Tusquittee, North Carolina

Tusquittee (originally Tusquitee) is an unincorporated community located in Clay County, North Carolina, United States. It is bordered on the north by Fires Creek Bear Reserve, which is within the Nantahala National Forest. The Tusquitee Mountain range includes Tusquitee Bald at 5,240 feet.

The Tusquittee mountain range in Clay County, North Carolina

History

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Tusquitee is a Cherokee Native American word meaning "Where the water-dogs laughed." (A Water Dog, sometimes also called mud-puppy, is a type of salamander.) According to folklore, a Cherokee hunter was crossing over Tusquitee Bald in a very dry season. He heard voices, crept silently toward them, peeped over a rock, and witnessed two water-dogs walking together along the trail on their hind legs and talking as they went. Their pond was dried up and they were on the way to the Nantahala River. As the hunter listened, one said to the other, "Where's the water? I'm so thirsty that my apron (gills) hangs down," and then both water-dogs laughed.[1]

There is a subdivision in Tusquittee called Tusquittee Landing which incorporates a 2700 foot grass airstrip. Most people assume the "Landing" refers to the airplanes landing. However, it actually is a carryover from the days where the mules dragged logs down from the forest to a landing on Goldmine Creek. The logs were then moved down the creek to Tusquittee Creek and eventually to the sawmill.

In the late 1870s and early 1880s the Tusquittee Turnpike ran from Clay County to the Nantahala River in Macon County. The toll road cost 25 cents per wagon and 5 cents per horseman, though Gospel ministers could travel for free.[2] A gold mine operated in Tusquittee around the 1930s.[2]

Tusquittee was the home of Lillith Lidseen, an actress who moved to the area from Chicago in the 1950s. Lidseen built the Peacock Performing Arts Center in nearby Hayesville. She raised peacocks on property connected to Tusquittee Road and the theatre was named for her favorite animal.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "The Tusquittee Valley". Casa on the Creek. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
  2. ^ a b Moore, Carl S. (2008). Clay County, N.C.: Then and Now. Franklin, N.C.: Genealogy Publishing Service. ISBN 978-1881851240.
  3. ^ Scott, Bob (June 13, 1986). "Dream Theater Comes of Age". Asheville Citizen-Times. p. 11. Retrieved October 15, 2024.

35°07′10″N 83°44′28″W / 35.1194204°N 83.7411631°W / 35.1194204; -83.7411631