|
Road to
Nowhere
In the 1930s and 1940s, Swain County
gave up the majority of its private land to the Federal Government for the
creation of Fontana Lake and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Hundreds of people were forced to leave the small Smoky Mountain communities
that had been their homes for generations. With the creation of the Park, their
homes were gone, and so was the road to those communities. Old Highway 288 was
buried beneath the deep waters of Fontana Lake.
The Federal
government promised to replace Highway 288 with a new road. Lakeview Drive was
to have stretched along the north shore of Fontana Lake, from Bryson City to
Fontana, 30 miles to the west. And, of special importance to those displaced
residents, it was to have provided access to the old family cemetaries where
generations of ancestors remained behind.
But Lakeview
Drive fell victim to an environmental issue and construction was stopped, with
the road ending at a tunnel, about six miles into the park. The issue was
eventually resolved, but the roadwork was never resumed. And Swain County's
citizens gave the unfinished Lakeview Drive its popular, albeit unofficial name
The Road To Nowhere.
On weekends throughout the summer, the Park Service still ferries groups of
Swain County residents across Fontana Lake to visit their old family cemetaries
for Decoration Days and family reunions. And the legal issue of whether to build
the road remains unresolved.
|