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Forest Fire Lookout Association |

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North Carolina |
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Chapter |





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A 30 ft. live-in USFS lookout, Panther Top it the western most NC fire tower and sits perched on a peninsula jutting out into the Hiwassee Lake. Built in 1940 by the CCC, its road accessing the summit is opened for vehicular access for several weekends each autumn by the Tusquitee District of the Nantahala National Forest. The tower features a stone monument underneath the tower commemorating its listing in the National Historic Lookout Register. Panther Top was staffed by the USFS until 1971 and then periodically by the NCFS thereafter. The tower is accompanied by a popular ‘geocache’ located nearby. |
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Rising high between Andrews and Robbinsville at the crest of the Snowbird Mountains, Joanna Bald is a 31ft. live-in USFS lookout built in 1952 which replaced a wooden lookout house with a cupola. Staffed through the early 2000s, its use for fire detection ceased due to state budget cuts. This lookout was staffed by FFLA member Marshall McClung during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Upon completion of structural repairs, McClung will once again staff the tower as a volunteer during periodic lookout tower access dates. Joanna Bald features spectacular views of the Nantahala, Snowbird, Unicoi, and Cheoah Mountains. |
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Wayah Bald |
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Panther Top |
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Joanna Bald |
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Albert Mountain |
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Albert Mountain took over fire detection duties from the lookout house on nearby Standing Indian Mountain on the opposite rim of the Nantahala River Basin in 1951. Built to compliment a lookout cabin on the summit, it also replaced a wooden lookout tower one half mile north on the peak of Big Pinnacle Mountain. It overlooks the deep Nantahala River Basin to the west and the steep sloped Coweeta Hydrological Laboratory to the east. Over 10 other current or former lookout tower summits are visible from this tower. Its views also extend into Georgia as well as the Great Smoky Mountains. Located directly on the Appalachian Trail, one route to this tower features a brutally steep, hand-over-hand climb up abrupt slopes that lives in infamy among AT thru-hikers. |
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Wesser Bald |
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Built 1936 by the CCC, this 30 ft. former live-in lookout on the Appalachian Trail offers stunning views of the Nantahala, Snowbird, Unicoi, and Great Smoky Mountains while hovering just above the canyon-like southern rim of the Nantahala River Gorge. Most are unaware of Wesser Bald’s significance in revitalizing the Appalachian Trail when first ever thru-hiker Earl Shaffer spent the night in the tower during his 1948 epic journey. In awe of his quest, the tower watchman radioed ahead to lookouts further north on the trail and word eventually spread into trail towns and into the media. Becoming overgrown and forgotten during a post-World Ward II slump, the AT gained national popularity after word of Shaffer’s hike got out from the Wesser Bald lookout. The live-in cab was destroyed by arson in 1979 and replaced in the early 1990s by the USFS with an observation deck for hikers. |
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Cowee Bald |
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Steeped in Native American and pioneer history, the summit of Cowee Bald hosts another 30 ft. live-in USFS lookout tower. Built in 1933 by the CCC at the crest of the Cowee Mountains, it overlooks the Macon County seat of Franklin with superb views of the Nantahala, Great Smoky, Plott Balsam, and Great Balsam Mountains. Used for fire detection through the mid-1990s, Cowee Bald look also overlooks the nearby Big Laurel, a peculiar high altitude “hanging valley”. Accessible within a half mile by vehicle, Cowee Bald shares the summit with numerous other communication and meteorological towers. |
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Atop the highest peak in the Cowee Mountains, this 1934 CCC-built stone lookout house is among only two of its kind remaining in the southeastern United States. Staffed until 1969, Yellow Mountain lookout tower fell into disrepair until the mid-1980s when USFS employee Ron Carnes led a restoration effort to rehabilitate the tower to its former condition. Its central location among mountain ranges enables a spectacular vantage point of the Great Smoky Mountains, Plott Balsams, Cowees, Nantahalas, and Great Balsams as well as into the Georgia and South Carolina high country. Reach it by hiking the 5 mile Yellow Mountain Trail starting near the quaint town of Highlands. |
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Yellow Mountain |
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Great Smoky Mountains & Vicinity |
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Shuckstack |
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A Public Works Administration effort completed in 1934, the Shuckstack lookout tower had a bird’s eye view of the start to finish construction of Fontana Dam, just 2 miles south, from 1941 to 1944. The tallest dam in the eastern United States was finished in just three years using work shifts encompassing 24 hours per day as an war effort project during World War II. Shuckstack also witness the subsequent flooding of the Little Tennessee River and creation of the 35 mile long Fontana Lake – one of, if not the most, dramatic landscape changes ever seen in western North Carolina. Incorporated into the route of the Appalachian Trail in 1946-47, Shuckstack offers the first glimpse of the massive Great Smoky Mountains range soon to be traversed for northbound thru-hikers. Standing 60 ft. tall, this steel tower has suffered grave structural deterioration and is in desperate need of restoration. |
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Clingmans Dome |
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At 6,643 ft., Clingmans Dome stands as the highest peak in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the state of Tennessee, as well as on the entire 2,100+ mile Appalachian Trail. An abstract concrete observation tower crowns the summit after replacing an earlier wooden surveyor tower in the 1920s and a wooden observation tower in the 1930s. Built in 1959 as part of the National Park Service “Mission 66” initiative, Clingmans Dome receives over 4 million visitors each year, the highest among all state high points. A 375 ft. ramp leads to the top of the 45 ft. tower for the most all-encompassing view of the wild and rugged Great Smoky Mountains. |
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Mt. Cammerer |
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More resembling a lighthouse or castle turret, Mt. Cammerer lookout tower is perched perilously on a rocky promontory at the eastern edge of the Great Smoky Mountains range. An octagonal stone lookout house, completed in 1939 by the CCC, has become one of the most endearing symbols of the Great Smokies following its 1995 restoration. Two decades of deterioration followed its decommissioning in the 1970s until the 1970s until a restoration effort restored it to its former glory in the 1990s. The project was the first undertaking of the group that soon became the Friends of the Smokies, the national park’s leading fundraising organization. Formerly known as White Rock, Mt. Cammerer is often debated as the best view in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park andis located just a half mile off of the Appalachian Trail. |
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Mt. Sterling |
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Another CCC lookout in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, this 60 ft. steel tower stands at the highest elevation of any true fire tower remaining in the eastern United States. Built in 1935, the tower overlooks the Cataloochee Valley, the location of the recent reintroduction of elk to western North Carolina. Known as the Devil’s Bedchamber to early Cherokee hunters, Mt. Sterling can be reached with a three mile hike via its former jeep access road or a six mile epic ascent on the Baxter Creek Trail, debated as the most strenuous and demanding trails in the southeast. Because of a backcountry campsite located at the tower base, hardy backpackers can enjoy the sunrises and sunsets from the top of the tower following a night camped atop the 5,842 ft. summit. Mt. Sterling lookout boasts the highest elevation of any remaining true fire lookout in the eastern United States. |
