nicolas Bellin's Map of Carolina and Georgia of 1757 shows but does not label the Valley River.[21] The Map of Georgia and Carolina by Bellin shows the Valley Towns of Euforsee, Comastee, Little Telliquo, Cotocanahuy, Nayowee, Tomatly, and Chewohe[22]

In 1768 the Valley River became part of Tryon County, North Carolina. In 1779 the Valley River became part of Rutherford County, North Carolina. In 1791 the Valley River became a part of Buncombe County, North Carolina. In 1808 Haywood County, North Carolina, which was to contain the Valley River, was carved from Buncombe County. In 1828, Macon County, North Carolina which was to contain the Valley River was carved from Haywood County. Until 1835, the lands around the Valley River all belonged to the Cherokee.[23]

The 1835 Treaty of Echota ceded the land to the state of North Carolina. Beginning in 1838 at Fort Butler, the Cherokee were marshaled for removal to Oklahoma. The Cherokee were forcibly removed on the order of President Andrew Jackson, despite a ruling in favor of the Cherokee by the US Supreme Court. The march would be known as the Trail of Tears. In 1839, Cherokee County, North Carolina, which now contains the Valley River, was constituted from Haywood County and a land lottery was held, opening the land to permanent European settlement.

The town of Murphy, at the confluence of the Valley and Hiwassee Rivers was founded in 1835. The town of Andrews was founded on the Valley River in 1890 as the railroad moved up the valley.[20] When the towns of Marble, Rhodo and Topton were founded is uncertain; they are the other three communities along the Valley River.

The Valley River Today edit

The Valley River area remains largely rural and agricultural. The lower reaches are navigable in a canoe but there is little activity on the river beyond fishing. At Murphy, the Konehette (“valley” in Cherokee) Park borders the Valley River, providing a greenway.

The State of North Carolina has identified nine tributaries of the Valley River as having some form of impairment, including the entire Valley River between Gipp Creek and Hiwassee Lake. Most of the impairments are minor and result from runoff from pasture or impervious surfaces.[24]

US 19 traverses the Valley River valley providing panoramic views from the Unicoi to the Snowbird Mountains. Historic sections of Murphy and Andrews have been restored and bring some tourism to the area; there are also a large flea market, and recreational opportunities provided by the Hiwassee Lake.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "GNIS Detail - Valley River". geonames.usgs.gov. US Geological Survey. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Valley River Topo Map in Cherokee". TopoZone. Locality, LLC. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  3. ^ "ArcGIS Web Application". epa.maps.arcgis.com. US EPA. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Valley River Watershed Report". US EPA Geoviewer. US EPA. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  5. ^ USGS Topographic Map; 7.5 minute series, Topton, North Carolina; 1976; USGS Topographic Map; 7.5 minute series, Andrews, North Carolina, 1990 and USGS Topographic Map; 7.5 minute series, Murphy, North Carolina, 1990
  6. ^ Hiwassee River Basin Report http://h2o.enr.state.nc.us/basinwide/documents/Chapter2Subbasin02_001.pdf
  7. ^ Asheville Historic Resources Commission: referenced to: (1883. Wilbur G. Zeigler and Ben Grosscup. In the Heart of the Alleghanies or Western North Carolina..., pp. 208–9)
  8. ^ "T.L. Clingman's 1849 letter to the Editor of The Highland Messenger, Asheville, NC's newspaper.", in Lanman, Charles. Letters from the Allegheny Mountains, p. 189.
  9. ^ History of Western North Carolina: Volume XXV: Mines & Mining; John Preston Arthur; 1914 [1]
  10. ^ "USGS Surface Water data for North Carolina: USGS Surface-Water Annual Statistics".
  11. ^ Peachtree Mound Village Site: http://www.greatcarolinaproperty.com/Outdoor-recreation/Peachtree-mound-village-site.htm
  12. ^ Hiwassee River Basin: http://www.eenorthcarolina.org/public/ecoaddress/riverbasins/hiwassee.150dpi.pdf
  13. ^ Blue Ridge Highlander: http://www.theblueridgehighlander.com/cherokee_county_north_carolina/
  14. ^ Neufeld, Rob (May 29, 2017). "Is WNC a coherent cultural entity?". Asheville Citizen-Times. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  15. ^ National Register of Historic Places: http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/nc/Cherokee/state.html
  16. ^ "Cherokee Archaeology," by David G. Moore, Western Office, North Carolina Division of Archives and History, Asheville, North Carolina http://www.amonsoquathbandofcherokee.com/cherokee-archaeology.html
  17. ^ Great Smoky Mountain Expressway http://www.floridahistory.com/inset9.html#Great%20Smoky%20Mountain%20Expressway
  18. ^ North Carolina Folk Life Institute: http://www.ncfolk.org/TravelGuides/CHI_Stop7.aspx 2012-08-25 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ DeSoto’s Carolina Trails: http://www.floridahistory.com/inset9.html
  20. ^ a b c Blue Ridge Highlander http://www.theblueridgehighlander.com/cherokee_county_north_carolina/
  21. ^ Bellin Map: http://georgiainfo.galileo.usg.edu/gamaps/ga1757map.htm
  22. ^ "Digital Library of Georgia".
  23. ^ North Carolina County Formations: http://statelibrary.ncdcr.gov/nc/CNTYOUT/CTYCOVER.HTM
  24. ^ Hiwassee Sub Basin Report; State of North Carolina; 2006 http://h2o.enr.state.nc.us/basinwide/documents/Chapter2Subbasin02_001.pdf

