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The Pisgah National
Forest consists of over half a million acres of forest surrounding Mt. Pisgah. The
beginnings of the Pisgah National Forest occurred when George Vanderbilt, the grandson of
railroad baron, Cornelius Vanderbilt, assembled property around his growing estate at the
confluence of the Swannanoa and French Broad Rivers in western North Carolina. As he added
to his 125,000 acre estate, one of the acquisitions included Mt. Pisgah. The mountain
dominates the Pisgah Ledge, which parallels the French Broad River west of the Biltmore Estate.
West of Biltmore,
thousands of acres of his "Pisgah Forest" were managed for the production of
timber, water, and other natural resources. These lands were managed first by Gifford
Pinchot, forester, conservationist, and first Chief of the Forest Service; and later by
Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck, a German forester hired by Vanderbilt on Pinchot's recommendation.
The area was sold after Vanderbilt's death in 1914 to the U.S. Government and became one
of the first tracts of the Pisgah National Forest. Purchase of land to become National
Forest was possible because farsighted North Carolina law makers passed state legislation
and supported the passage in the Federal Congress of the 1911 Weeks Act. The first tract
of land purchased under the Weeks Act for the Pisgah National Forest was in McDowell
County. The process initiated here also began the establishment of all other National
Forests east of the Mississippi. This 8,100-acre tract on Curtis Creek can be reached on
Forest Service Road #482 which goes north off U.S. Highway 70, 2 miles northeast of Old
Fort. The tract is appropriately signed and identified. From these first purchases,
including the Pisgah Forest tract purchased in 1917 from Vanderbilt's widow, grew the half
million acre Pisgah National Forest. It, along with the Nantahala National Forest, makes
up a significant portion of the remaining forested land in western North Carolina.
FYI: Mount Pisgah was
the biblical name for the mountain from which Moses saw the promised land after 40 years
of wandering in the wilderness. Local legend attributes the naming of Mt. Pisgah to
Reverend James Hall, a Scotch-lrish, gun toting, Indian fighting Presbyterian minister,
who accompanied General Griffith Rutherford's 1776 expedition against the Cherokee into
western North Carolina. Impressed by the bountiful French Broad River basin, visible from
the mountain, he drew upon his knowledge of the Bible to name the peak Mt. Pisgah.
For more
information call or write:
Pisgah
National Forest
Pisgah Ranger District
1001 Pisgah Highway
Pisgah Forest, NC 28768
(828) 877-3265 Pisgah
National Forest
Grandfather Ranger District
P.O. Box 519
Marion, NC 28752
(828) 652-2144
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Pisgah
National Forest
Toecane Ranger District
P.O. Box 128
Burnsville, NC 28714
(828) 682-6146Pisgah
National Forest
French Broad Ranger District
P.O. Box 128
Hot Springs, NC 28743
(828) 622-3202
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