<<< - North Carolina
Recreation and Places to Visit
Perhaps the best-known scenic attraction
is Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which is located
astride the North Carolina-Tennessee border. The park’s
mountainous terrain and primitive wilderness afford ideal
conditions for hiking, fishing, and camping. Western North
Carolina’s spectacular mountain panoramas and quiet
beauty are accessible from the Blue Ridge Parkway, a scenic
highway running from Shenandoah National Park in Virginia
to the Great Smoky Mountains. Along the route are beautiful
displays of rhododendrons, mountain laurels, and rugged
terrain, including Mount Mitchell (2,037 m/6,684 ft), the
highest peak in the eastern United States.
Other National Areas
A major attraction of the coastal region
is the Outer Banks, much of which has been set aside as
the Cape Hatteras and Cape Lookout national seashores.
The area offers extensive opportunities for seaside recreation.
Deep-sea fishing off the Outer Banks is excellent. Cape
Hatteras Lighthouse, near the cape, is the tallest lighthouse
in North America at 63 m (208 ft). The national seashore
also contains one of the state’s three national wildlife
refuges—Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge. Also
located at Kitty Hawk on the Outer Banks is the Wright
Brothers National Memorial, the place where the first motor-powered
flight was made in 1903. Fort Raleigh National Historic
Site on Roanoke Island commemorates the place where the
English first attempted to establish a colony in America.
Moores Creek National Battlefield and Guilford Courthouse
National Military Park are sites of important battles of
the American Revolution (1775-1783). The home of the poet
Carl Sandburg, Connemara, at Flat Rock, is a national historic
site.
Pisgah, Nantahala, Uwharrie, and Croatan
national forests cover 486,000 hectares (1.2 million acres).
Pisgah National Forest lies in the mountains, as does Nantahala
National Forest. Because the sun penetrates to the bottom
of Nantahala Gorge only in the middle of the day, the Cherokee
called it the “Land of the Noon Day Sun,” or “Nantahala.”
About 1,600 hectares (4,000 acres) of virgin wilderness
forest in the Nantahala National Forest has been set aside
as the Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest, to memorialize the
poet who wrote the poem “Trees.”
The Uwharrie National Forest, in the central Piedmont region
of the state, is a fairly rugged area of ancient volcanic
mountains that have resisted erosion and weathering better
than the surrounding countryside. The forest received its
name from German settlers, for whom uwharrie meant “new
home.” On the coast is the Croatan National Forest,
which derived its name from the name of a main town of
the Algonquin people that occupied the region when the
English arrived in the 1580s.
State Parks
There are 63 state parks, of which Kerr
Lake State Recreational Area is the largest at 43,246 hectares
(106,864 acres); this reservoir area includes nine different
parks. Hanging Rock State Park, in the Sauratown Mountains,
is well known for its vertical cliffs and rock climbing
opportunities. Pettigrew State Park, along the shoreline
of Lake Phelps, is located on a former plantation called
Somerset Place. Fort Macon, completed in 1834 and fought
over during the American Civil War (1861-1865), is a state
park near Morehead City. The state has a nature preserve
near Southern Pines. Also under state administration are
a number of historic sites, among which are Fort Fisher,
south of Wilmington, where a museum and remnants of the
Civil War earthwork fort commemorate one of the largest
amphibious landings prior to the invasion of Normandy in
World War II. Tryon Palace Historic Site and Gardens, at
New Bern, has been restored to its appearance during colonial
times. Town Creek Indian Mounds, near Mount Gilead, is
the location of some reconstructed Native American temples.
A fine example of a mountain log home is preserved at the
Zebulon B. Vance Birthplace State Historic Site near Weaverville,
commemorating the man who was governor of North Carolina
from 1862 to 1865 and later a United States senator.
The North Carolina Division of Forest
Resources operates a system of six Educational State Forests—Clemmons,
Holmes, Jordan, Rendezvous Mountain, Turnbull Creek, and
Tuttle—as well as several other state forests. The
educational forests, the first of which was designated
in 1977, are designed to teach the public—especially
schoolchildren—about the forest environment.
Museums
The North Carolina Museum of Art, in Raleigh,
is the nation’s first art museum whose collection
was founded with state funds. At Hickory is an art museum
with American and European works and Chinese porcelains.
Other art collections are in Chapel Hill, Greensboro, Durham,
and Winston-Salem. Raleigh and Charlotte have natural history
museums, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill has a planetarium. The state also has many small museums
devoted to special displays, such as minerals, handicrafts,
Native American lore, and the material of local historical
societies.
Other Places to Visit
The Biltmore Estate is one of the country’s
best examples of the mansions built at the turn of the
20th century by American millionaires. It was designed
and built in the early French Renaissance style by George
W. Vanderbilt. The birthplace of President Andrew Johnson
is in Raleigh, and that of the novelist Thomas Wolfe
is in Asheville. In Winston-Salem is Old Salem, a Moravian
town founded in 1766 (see Moravian Church). Many 18th-century
buildings, including Salem Tavern and Winkler Bakery,
are still in use. Automobile races are held annually
at speedways in Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem,
Hickory, and North Wilkesboro. The U.S.S. North Carolina,
a World War II battleship, is permanently docked in a
berth alongside the Cape Fear River at Wilmington as
a war memorial. A former Native American trading post
at Murphy is now the Cherokee County Historical Museum,
featuring 2,000 exhibits of the Native American lifestyle.
Source: MSN
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