valley, river, tributary, hiwassee, river, arises, pair, springs, snowbird, mountains, cherokee, county, north, carolina, descends, feet, elevation, approximately, forty, miles, enter, hiwassee, embayment, present, murphy, north, carolina, tributary, hiawassee. The Valley River is a tributary of the Hiwassee River It arises as a pair of springs in the Snowbird Mountains of Cherokee County North Carolina and descends 2 960 feet 900 m 5 in elevation in approximately forty miles 64 km to enter the Hiwassee embayment at present day Murphy North Carolina Valley RiverTributary to Hiawassee RiverOld railroad bridge over the Valley River in Murphy North Carolina in July 2023Location of Valley River mouthShow map of North CarolinaValley River the United States Show map of the United StatesLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNorth CarolinaCountyCherokeeCityAndrewsMurphyPhysical characteristicsSourceTulula Creek divide locationabout 2 miles northwest of Tipton North Carolina coordinates35 15 24 N 083 42 42 W 35 25667 N 83 71167 W 35 25667 83 71167 1 elevation3 520 ft 1 070 m 2 MouthHiawassee River locationMurphy North Carolina coordinates35 05 33 N 084 02 22 W 35 09250 N 84 03944 W 35 09250 84 03944 1 elevation1 525 ft 465 m 2 Length29 57 mi 47 59 km 3 Basin size117 13 square miles 303 4 km2 4 Discharge locationHiawassee River in Hiawassee Lake average295 62 cu ft s 8 371 m3 s at mouth with Hiawassee River 4 Basin featuresProgressionHiawassee River Tennessee River Ohio River Mississippi River Gulf of MexicoRiver systemHiawassee RiverTributaries leftPowder Burnt Branch Long Branch Watkins Creek Beetree Branch Jenkins Cove Turnpike Creek Harris Creek Puncheon Branch Worm Creek Junaluska Creek Tatham Creek Town Branch Whitaker Branch Brown Creek Sharp Branch Taylor Creek Parker Branch Laurel Branch Parsons Branch Vengeance Creek Highfall Branch Sam Branch Long Branch Pole Bridge Branch Sam Newton Branch Rogers Creek Sales Branch Rattler Branch George Martin Branch Wesley Martin Branch Palmer Branch rightTrim Cove Wright Branch Nelson Creek Millseat Branch Bryson Branch Brady Branch Tank Branch Mill Branch Melton Creek Doctor Branch Tom Thumb Creek Stillhouse Branch Flat Branch Mill Branch Burnt Shanty Branch Gipp Creek Stewart Branch Pile Creek Britton Creek Don Holland Creek Webb Creek Ricket Branch Morris Creek Welch Mill Creek Hyatts Creek Bettis Branch Magazine Branch Mason Branch Stillhouse Branch Morgan Creek Mary Branch Colvard Creek Hayes Mill Creek Moose Cove Stillhouse Branch Marble Creek Brittain BranchWaterbodiesHiawassee LakeBridgesCampbell Terrace x3 Kadie Lane Woodhaven Lane Old US 19 US 19 x2 Nelson Road Patterson Lane US 19 US 129 x3 Driftwood Lane Gipp Creek Road Stewart Road US 19 Robbinsville Road Locust Street Main Street US 19 NC 141 US 19 x4 Casino Parkway Snap On Road US 19 US 129 Black and Gold Drive Bulldog Drive US 19 Tennessee StreetFor other uses see Valley River disambiguation Not to be confused with River Valley U S Route 19 bridge over the Valley River at Murphy North Carolina in 1937The Valley River flows generally southwest US 19 runs parallel to it between Topton and Murphy North Carolina where it crosses the river via a small bridge The river has a total watershed of 120 m2 11 15km2 6 Contents 1 Variant names 2 Geology 3 History of settlement 3 1 Indigenous settlement 3 2 European settlement 4 The Valley River Today 5 ReferencesVariant names editAccording to the Geographic Names Information System it has also been known historically as 1 Konchete RiverGeology editThe Valley River formed in the uplifting of the Appalachian chain during the Paleozoic Era Devonian Period in an event known as the Alleghenian orogeny Earlier in the Paleozoic the area was the site of shallow seas which resulted in large limestone deposits The Alleghenian orogeny caused both uplift and the metamorphism of rock at the highest pressure points within the various Appalachian mountain chains The Snowbird and Unicoi Mountains which border the Valley River contain silver gold copper limestone sandstone marble brown iron ore in economically recoverable quantities 7 During the erosion of the mountains over a 480 million year period the Valley River carved a broad flat valley and deposited rich fertile soil Marble North Carolina is the site of high quality white gray pink and blue marble It has been known by European Americans since the removal of the Cherokee in 1838 1839 They have quarried here intermittently ever since Near Rhodo North Carolina is Silvermine Creek said to be the