Nantahala
Up Cheoah Ranger District

 

Nantahala National Forest

The Indian word Nantahala means "land of the midday sun" — an appropriate name for a forest in which deep mountain gorges and valleys are illuminated only when the noon sun is directly overhead. At 5,800 feet, the Appalachian summit of Lone Bald is the highest point in the forest — it is but one vertebra in the 1,600-mile spine that stretches from Alabama to Quebec. Cascading waterfalls and mad whitewater rivers give the forest a wild, untamed atmosphere heightened by primeval oaks, hemlocks, chestnuts, and poplars that reach for the sky.

For centuries, the Cherokee Indians roamed the forest before European settlers forced them deeper into the hills. In 1838, the U.S. Army escorted most of the tribe to an Indian reservation in Oklahoma — a mass deportation known as the "Trail of Tears." A few elusive Cherokee remained, but it wasn't until 1973 that negotiations were finally resolved, permitting them to legally own a portion of the land. A small section of the Cherokee Indian Reservation is located within the northern boundary of the forest — a larger area is situated just outside the forest northeast of Bryson City.


Campgrounds and cottage rentals with websites are underlined use your back button to return to us. 

Cottages within the area.

 
 

Campgrounds

Holly Cove RV Resort & Cabins341 Holly Cove Road
Whittier, NC   28789, 828-631-0692
Timberlake Campground, 3270 Conleys Creek Rd, Whittier, NC 28789, 828-497-7320.  9 Miles from Cherokee Reservation.
Nantahala Hideaway Campground, Topton, NC 28781, 1-800-936-6649