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You're listening to Bad Moon Rising, performed
by Creedence Clearwater Revival. For
hundreds of years now, the Brown Mountain Lights have mystified the people around
the area of Brown Mountain, near Morganton, North Carolina. The
local Native Americans have told of these lights for centuries. The first recorded
sighting by a European settler was made by Geraud de Brahm, a German-born engineer
who was exploring the area in 1771. The
lights are neither predictable nor consistently described. They have been described
as a ball of light, floating in the air, brightening and fading until no longer
visible. At times, they have been described as whirling like pinwheels in the
darkness and by others, like quietly exploding fireworks in the air. They have
also been described as suddenly darting farther skyward and increasing in intensity
before disappearing. Of course, as
with any unexplained phenomenon, legends abound. The Native Americans claim that
a great battle occurred here between the Cherokee and the Catawba. The lights
are the spirits of young Indian women, each seeking a lover or husband killed
in the battle. Another legend tells of a planter who was visiting the
mountains on a hunting expedition. He became lost and his slave went out to search
for him. The loyal slave was seen many times, lantern in hand, searching for his
master. Legend has it that the lights are the sightings of the slaves lantern,
still searching in the darkness. And
yet, another legend has to do with the murder of a woman in 1850. It was believed
that the husband killed her and disposed of her body on Brown Mountain. The community
organized a search party for the lady and on one dark night, a light appeared.
It was the belief by some that the light was the spirit of the lady, returning
to haunt her killer and to tell the party to search no more. Many years after
that night, bones were found at the bottom of a cliff. These were believed to
have been the skeletal remains of the missing lady. There
have been many efforts to provide a scientific explanation for the lights, but
none have been successful so far. Some state that the presence of several minerals
and gases in the area produce the lights. Others suggest that it is phosphorus.
In 1913, the U.S. Geological Survey
declared that the lights are somehow the reflections of automobile or locomotive
headlights in the Catawba Valley, located south of Brown Mountain. But, the lights
have been occurring since long before locomotives or automobiles existed. In 1916,
a huge, very destructive flood occurred, leaving Brown Mountain and the Catawba
Valley without power. Railroad bridges and roads were washed out; power lines
were down. It was weeks before they could be restored. During those weeks without
locomotives, automobiles or electrical lighting, the mysterious lights were still
sighted over Brown Mountain. The U.S. Geological Survey then decided it was the
spontaneous combustion of marsh gas. There are no marshes in the area of Brown
Mountain to produce these gases. The
closer a person is to Brown Mountain, the larger the lights appear. The times
that are best to see them is between about 8:00 pm and 2:00 am in the months of
September and October. The best places to view them are: The
Brown Mountain Overlook, located about 20 miles north of Morganton, North Carolina
on North Carolina Highway 181. Lost
Cove Cliffs Overlook, located at mileage marker 310 on the Blue Ridge Parkway. To
see photos, click HERE:
See the video below, courtesy of
YouTube. |