Carolina Mountain Life Magazine, Autumn 2021

Page 73

HISTORY ON A STICK

CRANBERRY MINES IN AVERY COUNTY

History on a Stick:

Spruce Pine Mining District By Michael C. Hardy

M

ention the Spruce Pine Mining District, and the area right around the town of Spruce Pine in Mitchell County comes to mind. However, Spruce Pine sits in the middle of the mining district. The whole district extends for 25 miles, from Avery County through Mitchell, and into Yancey County. Stories left by the earliest settlers make mention of the evidence left behind in mines worked by Native Americans, or perhaps the Spanish, centuries before the settlers themselves arrived in the late 1700s. Massive trees were found growing in old mine pits or nearby spoil piles, indicating how long ago the sites had been active. Formal mining by European settlers in the area really begins at the Cranberry Iron Ore mines in Avery County. Iron ore was commercially mined prior to and during the Civil War, but within two decades after the war, a rail line had reached Cranberry from Tennessee, and mining took off at Cranberry. Cranberry was one of the major iron ore suppliers in the South until the mine closed in 1929, victim of the Great Depression. In the 1870s and 1880s, a commercial market became available for mica. John G. Heap and Elisha B. Clapp arrived in the Toe River Valley to explore the mica deposits. They mined at the Sink Hole Mine and the mica mines in Clarissa. Most of this mica was used in stoves and as gas lamp shades. In 1881, Thomas Edison invented an electrical motor using mica as an insulator. The first mica mining craze was underway as mica was used in many electric products. The demand lasted through World War I, but the Great Depression and cheap mica from India slowed production in the Toe River Valley. World War II brought an increase of demand, and three-fourths of all mica in the world was coming from western North Carolina. The Meadow Mine on Doublehead Mountain is said to have produced more mica than any

MICA PIT IN MITCHELL COUNTY other mine in history. The demand continued into the 1960s, but today it is once again cheaper to get mica from overseas. Gold and silver were mined at times in the area. Former United States Senator and Confederate general Thomas L. Clingman was digging for silver at the Sink Hole Mine when he began pulling out mica. Clingman also mined for silver in the 1870s on Beech Creek on Beech Mountain. On several occasions, people have mined for gold on Grandfather Mountain, finding small quantities. A host of other minerals have been mined in the Toe River Valley over the centuries: aquamarine, kaolin, feldspar, corundum, columbite, lead, clay, kyanite, olivine, asbestos, and many others. It is estimated that at least 247 different minerals and rocks have been found in the Spruce Pine Mining District. In 2005, students from Harris Middle School helped to erect a North Carolina Highway Historical Marker at the Museum of North Carolina Minerals in Spruce Pine. It is located at the intersection of the Blue Ridge Parkway and NC226. CAROLINA MOUNTAIN LIFE Autumn 2021 —

73


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Articles inside

In the CML Kitchen with Meagan Goheen

7min
pages 128-132

Waterfront Group Offers New Wine Options |By Karen Rieley

5min
pages 121-127

Roll’d Sweets | By Pan McCaslin

4min
pages 111-115

Ounce of Prevention with Mike Teague

4min
page 107

High Country Fungi | By CML Staff

8min
pages 108-110

Be Well with Samantha Steele

5min
pages 104-106

ARHS Expands to Meet Health Needs | By Kim S. Davis

5min
pages 100-103

Community and Local Business News

11min
pages 95-99

Local Tidbits

8min
pages 86-90

Local Realtors on Affordable Communities | By Jason Reagan

8min
pages 91-94

Givers of Hope for Hospitality House | By Anna Lisa Stump

4min
page 85

Ray Christian – A Resilient Storyteller | By Karen Rieley

6min
pages 80-81

Shulls Mill Revisited | By Julie Farthing

7min
pages 78-79

Lieutenant Colonel John Collier – A Vet’s Story | By Steve York

6min
pages 82-84

Watauga County Sheriffs’ Wall of Fame | By Julie Farthing

3min
page 77

Historic Cemeteries | By Elizabeth Baird Hardy

6min
pages 74-76

History on a Stick with Michael C. Hardy

2min
page 73

Wisdom and Ways with Jim Casada

8min
pages 71-72

Trail Reports

3min
page 61

Fishing with Andrew Corpening

8min
pages 67-70

Blue Ridge Explorers with Tamara S. Randolph

4min
pages 59-60

Notes from Grandfather Mountain

6min
pages 56-58

Crazy for Grazin’ – Eating on Board | By Gail Greco

4min
page 51

Mayland’s Earth to Sky Park | By Elizabeth Baird Hardy

5min
pages 62-64

Book Nook

3min
page 50

Behind the Lens – Capturing Fall Colors | By Local Photographers

3min
pages 48-49

NC’s Treasure – Rosemary Harris | By Keith Martin

9min
pages 40-41

App Theatre is Live | By Keith Martin

5min
pages 45-47

Cultural Calendar with Keith Martin

9min
pages 26-31

Where Are They Now? | By Trimella Chaney

4min
pages 37-39

Where the Music is | By CML Staff

6min
pages 42-44

Valle Country Fair & Woolly Worm | By Steve York

8min
pages 24-25

Regional Happenings | By CML Staff

18min
pages 20-23
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