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Mt. Noble |
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Overlooking the Cherokee Indian Reservation near the border with the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, this steel lookout tower replaced a wooden lookout in 1957. Standing 60 ft. tall, this tower can be reached by a two and one half mile trail starting at the Oconaluftee Indian Village in Cherokee, NC. Include a hike to the tower after viewing the outdoor drama “Unto These Hills” and a tour of the recreated Indian Village. Stunning views of the Great Smoky, Nantahala, Great Balsam, and Plott Balsam mountains are available from the top. Look carefully to pick out and identify nearby Barnett Knob lookout tower to the east. |
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Barnett Knob |
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Another fire tower on the Cherokee Indian Reservation, this lookout is just a half mile off of the Blue Ridge Parkway and overlooks both Cherokee, NC and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Built in 1932 by the CCC, this 60 ft. tower was manned for fire detection until 2004. The lookout and its breathtaking views of the Plott Balsams and the Great Smoky Mountains may be incorporated into the 700 mile North Carolina Mountains-To-Sea Trail in the future. Accompanied by a watchman’s cabin, Barnett Knob is reached with just a half mile hike off of the Blue Ridge Parkway between the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Maggie Valley. |
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Central NC Highlands |
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Rich Mountain |
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Just off of the Appalachian Trail, the Rich Mountain lookout tower was used for fire detection through the 1980s. Built by the USFS in 1932 straddling the NC/TN state line, a 30 ft. live-in tower overlooks the quaint mountain town of Hot Springs, NC where the Appalachian Trail shares the sidewalk as it passes through downtown. Amazing views of the Bald and Black Mountains, including the east’s tallest Mt. Mitchell, are seen from this lookout. |
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Camp Creek Bald |
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North Carolina’s oldest remaining lookout, Camp Creek Bald was built in 1928 with a standard square live-in cab supported by a 21 ft. steel tower. Prior to replacement with a proprietary circular live-in cab in the 1960s, this tower – like Wesser Bald, hosted Earl Shaffer for a night during his first ever 1948 Appalachian Trail thru-hike. Once threatened by a ski resort development gone bust, this lookout offers views of Mt. Mitchell and the Black Mountains as well as the Highlands of Roan. |
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Chambers Mountain |
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One of only two western North Carolina fire towers still actively staffed for fire detection, Chambers Mountain hosts a 60 ft. steel lookout that boasts views of the region’s highest ranges including the Great Smoky, Great Balsam, Plott Balsam, and Newfound Mountains. A hike through a scenic high mountain meadow reaches the1934 built tower and its NC Forest Service caretaker cabin inhabited by tower operator Orvale Banks. Watch out for the grazing livestock on your way to the tower! |
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Duckett Top |
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A hidden treasure in the North Carolina high country, Duckett Top is a quaint 10 ft. stone lookout house tucked away in isolated and beautiful Madison County. Built in by the CCC in 1936, it was first used by the USFS and then transferred to the NCFS who operated it until the late 1990s. Its views include the Great Smoky, Plott Balsam, Bald, Black, and Newfound Mountains as well as an incredible birds eye view of the Asheville skyline on a clear day. However, it is the charming mountain farm owned by Tom & Judie Hare at the trailhead to the tower that will have you and have you coming back to visit the tower and the farm for years to come. |
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Fryingpan Mountain |
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An easy hike off of the Blue Ridge Parkway or from the Pisgah Inn, Fryingpan Mountain is the tallest USFS lookout tower in western North Carolina at 70 ft. tall. Built in 1941 and supporting a steel live-in cab, this tower features the most stunning view of nearby Cold Mountain than anywhere else in the area. Its views of Mt. Pisgah, the Shining Rock Wilderness, the Cradle of Forestry, the Pisgah National Forest, and distant Mt. Mitchell and the Black Mountains are equally impressive. |
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Bearwallow Knob |
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Built in 1934 and standing 47 ft. tall, the steel Bearwallow Mountain lookout tower straddles the Eastern Continental Divide in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains range. It hovers above a scenic bald mountaintop which features panoramic views of the city lights of both Asheville and Hendersonville as well as the deep Hickorynut Gorge and Lake Lure. The Great Balsam, Craggy, and Black Mountains are all visible from its perch. Reached by a mile hike on its access road, the mountain’s central location among North Carolina’s highest ranges offers the opportunity to identify a seemingly innumerable amount of nearby and distant peaks. |
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Little Snowball |
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Little Snowball is perhaps one of the most fascinating lookout stories in western NC. Built by the Big Ivy CCC camp in 1934, this 21 ft. live-in fire tower stood on a spur of the Great Craggy Mountains, north of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Staffed by only two tower operators until its use for fire detection ceased in 1980, it was earmarked for removal and schedule for demolition. Local resident Lloyd Allen, who grew up in the Big Ivy community below and had fond childhood memories of the tower, bid $300 for the lookout and spent the next year dismantling it by hand. After sitting in storage for over a quarter decade, Little Snowball was re-erected and restored on the Big Ivy Historical Campus in 2006, the site of the CCC camp that built it and in the valley that it once protected. Today, it stands as the most historically complete lookout tower remaining in western NC |
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Mt. Mitchell |
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The summit of Mt. Mitchell boasts a more extensive history than any other southern Appalachian peak. At 6,684 ft., “Mitchell’s Peak” is the highest mountain in the eastern United States. Preceded by four different lookout towers, the squat stone observation tower atop Mt. Mitchell is scheduled for completion in Fall 2008 after construction closed the summit for over two years. Replacing the 35 ft. former tower that faced structural deterioration and inaccessibility, a new 10 ft. lookout will soon offer views from the rooftop of North Carolina |
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Flat Top Mountain |
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The Green Knob lookout boasts the best viewing point of the rugged and tall Black Mountains range, including Mt. Mitchell, North Carolina’s highest peak. Accessible by a half mile trail from the Blue Ridge Parkway, or for a hardier workout - a grueling 3 mile ascent from the Black Mountain campground, 5,000 ft. Green Knob hosts a 21 ft. former live-in lookout tower built by the USFS in 1931. Staffed through the late 1970s, Green Knob was restored in the 1990s but has again suffered deterioration and desperately needs additional rehabilitation. Straddling the Eastern Continental Divide, the tower also features stunning views of the Great Craggy Mountains, Table Rock, Grandfather Mountain, and the North Carolina Piedmont. |

