{"id":97,"date":"2016-03-20T14:55:03","date_gmt":"2016-03-20T14:55:03","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/staging.toddnc.org\/?page_id=97"},"modified":"2024-04-29T14:52:56","modified_gmt":"2024-04-29T14:52:56","slug":"about-todd","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/toddnc.org\/about-todd\/","title":{"rendered":"History of Todd, NC"},"content":{"rendered":"
The most storied parts of Todd\u2019s history involve trains and timber in the 1920s.<\/p>\n
We\u2019ll get to that. Let\u2019s start from the beginning a long, long time ago.<\/p>\n
The earliest documented human activity in the Todd area was at soapstone quarry located about \u00bd mile northwest of the Todd Post Office\u2019s current location. Archealogists have dated the quarry back about 6,000 years and believe that native peoples used the soapstone deposit \u2013 a large outcropping of rocks on a mountainside \u2013 to fashion bowls and vessels.<\/p>\n
A dig site not far from this quarry has also documented a structure that was likely a summer house. The High Country of North Carolina \u2013 owing to its harsh winters \u2013 is believed to have been only briefly inhabited by permanent residents sometime around 1200 A.D. during a particularly warm period in the Earth\u2019s climate. Despite local folklore, there\u2019s no evidence to support any theories of Cherokee here \u2013 instead those who hunted and passed through this area were likely Siouxan speaking peoples.<\/p>\n
When German Bishop Spangenburg made an expedition through the High Country of North Carolina in 1751, he encountered no Indians.<\/p>\n