Kings Mountain Historical Museum, at 100 East Mountain Street, Kings Mountain, North Carolina, features archives and objects related to the City of Kings Mountain. It’s free to visit.
Visiting Kings Mountain? Also check out Kings Mountain Gateway Trail and Southern Arts Society!
A Delicious Country
July 18 to October 21, 2023
In 1700, John Lawson left London and landed in Charleston, South Carolina. For reasons unknown, he undertook a two-month journey through the still-mysterious Carolina backcountry. His travels yielded, A New Voyage to Carolina in 1709, one of the most significant early American travel narratives, rich with observations about the region’s environment and Indigenous people.
In 2014, writer Scott Huler made a decision to leave his home for his own journey by foot and canoe, retracing Lawson’s route through the Carolinas. What he finds are surprising parallels between Lawson’s time and our own, with the locals and their world poised along a knife-edge of change between a past they can’t forget and a future they can’t quite envision.
Exhibit courtesy of City of Raleigh Historic Resources and Museum Program-City of Raleigh Museum.
Kings Mountain Historical Museum
Special Events
Archivist Talk with Ensley Guffey: The Catawba and the American Revolution
Saturday, July 29, 2023
1 to 2 p.m.
Free (registration required)
Catawba Archivist Mr. Ensley Guffey will present a deeper look into the Catawba People and their participation and involvement in the American Revolution.
Ensley F. Guffey has completed his AA, BA, an MA in History, and an MLIS. Since 2020, Ensley has been the tribal archivist for the Catawba Indian Nation, working out of the Catawba Nation Archives in the Catawba Cultural Center on the Old Reservation outside of Rock Hill, South Carolina. There he cares for a multi-media collection including everything from documents to pottery to projectile points to traditional regalia to audio and video on a variety of formats.
Meet the Author & Curator: Scott Huler’s “A Delicious Country”
Saturday, September 9, 2023
1 to 2 p.m.
Free (registration required)
In 1700, explorer John Lawson left “Charles-Town,” then the only settlement of any size in the Carolina colony, for a walk into the backcountry, “being six English-men in Company, with three Indian-men, and one Woman.” Two months and almost 600 miles later he emerged in what North Carolinians today would call Little Washington, with stories to tell. He put the stories in “A New Voyage to Carolina” in 1709, and it became a best-seller, helping populate the Carolina colony. Three hundred fourteen years later, writer Scott Huler, seeking descriptions of early Carolina, read Lawson’s book. He went looking for a book that connected what Lawson saw with present-day Carolina. That book did not exist, so Huler, like Lawson, took a walk, with the goal of comparing what Lawson saw with what he saw. His walk took a year, and it too yielded stories.
Those stories constitute “A Delicious Country,” an account of his own walk and a comparison with Lawson’s. Like Lawson, Huler described flora and fauna, geography and ecosystem, settlement and culture. Lawson sent his botanical specimens to the British Museum. Huler’s specimens — from plants to rocks, from beer cans to arrows — have been gathered into an exhibit that has been shown in Raleigh and Charlotte and now comes to Kings Mountain.
Double-Check Before You Head Out!
We make every effort to make sure that everything on Charlotte on the Cheap is 100% accurate.
However, sometimes things change without notice, and we are not always notified. It’s also possible that we can make a mistake.
Please verify all deals and events with the venue or organizer before you go.
You might also be interested in:
- Subscribing to Charlotte on the Cheap’s email list
- Best skyline views in Charlotte for photos
- Best food and drink deals in Charlotte
- 50+ walks and hikes in and near Charlotte
- Free and cheap things to do this week
- Charlotte Hotel Deals
- Charlotte on the Cheap events calendar
- Charlotte area farmers markets
Leave a Reply