location of a small silver deposit Silvermine Creek is a tributary of the Valley River The following account was dated 1849 In the counties west of the Blue Ridge there has been as yet no exploration to any depth beneath the surface of the ground with perhaps the single exception of the old excavations in the county of Cherokee According to the most commonly received Indian tradition they were excavated more than a century ago by a company of Spaniards from Florida They are said to have worked there for two or three summers to have obtained a white metal and prospered greatly in their mining operations until the Cherokees finding that if it became generally known that there were valuable mines in their country the cupidity of the white men would expel them from it determined in solemn council to destroy the whole party and that in obedience to that decree no one of the adventurous strangers was allowed to return to the country whence they came Though this story accords very well with the Indian laws which condemned to death those who disclosed the existence of mines to white men yet I do not regard it as entitled too much credit 8 Talc has been mined in Cherokee County since at least the 1850s 9 At Tomotla the river has a mean annual discharge of 247 cu ft s 7 0 m3 s 10 History of settlement editIndigenous settlement edit Indigenous peoples have been proven to have settled here between 8000 and 1000 BC 11 Two miles 3 2 km east of the terminus of the Valley River lies the Peachtree Mound an Archaic period earthwork mound It was excavated in 1933 by the Smithsonian 12 Successive indigenous cultures continued to arise here During the Pisgah phase 1000 to 1500 of the South Appalachian Mississippian culture the Valley River was known as Gunahita or Long River Later the Cherokee called it Konehetee or Konnaheeta meaning Valley River 13 14 Another ancient mound is known as the Andrews Mound it is located on private property along the Valley River near Andrews North Carolina It is believed to have been built in the Qualla Phase 1500 to 1850 The earliest years were during the South Appalachian Mississippian culture period in this region The Iroquoian speaking Cherokee people are believed to have reached this area later 15 Settlements along the Valley River and the larger Hiwassee River were classified among what English colonists referred to as the Valley Towns The traders and colonists of South Carolina classified six 6 regions of Cherokee villages in 1700 by geographic groupings based on their relation to the colonial settlements at the Atlantic coast 16 The Cherokee towns of Conoske Tomatly Little Telliquo and Nayowee were located along the Valley River 17 The Cherokee called the confluence of the Valley River at the Hiwassee River Tlanusi yi or The Leech Place They said that it was the home of a legendary giant leech that ate the ears and noses of Cherokee victims 18 European settlement edit Hernando De Soto was the first European to enter the area on May 25 to 30 1540 De Soto s march paralleled the Valley River on an old Indian trail today US 19 from the Cherokee town of Xuala modern Tryon NC to the Cherokee town of Gauxule modern Asheville North Carolina Although no clear record exists De Soto probably passed near the Cherokee Valley Towns of Conoske Tomatly Little Telliquo and Nayowee 19 Juan Pardo followed in 1567 traversing the area on the way to building a fort on the Catawba River near Charlotte North Carolina 20 The first permanent settlement of Europeans in the area was a Baptist missionary outpost near Peachtree North Carolina on the Hiwassee River in 1817 20 The Valley River saw a succession of administrative and political changes as the counties of western North Carolina were formed and subdivided In 1753 the Valley River was part of the as yet unsurveyed western end of Anson County North Carolina Jacques Nicolas Bellin s Map of Carolina and Georgia of 1757 shows but does not label the Valley River 21 The Map of Georgia and Carolina by Bellin shows the Valley Towns of Euforsee Comastee Little Telliquo Cotocanahuy Nayowee Tomatly and Chewohe 22 In 1768 the Valley River became part of Tryon County North Carolina In 1779 the Valley River became part of Rutherford County North Carolina In 1791 the Valley River became a part of Buncombe County North Carolina In 1808 Haywood County North Carolina which was to contain the Valley River was carved from Buncombe County In 1828 Macon County North Carolina which was to contain the Valley River was carved from Haywood County Until 1835 the