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Several folks have gone up Juney Whank Branch looking for home places and have asked me about location and directions to the Casada place, so I thought I’d provide them here.
From the parking lot area near
the mouth of the branch, it is – in the words of my father – a country mile to
the home. According to my GPS unit, his
country mile is about 1.25 customary miles.
Along the way, you pass three other former home sites, as indicated on
the Figure 11 map.
Those undertaking off-trail
wandering are well-advised to study maps before heading out, especially if
you’re seeking a particular location.
Juney Whank Branch has some of the standard vegetation that you have to
deal with in the area – rhododendron and greenbriers – but relative to many
other locations in the Smokies, it is a relatively easy bushwhack. One important point to remember is that if
you get turned around or confused, simply follow the stream downhill as it winds
its way toward Deep Creek.
Here are some general directions
to what was once the Casada home place: Figure 1: Juney Whank Branch map, with former home places marked |
Starting at the parking lot,
located near the mouth of Juney Whank Branch and the trailhead for the Deep
Creek trail. From the parking lot, turn
left to follow the trail toward the Juney Whank Falls. The climb, by trail, to above the falls will
get both your heart and lungs pumping; the trail portion is actually the
hardest part of the trip. Continue on up
the trail to above the falls (which you’ll see to your right as you
ascend). Cross the branch, turn left and
start on an unmaintained wagon road, immediately passing a springbox with a
pipe water spout. If you want to follow
the old wagon road from this point, that’s fine, but I usually veer off the
road to the left just as it starts to climb a bit and walk through the quite
open woods. In late winter and early
spring, you’ll spot a patch of jonquils just after getting off the road. Continue to wander up the drainage, staying
on the right (east) side of the branch.
About 0.2 miles after leaving
the road, be on the lookout for an old washtub, lying alongside a patch of
jonquils. This is all that marks a
former home place which was owned by A.T. (Tom) Lollis. I don’t think that Tom’s family ever lived in
it, however; they once lived near the mouth of Hammer Branch (to the north) and
later near the mouth of Durham Branch, near the pavilion in the Deep Creek
campground area.
As you continue on up the
branch, the walls will pinch in on either side, and you’ll run back into the
old road as it closes in on the branch.
I normally go ahead and wade into the rhododendron at this point and
follow the road. There are a couple of
trees that have fallen across the road which you’ll have to crawl under or navigate
around, but overall, it’s not a bad go.
Shortly after crossing a small
feeder branch coming in from the right (coming out of Hall’s Holler – a story
for another time), you’ll pop out of the pinched-in section to where things
open up substantially. Leave the old
road and cross a small branch which runs right beside the road and traveling
through a two-or three-foot deep gouge.
Look for a patch of yellowbells, washtubs, and in the midst of a
thicket, a fallen chimney. This was the
Lee Wiggins home.
Beyond that home, bear a little off
to the west, away from the road. Cross
Juney Whank Branch and look for the home of Ben Lollis. Although the marker in Figure 1 shows it on
the east side of the branch, it is actually on the west side of the branch (the
topo map is off). Just below where the home stood is a sizable collection of
automobile parts, including the driveshaft and rear end, brakes, engine mount
and other pieces. The home spot is
marked by a fallen chimney pile just above the vehicle parts. Also nearby is other detritus, including
terra cotta pipe and bits of galvanized metal roofing. Not far above the chimney pile is a flattened
out spot where a barn once stood.
Cross
back to the east side of Juney Whank Branch and continue up the drainage. If you watch closely, about 0.15 miles above
the Lollis home, you’ll run into the wagon road, with some sizable rocks on
either side of it. I don’t usually
follow that road – although it will take you to the home place. Instead, I cross it and continue until I
reach the noticeably larger trees toward what was the lower end of the garden
area. On the left is a good-sized maple;
on the right is a two+ foot diameter red oak.
On up above are other fine tree specimens – all second-growth. The largest yellow poplar in the area, which
my wife, Susan stands next to in Figure 2, is a good reference point.
Above
the home site, a rock wall runs an east-west course across the hollow. The area above this was fields. On above that was pasture. About a quarter mile above the home site is a
two-hundred yard long rock wall which winds along a section of wet weather
branch. That rock wall served a dual
function – a place to relocate rocks from the pasture and field areas and to
provide erosion control from the considerable flow that courses that wet
weather stream following heavy rains.
Light and set
Let me close by saying that in
my view, were the folks who once called these places home still alive to ask, I
think that they’d be absolutely delighted if someone came by to visit – either
before or after they left the place behind.
So, by all means, go by and “set a spell.”
When
I visit a home place – particularly this one – I like to sit on a log in the
sun in winter or a rock by the branch in warm weather and let my mind carry me
on a journey back to when there were sounds of children’s laughter as they
hemmed in spring lizards and the satisfying crack of white oak splitting from a
solid whack; the smells of wood smoke and freshly-turned soil; the sights of a
barefoot boy carrying a bucket of spring water to the house in the gloaming and
strings of leather britches hung across the porch in late summer to dry. Those were hard days, inhabited by folks
tough beyond modern measure. I’m
confident that many would not trade the lives that they had later on for those
earlier, harder ways (my grandparents and parents certainly included). Still, there was –and is, among the dwindling
few who once called these remote places home – a deep sense of affection for
the time and the place where they were raised.