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The highest point on the former estate of denim king and textile tycoon Moses H. Cone and his wife Bertha, Flat Top Mountain first hosted a 1900 built wooden lookout tower that served as an observatory for Cone and guests to his elaborate Flat Top Manor. Following the death of the Cones, their estate was given to the National Park Service who removed the wooden tower and replaced it in 1954 with a 40 ft. modified steel lookout tower for visitor use to the park now incorporated into the Blue Ridge Parkway. Reach this observation tower via a 3.5 mi. carriage trail that begins at the steps of the Cone’s impressive colonial revival mountain mansion and incorporates a piece of the North Carolina Mountains-To-Sea Trail. |
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Rendezvous Mountain |
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Rendezvous Mountain received its name for its use as a meeting point for Colonel Benjamin while summoning the local militia to organize against the threat of invading British forces. Above 350 Patriot militia organized on the summit and marched south to join the Overmountain Men who later took part in the victorious Battle of Kings Mountain. The lookout, a 60 ft. steel structure built by the nearby Camp James CCC camp in 1936, is accompanied by a CCC cabin adjacent to the tower. Both are incorporated into the North Carolina Forest Service Rendezvous Mountain Education State Forest, an interpretive park designed to educate visitors about the importance of forest conservation and management in the past, present, and future. |
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Moores Knob |
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The highest point in Stokes County and the Sauratown Mountain range, Moores Knob is crowned with a former stone lookout tower that features awe-inspiring views of the Winston-Salem skyline, Virginia, and the Blue Ridge Mountains. Use for fire detection for only a few years, hurricane damage caused its decommissioning and eventual conversion to a observation tower . The lookout was preceded by a steel fire tower built by the CCC in the 1930s later destroyed by fire. Located in Hanging Rock State Park, one of NCs most popular, the lookout is just one feature in the park that features hiking trails to a variety of fascinating caves, waterfalls, cliffs, and rock formations. |


