| Brown Mountain lies in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Parkway
with an elevation of only 2,600 feet. The Brown Mountain Lights of Burke County, near
Morganton NC, have intrigued residents and visitors for hundreds of years. The lights are
mentioned in local Native American mythology, and by Geraud de Brahm, a German engineer
and the first white man to explore the region, in 1771. The lights have been described in
many ways from being a glowing ball of fire, to being a bursting skyrocket, or a pale
almost white light. The fact that they never seem the same is as fantastic as the lights
themselves. At times they seem to drift slowly, fading and brightening and at other times
they seem to whirl like pinwheels, then dart rapidly away.
One of the legends explaining the
Brown Mountain Lights was of a planter from the low country who traveled to the mountains
to hunt, and became lost. One of his slaves came to look for him and was seen searching
through the hills with a lantern, night after night. Now, according to the legend, the old
slave is gone, but his spirit remains and the old lantern still casts it's light.
Another such legend is of a woman
who disappeared about 1850, the general suspicion was that her husband had killed her.
Almost everyone in the community joined the search for her and one dark night while the
search was on the strange lights appeared on Brown Mountain. Some of the searchers thought
that this was the dead woman's spirit come back to haunt her murderer and warn the
searchers to stop looking for her body. The search ended without a trace of her body, but
long years afterwards a pile of bones was found under a cliff and were identified as the
skeleton of the missing woman.
The Cherokee Indians were familiar
with these lights as far back as the year 1200. According to Indian legend, a great battle
was fought that year between the Cherokee and Catawba Indians near Brown Mountain. The
Cherokees believed that the lights were the spirits of Indian maidens who went on
searching through the centuries for their husbands and sweethearts who had died in the
battle. Early frontiersman believed that the lights were the spirits of Cherokee and
Catawba warriors slain in an ancient battle on the mountainside. Some say the lights are
just a troop of candle-bearing ghosts destined to walk back and forth across the mountain
forever.
Of the many scientific theories
made to explain the Brown Mountain Lights, none have been proven. Some suggest that the
lights are caused by a combination of several minerals and gases in the area. One
geologist suggested that possibly deposits of radioactive uranium ore in the area may be
responsible for producing the lights. Another suggests phosphorus, but this element
oxidizes quickly and is not found here. Pitchblende Ore, from which radium is derived, has
been mentioned, but the rays from radium are invisible.
Some scientists have advanced the
theory that the lights are a mirage. Through some peculiar atmospheric condition they
believe the glowing balls are reflections from Hickory, Lenoir, and other towns in the
area. The only drawback to this theory is that the lights were clearly seen before the War
between the States, long before electricity was used to produce light.
A U.S. Geological Survey decided
in 1913 that the lights were locomotive headlights from the Catawba Valley south of Brown
Mountain. However, three years later in 1916 a great flood that swept through the Catawba
Valley knocked out the railroad bridges. It was weeks before the right-of-way could be
repaired and the locomotives could once again enter the valley. Roads were also washed out
and power lines were down. But the lights continued to appear as usual. It became apparent
that the lights could not be reflections from locomotive or automobile headlights.
A second U.S. Geological Survey
report disposes of the cause of the Brown Mountain Lights by saying they are due to the
spontaneous combustion of marsh gases. But there are no marshy places on or about Brown
Mountain.
The lights can be seen from as far
away as Blowing Rock or the old Yonahlosse Trail over Grandfather Mountain some fifteen
miles from Brown Mountain. At some points closer to Brown Mountain the lights seem large,
resembling balls of fire from a Roman candle. Sometimes they may rise to various heights
and fade slowly. Others expand as they rise, then burst high in the air like an explosion
without sound.
Brown Mountain is located in the
Pisgah National Forest, in the Blue Ridge mountains of Western North Carolina. There are
several places where the lights can be seen, here are a few of the more popular places.
- Brown Mountain Overlook Located 20
miles north of Morganton, on NC highway 181, 1 mile south of the Barkhouse Picnic Area.
- Wiseman's View Overlook Located 5
miles south of the village of Linville Falls on Kistler Memorial Highway a.k.a Old NC 105
or State Road 1238.
- Lost Cove Cliffs Overlook Located
on the Blue Ridge Parkway, at mile-post 310, 2 miles north of the NC highway 181 junction.
The Brown Mountain Lights are a
somewhat rare occurrence, and are not always visible. To see the lights you need good
visibility between your viewpoint and Brown Mountain. Clear weather conditions with little
or no moonlight are the most favorable for viewing the lights, but the lights have been
seen during hazy conditions and light rain. The lights have been reported to be seen at
all hours of the night between sundown and sunrise, but the best noted times are at 10:00
PM and 2:00 AM. The locals also say they are much more prominent in the months of
September and October.
One thing is certain, the lights
do exist. They have been seen from earliest times. They appear at irregular intervals over
the top of Brown Mountain. They move erratically up and down, are visible at a distance,
but vanish as one climbs the mountain. From the Wiseman's View on Linville Mountain the
lights can be seen well. They at first appear to be about twice the size of a star as they
come over Brown Mountain. Sometimes they have a reddish or blue cast. On dark nights they
pop up so thick and fast it's impossible to count them.
Who knows what causes the Brown
Mountain Lights, but if you view them, as I have, you can say you have viewed a natural
phenomenon that scientists have yet to explain. |