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Along the Path

Updates as we learned about Lawson's journey and times -- and reports from the trail as we progressed along it. Plus tales of the process of publishing the result.

Walking into the Past

8/4/2015

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Picture
David Harris's roots stretch generations into the Piedmont hills, and he loves to find out what's back of him. He offered me a ride but I wouldn't take it. I'm out here to walk.
PictureYou could probably find a better fried bologna and cheese if you looked hard enough, but if it was me I would just eat the one at the Village Restaurant in Denton and be happy.
From Denton, North Carolina, to Julian, North Carolina, what I can tell you is it's hot. Hot, hot, hot. If you walk in late July, you can plan on sweating enough to go through a couple shirts a day and still stink something awful, which is what I did.

I had in mind one thing when I left Denton, just east of Salisbury and the Yadkin River: Archaeology. I was interested in archaeology, because I knew I was going to pass by the site of Keyauwee Town, the site on the Caraway Creek of not only the Keyauwee Indians Lawson visited (though uncertainty remains about the exact location of that town) but of the dawn of scientific archaeology in North Carolina. In 1933, one Joffre Lanning Coe, born and educated in North Carolina, attended the first meeting of the Archaeological Society of North Carolina, whose president, Douglas Rights, was the dean of the nascent North Carolina study of archaeology. It was Rights, in fact, who in 1931 published the article "The Trading Path to the Indians," which included a first attempt to figure out Lawson's path. In 1947 his book The American Indians in North Carolina contained "Lawson's Long Trail," a chapter that detailed the trail in far greater depth, as far as Rights could trace it; until I met Val Green, I thought Rights was as close as I was going to get. 

Anyhow, so as I left Denton I was excited to be heading off to not only Lawson's history but the history of NC archaeology. I had made arrangements with Delk's Army-Navy Surplus Store, possibly the greatest surplus store in the world, to set up camp on their front lawn, which I had only seen on Google Earth. It was within a quarter mile of the Keyauwee site, plus it was a good day's walk from Denton. I got the always-helpful Katie Winsett to drop off my camping stuff there; we had left my car in Julian, NC, where I expected to finish a day later, and I bought Katie lunch at the Village Restaurant in Denton. If you learn nothing else from this website, please learn that you should go to lunch someday at the Village Restaurant in Denton.

 Lawson speaks of visiting the Keyawees a day after leaving the Sapona, and finding a town that he says that "Nature hath so fortify'd this Town, with Mountains, that were it a Seat of War, it might easily be made impregnable; having large Corn-Fields joining to their Cabins, and a Savanna near the Town, at the Foot of these Mountains.... And all this environ'd round with very high Mountains, so that no hard Wind ever troubles these Inhabitants."  He says it's 5 miles northwest of the Uwharrie River (he calls it the Heighwarrie), though that turns out to be a misprint: on Caraway Creek, almost exactly 5 miles northEAST of the Uwharrie, flows the Caraway Creek.

There on the Caraway the society believed it had in 1936 found part of the Keyauwee Village mentioned by Lawson, after members had begun digging there a year before. (Much of this story as I relate it comes from discussions with professor Stephen Davis at the University of North Carolina, or from the book he coauthored, Time Before History: The Archaeology of North Carolina.) The spot sits on the river, with plenty of farmland spreading as Lawson describes, and the Caraway runs right through the Caraway Mountains, the northern branch of the Uwharrie Mountains, supporting Lawson's description of the spot's protected environs. Lawson also describes the food provided to some of his party: "Two young Fawns, taken out of the Doe's Bellies, and boil'd in the same slimy Bags Nature had placed them in, and one of the Country-Hares, stew'd with the Guts in her Belly, and her Skin with the Hair on. This new-fashion'd Cookery wrought Abstinence in our Fellow-Travellers." I was glad I'd enjoyed the fried bologna at the Village.

PictureThis isn't Mr. Harris's millstone, but it wasn't far from where he and I talked. Such stones are common here -- relics of the time when these creeks and rivers were the power source that made meal or flour of everybody's grain.
Anyhow, as I was walking along the hot road, thinking about archaeology and this region, a white pickup slowed down next to me and asked if I wanted a ride. This is a nice thing that happens fairly often, and as I commonly do I said I preferred to walk, and I briefly explained about Lawson and the whole point of this undertaking being to walk along the ground, not to bicycle or drive or take helicopters or something. Walking put me right on the earth, where Lawson had been, and you just see better. David Harris, whose picture you see at the top of this post, broke into an enormous smile and we began to talk. He talked about his family -- he's a Harris, his wife is a Johnson, and there used to be a mill called the Harris Johnson Mill down on Toms Creek, a tributary of the Uwharrie River just off Brantley Gordon Road, where we chatted, near his property. He runs a logging and chipping company, but he loves history and has looked back into the stories on his property. 

