THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
The Logan
Turnpike
If you want to travel the Logan
Turnpike today,
you will have to walk over portions of it or use a two-wheeled vehicle. The present-day
It was my privilege in 1992,
while the
venerable Charles Roscoe Collins, better known to family and friends as
“Ros,”
was still able to travel and give his historical accounts, to spend a
day with
him and have him personally give me a tour of the Old Logan Turnpike. His knowledge and memories provided a colorful
roadmap to places and times in our history which have long since
vanished.
“I rode the turnpike many times
with my
father, James J. Collins, in our two-horse wagon,” Collins remembered. As a lad, his major job was braking the wagon
on the steep inclines. He told of
cutting blocks of wood to use as “scotches” for the wheels. One time, he cut pine saplings and tied them
behind the wagon to impede speed on the steep grades.
In the winter, he also traveled ahead of the
wagon and broke ice in the streams so the horses could cross.
When he was about seventeen, his
father
allowed him to take the wagon and its precious cargo on the Logan
Turnpike to
In tracing the history of the
turnpike,
this notation was found in the “Digest of Laws for the State of
Georgia” for
1821: “John Lyon, Joel Dickerson and Company shall hereafter be a body
corporate by the name and style of the Union Turnpike Company, for the
purpose
of constructing a turnpike road from Loudsville in Habersham County,
through
the Tesnatee Gap in the Blue Ridge Mountains, by way of Blairsville to
some
eligible point on the northern boundary of this state in a direction
toward the
Tellico Plains in the state of Tennessee.”
Specifications
called for the turnpike to be
twenty feet wide with a causeway of twelve feet. No
railroad or other road or canal could be
built within ten miles of the turnpike for fifteen years.
Since, in 1821, Indians were still in the
area, it is reasonable to assume that the turnpike followed an Indian
trail. The Union Turnpike was
finished the same
year it was chartered. A companion
road, the Old Unicoi Turnpike to the east, paralleled the Union
Turnpike. Unicoi was chartered in 1813 and
led from
These two roads, the
The Union Turnpike became the Logan
Turnpike because of the
Certain events have a way of
setting off a
chain reaction. In 1828 one of Francis
Logan’s slaves found a gold nugget along Duke’s Creek with a weight of
more
than three ounces. This set off the
famous North Georgia Gold Rush. More gold
was found along the
Francis Logan had a son named
Major Willis
Logan. He had extensive land holdings
south of the mountains in western
Logan Turnpike was seven and
one-half miles
over the mountain, from Loudsville in
[Next
week: More on the Logan Turnpike.]
c2004 by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published Feb. 5, 2004 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA.
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Updated May 27, 2018
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