Figure 4: The old spring. |
Random Thoughts and the
Musings of a Mountaineer,
written by Judge Felix Alley and published in 1941, is a book long out of print
and hard to come by. Alley was a man
whose love of these mountains was surpassed by his love of his kindred mountain
people. He noted that the poem below by “Mr.
J.W. Clay, citizen and poet of Winston-Salem” expressed his sentiments fully. It does mine as well, particularly when I pay
a visit to the Casada place, a country mile up Juney Whank Branch.
A Little Log Cabin in the Mountains
J.W. Clay
A little log cabin in the mountains
A spring, and a creek running by,
The deep solemn silence of the wild-wood,
Broken by the screech owl's cry.
A meadow that harbors a hay-stack,
A field where the golden-rod blooms,
A hill where hides the arbutus,
Where tall the great oak tree looms.
A garden of old-fashioned flowers,
The hollyhock, marigold, and rose;
A plot with vegetables growing,
With onions and cabbage in rows.
The whinny of the horse in the pasture,
A cow in the shed, and a calf,
A pig in the pen making a noise,
That is neither a cry nor a laugh.
A cock with a dictator strut,
Some pullets and hens running 'round,
A fretting old 'cluck' with her brood,
Scratching for worms in the ground.
A blazing wood fire in the winter,
When snow is covering the ground,
A cat on the hearth-stone purring,
And a lazy but faithful old hound.
I have traveled the far-away places,
I have crossed over mountain and sea,
I have seen the great cities in splendor,
But their splendor holds nothing for me.
For I love my log cabin in the mountains,
It is humble, but still it's my home,
And never again shall I leave it,
Across the wide earth to roam.
Of course I live in the city,
Like you, and other poor devils I know,
But my heart and my soul are in the mountains,
Where memories, like warm embers glow.
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Wendy--Of course this place is as deeply meaningful to me as it is to Don. Even quite late in life--well into his 80s if I'm not mistaken--Daddy loved to hike to the place where he spent the most meaningful years of his boyhood and, once there, reminisce and ruminate. He'd talk about hollering at Clark boys coming down from their home on Toms Branch as they all headed to school, our uncle getting into a yellow jacket nest when they dammed up Juneywhank Branch, how good the spring water tasted (and it still does), his boyhood mischief in stealing refreshing sips of buttermilk from the spring house, and much more. It was a hardscrabble life but one which clearly, at least in his eyes, was immensely satisfying. Thanks to you (and Br'er Don) for this piece.
ReplyDeleteJim Casada
'Twas a pleasure, Jim. I love going there with you, Don and the family. It's always a special trip...it almost feels more like a pilgrimage.
DeleteHi Wendy, It's been a half a year or more since last I heard from you. I was starting to worry.
ReplyDeleteOh, thank you, Ed! Family stuff...working a ton of hours, etc. Never fear - I have several blogs ready to publish!
DeleteWendy or Don Cassada,
ReplyDeleteSince you know the Juney Whank and Deep Creek area, may I ask if you can help me locate a few fragments or marks of my relatives: Alfred Parris and his wife? We tried to visit Deep Creek, but could not find her grave--was told somewhere up Juney Whank branch, but had already hiked too far up Deep Creek past what a cousin told me was "the old Parris house". I could make out nothing meaningful as far as seeing any evidence of their home or a cemetery marker for Alfred Parris'es wife. Did we miss the marks, or are there pictures somewhere of what may be gone now? Thank you, Cherie Cox
Cherie,
ReplyDeleteI am sorry that I'm just now seeing this. There are two men by the name of Alfred Parris who lived in the Deep Creek area. One was Alfred Washington Parris, who, along with his wife, Louisa Conner, made their home on Indian Creek. The other was his cousin, Alfred Jefferson Parris and wife Margaret Monteith, who lived in the home that my grandparents bought on Juney Whank Branch from Alfred's heirs, including Margaret.
Alfred Jefferson Parris is buried in the Deep Creek Cemetery, which is located on a hill to the west of the road leading into the Park at Deep Creek (on the west side of the creek). His wife, Margaret, is likely buried in Texas, which is where she and most of the family moved.
Alfred Washington Parris is buried in the Morrow Cemetery, a mile or so below the Park boundary, on the east side of Deep Creek. His wife, Louisa, is buried on Indian Ceek in the lower cemetery, listed as Laney Cemetery on USGS maps.
I would, and I'm sure the same is true for Wendy, be delighted to escort you to these places as well as the home sites of either.
Wendy, I hadn't read this until just a few days ago. I loved Don's story. Late yesterday(after 4:00 Wed) afternoon I started up Juney Whank. Got up to the Lee Wiggins area and had to turn around because of daylight. This afternoon, I headed up again, hitting all of the places Don mentioned. Found the car parts - Yay! I couldn't determine where the Casada house site was, but went on up past the east/west rock wall to the top of the north/south wall. It was a wonderful afternoon. Thank you and Don.
ReplyDelete