lands around the Valley River all belonged to the Cherokee 23 The 1835 Treaty of Echota ceded the land to the state of North Carolina Beginning in 1838 at Fort Butler the Cherokee were marshaled for removal to Oklahoma The Cherokee were forcibly removed on the order of President Andrew Jackson despite a ruling in favor of the Cherokee by the US Supreme Court The march would be known as the Trail of Tears In 1839 Cherokee County North Carolina which now contains the Valley River was constituted from Haywood County and a land lottery was held opening the land to permanent European settlement The town of Murphy at the confluence of the Valley and Hiwassee Rivers was founded in 1835 The town of Andrews was founded on the Valley River in 1890 as the railroad moved up the valley 20 When the towns of Marble Rhodo and Topton were founded is uncertain they are the other three communities along the Valley River The Valley River Today editThe Valley River area remains largely rural and agricultural The lower reaches are navigable in a canoe but there is little activity on the river beyond fishing At Murphy the Konehette valley in Cherokee Park borders the Valley River providing a greenway The State of North Carolina has identified nine tributaries of the Valley River as having some form of impairment including the entire Valley River between Gipp Creek and Hiwassee Lake Most of the impairments are minor and result from runoff from pasture or impervious surfaces 24 US 19 traverses the Valley River valley providing panoramic views from the Unicoi to the Snowbird Mountains Historic sections of Murphy and Andrews have been restored and bring some tourism to the area there are also a large flea market and recreational opportunities provided by the Hiwassee Lake References edit a b c GNIS Detail Valley River geonames usgs gov US Geological Survey Retrieved 28 August 2020 a b Valley River Topo Map in Cherokee TopoZone Locality LLC Retrieved 28 August 2020 ArcGIS Web Application epa maps arcgis com US EPA Retrieved 28 August 2020 a b Valley River Watershed Report US EPA Geoviewer US EPA Retrieved 28 August 2020 USGS Topographic Map 7 5 minute series Topton North Carolina 1976 USGS Topographic Map 7 5 minute series Andrews North Carolina 1990 and USGS Topographic Map 7 5 minute series Murphy North Carolina 1990 Hiwassee River Basin Report http h2o enr state nc us basinwide documents Chapter2Subbasin02 001 pdf Asheville Historic Resources Commission referenced to 1883 Wilbur G Zeigler and Ben Grosscup In the Heart of the Alleghanies or Western North Carolina pp 208 9 https web archive org web 20080704051827 http www heritagewnc org WNC mines minerals default mines minerals htm T L Clingman s 1849 letter to the Editor of The Highland Messenger Asheville NC s newspaper in Lanman Charles Letters from the Allegheny Mountains p 189 History of Western North Carolina Volume XXV Mines amp Mining John Preston Arthur 1914 1 USGS Surface Water data for North Carolina USGS Surface Water Annual Statistics Peachtree Mound Village Site http www greatcarolinaproperty com Outdoor recreation Peachtree mound village site htm Hiwassee River Basin http www eenorthcarolina org public ecoaddress riverbasins hiwassee 150dpi pdf Blue Ridge Highlander http www theblueridgehighlander com cherokee county north carolina Neufeld Rob May 29 2017 Is WNC a coherent cultural entity Asheville Citizen Times Retrieved May 29 2017 National Register of Historic Places http www nationalregisterofhistoricplaces com nc Cherokee state html Cherokee Archaeology by David G Moore Western Office North Carolina Division of Archives and History Asheville North Carolina http www amonsoquathbandofcherokee com cherokee archaeology html Great Smoky Mountain Expressway http www floridahistory com inset9 html Great 20Smoky 20Mountain 20Expressway North Carolina Folk Life Institute http www ncfolk org TravelGuides CHI Stop7 aspx Archived 2012 08 25 at the Wayback Machine DeSoto s Carolina Trails http www floridahistory com inset9 html a b c Blue Ridge Highlander http www theblueridgehighlander com cherokee county north carolina Bellin Map http georgiainfo galileo usg edu gamaps ga1757map htm Digital Library of Georgia North Carolina County Formations http statelibrary ncdcr gov nc CNTYOUT CTYCOVER HTM Hiwassee Sub Basin Report State of North Carolina 2006 http h2o enr state nc us basinwide documents Chapter2Subbasin02 001 pdf Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Valley River amp oldid 1171893106, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.