Morley, Margaret Warner
In 1890
Margaret Morley
a well-known biologist
writer
and educator
visited the mountains of North Carolina. She was so enchanted by their pastoral beauty and charm that she spent over a decade exploring the region
recording scenes of everyday life in captivating photographs and delightful prose. Her documentation culminated in her book The Carolina Mountains
originally published in 1913. The Carolina Mountains is a combination of travelogue
biological observation
history
and photography. Morley toured widely through areas of upstate South Carolina and Western North Carolina
traveling by train
horse and buggy
horseback
and on foot. Her skill with a camera
her background in botany
and her ability to befriend the tough
independent mountaineers helped her create one of the most descriptive and poetic accounts of the region. Influenced by her Victorian sensibilities
Margaret Morley presents a unique historical perspective on the region. Her descriptions of the early settlers
early education in the mountains
local speech
the Biltmore Estate
Flat Rock
and the Great Smoky Mountains thoughtfully capture the essence of the area as she experienced it in the early twentieth century. Even today
we can trace Margaret Morley's travels throughout the region
from Caesar's Head to Asheville
Tryon to Cashiers. Her detailed descriptions of Mount Mitchell and Roan Mountain still ring true. With very few exceptions
the detailed and accurate account of her journeys makes The Carolina Mountains a reliable guidebook nearly a century later.