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TOWNS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 18 people annually on every third weekend in October.
Cutting between the peaks of Sugar Mountain, Beech Mountain and Grandfather Mountain, the topography of the town provides natural definition and gentle undulation through the town’s boundaries.
For more information or a calendar of events, call Banner Elk Chamber of Commerce at (828) 898-8395, or visit www.bannerelk.org.
BEECH MOUNTAIN
At 5,506 feet, Beech Mountain is the highest town in Eastern North America. That means two things: When summer comes, it’s a great place to go biking as the ski resort offers a bike park. Even on the hottest day of the summer, it’s cool atop the peaks of the mountain.
Even when it’s steamy in the “lowlands” of 3,000-plus feet, the temperature stays comfortable.
The rest of the world seems distant when you settle down on the front porch of a rental condominium and survey the magnificent view that is one of Beech Mountain’s trademarks.
Beech Mountain is a four-season resort, with more than 5,000 beds available on top of the mountain. These range from rustic cabins to mountain chalets to luxury condominiums.
When it’s time to eat, you can enjoy anything from a deli sandwich to pizza to a gourmet meal by candlelight.
During the days, there are many specialty stores for shopping, a golf course, horseback riding, tennis, swimming and hiking. In warmer weather, there are nearby canoe and raft runs that are among the best offered in the Eastern United States, while in the cool of winter there are skiing and snowboarding opportunities, as well as the town’s very own sledding hill near town hall. Nightlife is alive and well on the mountain. Whatever your musical taste, you can find a spot to enjoy an afterhours scene.
There’s another good thing about Beech Mountain: The mountain is so large that much of it remains in a natural state, with rich forests dotted by rolling farmland. Not to mention it’s only a short drive from the “downtown” area to the country or resorts. Take your pick.
Our guess is if you spend some time in Beech Mountain, you’ll want to come back to do some real estate shopping, or at least book a slopeside condo for the ski season.
For more information, visit www. beechmtn.com.
Crossnore
Crossnore is a town steeped in educational history. The town is home to Marjorie Williams Academy, founded by doctors Eustace and Mary Martin Sloop.
The Sloops traveled the steep dirt trails in isolated mountain valleys to bring medicine to the people and convince farmers to let their children come to school. Because of poverty and distance, the Sloop school in Crossnore eventually took in boarders and built dormitories to accommodate them.
It gained a national reputation for effectiveness in changing lives and in breaking the cycle of poverty, moonshine and child marriages of mountain families. Mary Martin Sloop eventually put these tales to paper in her autobiography “Miracle in the Hills,” which has since been used as the basis for a drama of the same name that takes place each summer in present-day Crossnore.
The Sloops built a school, hospital, dental clinic and, eventually, a boarding school to give children the basis for an improved life. They brought to Avery County the first electricity, telephones, paved road and boarding school. Through the Sloops’ advocacy, public schools flourished in Avery County.
Today, Williams Academy carries on the work of the original school and has reclaimed the educational foundation beneath its commitment to give hurting children a chance for a better
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