CarolinaMountainLife-Summer2022

Page 98

Dedy Traver:

Promoting a Bright Future for the Village of Sugar Mountain by Remembering the Past By Kim S. Davis

Sugar Buggy, March 1975

A

n historian is defined as an expert in or student of history, especially of a particular time or region. The Village of Sugar Mountain is fortunate to have Dedy Traver, a passionate resident dedicated to preserving the history of Sugar Mountain, to ensure the area remains a special place for all visitors throughout all seasons. Not only is she the unofficial historian for the Village of Sugar Mountain, she is a community volunteer and an appreciative advocate for her High Country home. Dedy and her family began coming to Sugar Mountain shortly after its inception in 1969. The family stayed in the summer lodge and enjoyed the many amenities. Her father, Al Traver, relocated from New England to Charlotte in the early sixties, and being an avid skier, he saw so much potential that he and her mother moved to the High Country and became full time residents working in real estate and helping manage some of the properties. An enthusiastic photographer, her father took countless photographs of the wildflowers of Sugar Mountain as well as the beginning development of the Sugar Mountain Resort. A great many of his photographic slides depict the construction of the slopes, the building of the lodge and golf course, and other interesting historical details such as the use of horses to pull out the logs because they were more

98 — Summer 2022 CAROLINA MOUNTAIN LIFE

efficient in the rugged terrain than tractors. From its inception, through a bankruptcy, and during the earlier years as an incorporated village, Dedy’s father documented the progression with thousands of slides. Dedy was living in Atlanta and was coming up to ski on weekends with the Atlanta Ski Club when she realized she needed to get out of the city and to this beautiful mountain community permanently. So she followed in her parents footsteps and moved to Sugar Mountain in the early seventies. She worked for several companies over the years, all involved with the Sugar Mountain community in some way, and her love of the natural beauty and variety of activities continued to expand. Dedy came to be the keeper of Sugar Mountain’s history by default because of her access to her father’s vast photographic slide collection, and she has thoroughly embraced the role of historian. After her father passed away in the late 1980s, she inherited his slide presentations and took the initiative to organize them and include narratives for each collection. The Village Hall often refers callers who are looking for historic photos or details to Dedy, and she takes her presentations “on the road” to community organizations. Traver has presented for the Sugar Mountain Community Association to introduce its newer members to the story of

Sugar Mountain. She has also presented at the Banner Elk Book Exchange during their summer programs, and has shared her presentation on the development of the golf course with the golfing community. Additionally, many of her photographs were included in the Sugar Mountain Resort 50th Anniversary Documentary video (viewable on YouTube), put together by Kim Jochl, Vice President of Sugar Mountain Resort and another extraordinary woman and voice for the bounties of Sugar Mountain. When asked about some of the most interesting historical events in Sugar Mountain’s history, Dedy recounts some of the famous and spectacular guests who have helped promote the resort over the years. She shared how Norwegian Olympic Gold Medalist Stein Eriksen, who is often attributed with bringing the love of skiing to the American public, visited the newly formed southern ski area. Other Olympians followed, including charismatic Jean-Claude Killy, who arrived with show-business promoter Jack Lester in a black limousine flying the French and Swiss Flags to promote the value of ski lessons for new southern skiers. American Alpine Olympian Spider Sabich also visited the resort to promote the NASTAR recreational ski racing program. Those historical visits by well-known Olympians


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Articles inside

Recipes from the CML Kitchen with Meagan Goheen

7min
pages 140-148

Community and Local Business News

36min
pages 110-124

Local to Go

3min
pages 130-131

Containing the Good Life

4min
pages 104-106

Local Tidbits

10min
pages 107-109

Be Well with Samantha Steele

6min
pages 125-129

An Appalachian Summer Endowments

9min
pages 100-102

Time Is Relative

3min
page 103

Sugar Mountain Historian: Dedy Traver

5min
pages 98-99

Match Made in the Mountains

8min
pages 96-97

Yonahlossee Racquet Club Turns 100

4min
pages 85-89

History on a Stick with Michael C. Hardy

2min
pages 93-94

Historic Whitehead Home

7min
pages 90-92

Wisdom and Ways with Jim Casada

4min
page 95

Rite of Passage

10min
pages 82-84

Golf Guide with Tom McAuliffe

7min
pages 79-81

Fishing with Andrew Corpening

3min
pages 77-78

Birding with Curtis Smalling

8min
pages 69-72

Regional Happenings & Featured Events

12min
pages 20-24

Notes from Grandfather Mountain

7min
pages 60-64

70 Years of Horn in the West

5min
pages 51-53

Showing Appreciation

8min
pages 30-32

Book Nook with Tamara S. Randolph

3min
page 54

Blue Ridge Explorers with Tamara S. Randolph

6min
pages 65-68
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