PictureThis is from Coe's report on the excavation at the Keyauwee site. Those are graves up at the top.
His family eventually acquired a piece of that mill property: "Mr. Johnson lived back there -- he had a two-story house," he says. "They got a picture of it in the Randolph County archives." He's built himself a cabin where that old house stood: "It's by the same oak trees. They're huge!" The mill was a few hundred yards away, but most traces of it are gone, though searching around he's found parts of an old safe, the back cover of a pocket watch, and an old mill stone, which he's pulled out and used as ornament. He's done a lot of research since then. It seems that piece of land that used to be Harris Johnson's house is landlocked -- surrounded by other properties with no road in. "There was a woods road in there, and the state abandoned it in the 1930s," instead maintaining Richey Road, which parallels it. "I have to go over three separate landowners to get to it," he says of his property now, and one unfriendly neighbor won't give an easement, so Harris has spent hours, and thousands of dollars, and miles driving back and forth to Raleigh looking up property records to demonstrate his claim for an easement. "I walk through the woods and follow the old road beds," he says. "I pass two, three old house places," abandoned but still standing -- one even still has power.

But lost roads are the way of things. "That was a big thing in these areas," he says. "Everyone went to the watermill to get their wheat and corn ground. Then the power come, and they all shut down and everyone went into town." His aunt, born in 1918 but still sharp, tells him stories. "She was born back in there, and she told me of all the people that lived down in there."

Though he doesn't think his last name is connected to Mr. Johnson's first name, Mr. Harris liked the fact that he is a Harris and his wife is a Johnson -- "she's a double-barrelled Johnson," he laughed. "When they got married they didn't even have to change their name!" 

In all my reading about the Caraway site of Keyauwee Town I have learned that the site Coe excavated  was likely not the exact site of Lawson's visit. The graves they found at the site show virtually no signs of the trade goods that demonstrate contact with Europeans: beads, axeheads, iron goods, and so forth. "But they had one pit they excavated that had glass beads in it," said Stephen Davis of UNC. "So it's the best candidate. We have nothing else to rival it, and the material evidence from the site, you could argue that it has artifacts that date to that site."

Anyway -- the point for me was that just as Coe was doing archaeology at the Keyauwee site, so was Mr. Harris at his old mill. Finding the evidence -- road depressions, millstones, the safe, the pocket watch back. Checking the stories -- his aunt, his wife, the library, Raleigh. The story of the place lives in those road beds, those deeds and plats, those millstones and safes and pocket watch backs.  Those empty house places tell a story of how the land was once, and the new cabin he's built tell a new story. And someday, one presumes, a new deed and entry in the plat book will show how a piece of land has a road easement, and the ghost road the state abandoned will reassert itself, a century later

One more thing. Here's my campsite at Delk's -- possibly my championship weirdest and coolest campsite on the whole Trek so far. Delk's was very kind to me, and though their yard was a bit like a junkyard (including open 55-gallon drums serving as mosquito breeding tanks), I loved camping here, even when someone who didn't get the memo came roaring up to my campsite in a pickup at about 9 pm, assuring me that oh no I WASN'T camping on Delk's front lawn. A quick phone call of course resolved that, and no harm done, and he roared off again. Still -- when I dropped off my stuff early in the day, there had been a truck with a helicopter chassis loaded on it parked there, and I was going to camp between it and the rest of the yard, lightly sheltered from the all night Route 64 traffic. Delighted by the chopper, I spent all day thinking up
Picture
This may actually be one of the coolest places I've ever camped in my whole life. Still bummed about the helicopter, though.
"Apocalypse Now" jokes to accompany the photos with which I planned to bombard Instagram. Imagine my heartbreak when I came to Delk's at end of day and found no helicopter. Best I can do now is guess my pickup antagonist was trying to terminate my Trek with extreme prejudice, but without the helicopter, to be honest the joke just falls kinda flat.
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