North Carolina Gazetteer browse
Place | Description |
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Cat Ridge | NE Transylvania County N of McCall Mountain. |
Cat Square | crossroads community in NW Lincoln County. Named after unwanted cats and kittens were left there on several occasions. |
Cat Tail Creek | rises in N Johnston County and flows SE into Little River. |
Cataloochee | community on Cataloochee Creek in W Haywood County. Now almost entirely in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Alt. 2,620. Population formerly around 250. Cataloochee is a corruption of the Indian word gad-a-lu-sti, a descriptive exclamation that means "standing in a row." It is what the Indians saw from Cove Creek Gap—timber standing up on the distant mountains near the head of the watershed. |
Cataloochee Balsam | mountain on the Haywood-Swain county line between Horse Creek Gap and Pauls Gap. Alt. 5,940. |
Cataloochee Creek | is formed in W Haywood County by the junction of Caldwell Fork and Palmer Creek. It flows SE and E into Waterville Lake on Pigeon River. |
Cataloochee Divide | W Haywood County, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, extending NE from Whim Knob. It forms the E boundary of the park for more than 10 mi. It also marks the Cataloochee Creek and Johnson Creek drainage line. |
Cataloochee Township | NE Haywood County. |
Catawba | town in E Catawba County on the Catawba River. Inc. 1893. Alt. 834. Post office first est. as Chestnut Grove in nearby Iredell County, but the name was changed to Catawba Station when it was moved to E Catawba County in 1859. Became Catawba in 1877. |
Catawba County | was formed in 1842 from Lincoln County. Located in the W central section of the state, it is bounded by Iredell, Lincoln, Burke, Caldwell, and Alexander Counties. It was named for the Catawba Indians, who once inhabited the region. Area: 412 sq. mi. County seat: Newton, with an elevation of 996 ft. Townships are Bandy, Caldwell, Catawba, Clines, Hickory, Jacobs Fork, Mountain Creek, and Newton. Produces wheat, oats, barley, hay, poultry, corn, cattle, hogs, hosiery, furniture, fiber-optic cable, textiles, electronics, fabricated metals, lumber, paper boxes, crushed stone, and brick. |