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
For
many years no paved roads aided traffic in
A day or more at
Then came the advent of the first
paved road across the mountain. A
different route was chosen from the Logan Turnpike.
An engineer with the Georgia Highway
Department, Mr. Warren Rabun Neel, surveyed for the road.
He chose as the most likely corridor the old
Frogtown Indian Trail. In laying out
the road, Mr. Neel had to follow the natural contours of the land. Consequently, many steep grades and sharp
curves were in the original plan for the road.
In 1923 work began on the road through
Frogtown or Walisiyi Gap. No modern
equipment was available then for grading.
Citizens were hired as were their teams of mules and horses. Ball wagon dirt movers were used to dig out
the roadway. One steam shovel was
available, provided by the construction company, C. M. Lyle, who had
the
contract for building the road. Picks,
shovels, wheelbarrows and drag pans pulled by the farmers’ mules were
the main
tools used to grade the road across Frogtown, in the shadow of towering
Some of the men who hired out to
work on
the road from the Choestoe District was my father, J. Marion Dyer, and
his team
of mules and a drag pan; Jeptha Souther who fired the boiler for the
steam
shovel and contracted to erect the guard rails at the curves; Alonzo Allison, Howard Curtis, Tom and Ed
Lance, Floyd Berry and Victor Souther were other known workers. John Paul Souther, son of Jeptha, a mere
eight years of age at the time the work began, got a job as water boy.
When the road was first opened
in the
summer of 1925, it was a soil-surfaced road fourteen feet wide. It was named Neel Gap to honor the engineer
who had drawn up the plan for the road.
In 1926 macadam was applied and paving became a reality for the
central
nine feet of the roadway. Four feet of
crushed stone paved the shoulders, providing passing room on the
one-lane
road. More improvement came with the
years. In 1931 the highway was
resurfaced and widened to fourteen feet.
Another project in 1950 brought it to its present 20-feet width
with
some of the sharp curves softened. Now
the picturesque mountain roadway has passing lanes and smooth surfacing. It is a boon to tourism and to commuters who
live in the mountains and work “below” them in
Fascinated by the work of the
steam shovel,
John Paul Souther could hardly stay away from the scene of the grading
between
1923 and 1925, and when the first macadam surface was laid in 1926. He says, “This was the most exciting thing I
had ever seen in my life. That is why I
wanted to see the road work.” Now 90
years of age, Mr. Souther still remembers clearly how the road was
constructed
and how it changed the way of life for farmers in
When Jeptha Souther worked to
build the
railing, or fence, guard rails were not available.
Strong locust posts and cyclone fencing
twenty-four inches in width were used to make the fence.
Local men were glad to be paid for the locust
posts they cut and hauled to the sites along the new road.
It was a means of making some money when
times were hard for mountain farmers.
Updated June 11, 2018
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