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Walker Top |
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At 100 ft., Walker Top hosts the tallest lookout tower standing in western North Carolina. Originally built in 1951, this steel lookout was relocated from Carthage in the North Carolina Piedmont in the late 1980s. Replacing fire detection of former fire towers on nearby Benn Knob and Horse Ridge, Walker Top itself is no longer used as a fire lookout and is currently being transferred to a private landowner. Walker Top is the highest summit on Burkemont Mountain and overlooks the South Mountains State Park, NC’s largest. Striking views of Grandfather Mountain, the Linville Gorge, and Table Rock Mountain are visible to the north above the Burke County seat of Morganton while the glimpses of Mt. Mitchell and the Black Mountains are seen to the west. |
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Western North Carolina Lookout Towers |
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Nantahala National Forest |
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Hiking North Carolina’s Lookout Towers features 26 fire and lookout towers in western North Carolina. In addition to hiking and driving directions, each tower features extensive background information including natural and cultural history and architectural statistics. In addition to the 360 degree breathtaking views, these towers are also historic structures used by men and women for a half century to safeguard our natural resources that we cherish so much. Find out a little bit more about these former forest sentinels below. |






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Other towers featured in the appendix of Hiking North Carolina’s Lookout Towers include Look Rock (TN), Brasstown Bald (GA), Rabun Bald (GA), Meadow Creek Mountain (TN), and Cove Mountain (TN). Historical write-ups on former and restricted lookouts are included for many other towers, including Haoe Bald, Wauchecha Bald, Little Switzerland, High Rocks, Table Rock Mountain, Devils Nest,. High Windy, Pilot Mountain, Satulah Mountain, Standing Indian Mountain, Reynolds Mountain, and many, many more! |
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Green Knob |




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Blue Ridge & Black Mountains |
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Northwestern North Carolina |

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Situated along both the Appalachian Trail and Bartram Trail, Wayah Bald was built by the CCC in the 1930s. Once a 53-foot tall, three story stone lookout, faulty mortar led to its decommissioning in the 1940s. Later, the USFS removed half of its structure for conversion to a public observation tower. Wayah Bald features breathtaking views of the entire Nantahala National Forest and extends to the Great Smoky, Unicoi, and Great Balsam mountain ranges as well as into Georgia. |