Meigs Mountain Trail

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Length6 mi (9.7 km)
TrailheadsJunction with the Jakes Creek Trail just south of Elkmont
Junction with the Lumber Ridge Trail and Meigs Creek Trail at Buckhorn Gap. Meigs Creek Trail trailhead starts at the Sinks.
UseHiking
Meigs Mountain Trail
The Meigs Mountain Trail at the Curry Mountain Trail junction
Length6 mi (9.7 km)
LocationGreat Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee, United States
TrailheadsJunction with the Jakes Creek Trail just south of Elkmont
Junction with the Lumber Ridge Trail and Meigs Creek Trail at Buckhorn Gap. Meigs Creek Trail trailhead starts at the Sinks.
UseHiking
Highest pointNear Campsite 19, 2,880 ft (880 m)
Lowest pointBuckhorn Gap, 2,400 ft (730 m)
DifficultyModerate
SeasonOpen year-round
HazardsMultiple stream crossings

The Meigs Mountain Trail is an American hiking trail in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park of Sevier County, Tennessee. The trail traverses the northern slopes of Meigs Mountain in the northwest section of the park, connecting Jakes Creek in the Elkmont area with Lumber Ridge in the Tremont area. The Meigs Mountain Trail, when joined with the 4.1-mile (6.6 km) Lumber Ridge Trail and the first 0.4 miles (0.64 km) of the Jakes Creek Trail, is part of a 10.5-mile (16.9 km) continuous path connecting the Appalachian Club section of Elkmont with the Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont. In the early 20th century, the logging communities that formed at Elkmont and Tremont branched out across the relatively broad northern slopes of Meigs Mountain. Other than a crude mountain cemetery, the occasional detritus, and a few rock walls, however, very little remains of the mountain's former inhabitants.

The nearest parking lot for the Meigs Mountain Trail is the Jakes Creek Trailhead parking lot, located at the end of Elkmont Road. The Curry Mountain Trail and the Meigs Creek Trail both connect the Meigs Mountain Trail to Little River Road.

  • The parking lot at the Jakes Creek Trailhead is very small and fills up quickly in the warmer months.
  • Backcountry Campsite 20 is approximately 1.9 miles (3.1 km) from the Meigs Mountain Trailhead (2.3 miles from the nearest parking lot); Backcountry Campsite 19 is approximately 4.5 miles (7.2 km) from the trailhead.
  • The Meigs Mountain Trail crosses nearly a dozen small mountain streams, the most substantial being Jakes Creek and Blanket Creek. While there is a footbridge at Jakes Creek, the other streams must be forded. These streams are normally minor trickles less than a foot deep at the trail crossing, but can quickly swell beyond their normal volume after heavy rain or snow.

Landmarks/overlooks

Jakes Creek
  • Jakes Creek Trail/Meigs Creek Trail junction (0.0 miles)
  • NPS corral at the old Lem Ownby homesite (0.2 miles)
  • Deteriorating rock walls, detritus (0.5 miles)
  • Deteriorating rock walls (1–2 miles)
  • Backcountry Campsite 20 (1.9 miles)
  • Blanket Creek and mill rubbish (2 miles)
  • Mannis Branch headwater streams (between miles 3 and 4)
  • Meigs Mountain Trail/Curry Mountain Trail junction (4.1 miles)
  • Henderson homesite ruins (4.2 miles)
  • Meigs Mountain Cemetery (4.3 miles)
  • Backcountry Campsite 19 (4.5 miles)
  • Trailfork with Lumber Ridge Trail and Meigs Creek Trail (6.0 miles)

Geographical and natural information

Meigs Mountain, looking south from the Curry Mountain Trail

Meigs Mountain is a ridge stretching for roughly 5 miles (8.0 km) between Blanket Creek to the east and the Middle Prong of Little River to the west. To the southeast, Meigs Mountain is flanked by Blanket Mountain, which culminates in a prominent 4,607-foot (1,404 m) summit. To the north, three low mountains are "wedged" between Meigs Mountain and the Little River Gorge Curry She Mountain to the northeast, Curry He Mountain to the north, and Lumber Ridge to the northwest. The 3,982-foot (1,214 m) summit of Meigs Mountain is located on the mountain's eastern end, with the elevation decreasing gradually to the west and sharply to the north and south.

Geologically, Meigs Mountain is composed of Precambrian rocks (primarily sandstone) of the Ocoee Supergroup, formed from ancient ocean sediments nearly a billion years ago.[1] Rock exposures are not very common along the Meigs Mountain Trail, although the trail crosses multiple steambeds littered with rocks and small boulders. The streams that drain Meigs Mountain are part of the Little River watershed.

Meigs Mountain is covered by a mature second-growth deciduous forest. Most of the mountain's commercial timber was removed by the various logging operations that occurred on the mountain in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Hemlock, magnolia, sourwood, tulip trees, and silverbell trees are among the most common tree types encountered along the Meigs Mountain Trail.[2]

Historical information

Rusted machine parts and other detritus from the early 20th century are occasionally encountered along the Meigs Mountain Trail

Meigs Mountain is named after Colonel Return Jonathan Meigs (1740–1823), a Revolutionary War veteran who began a re-survey of the last nine miles of the Hawkins Line (the crude early border between Tennessee and North Carolina) from atop this mountain in 1802.[3] Meigs supposedly hung a brightly colored blanket atop the adjacent mountain (which was subsequently known as "Blanket Mountain") for use as a compass reference point.[4]

Meigs Mountain Cemetery

Extensive logging operations on Meigs Mountain began in the 1880s with Knoxville-based entrepreneur John L. English. English selectively logged Blanket Creek for cherry and basswood and moved the logs downstream to a mill in Blount County using a series of splash dams. Although English's operations ceased in the late 1890s after a flood washed away his splash dams, small-scale selective logging continued until the arrival of the Little River Lumber Company around 1908.[5][6]

Between 1908 and 1939, the Little River Lumber Company removed most of Meigs Mountain's commercial timber. The company built two large band saw mills in Townsend and connected the mills to the Elkmont area via the Little River Railroad. Incline railways were used to reach the trees on steeper slopes, including those along Blanket Creek.[7]

In the early 20th century, the various logging operations led to the development of a small community along what is now the Meigs Mountain Trail. Members of the Huskey and Henderson families lived in the vicinity of the Meigs Mountain Trail/Curry Mountain Trail junction, some of whom are buried in a crude cemetery just southwest of this junction. The Meigs Mountain schoolhouse was also located at this trail junction, although no part of it remains. What is now Backcountry Campsite 19 was once the homesite of Andy Brackin (1888–1924), whose sister and brother-in-law ran a boarding house for loggers at Elkmont. Legendary mountaineer Lem Ownby (1889–1984) lived along Jakes Creek at the Meigs Mountain Trail/Jakes Creek Trail junction until his death in 1984. He was the last of the park's permanent residents outside of Cades Cove.[8][9]

Trail synopsis

References

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