Southern Cast Iron – September 2019

(Ron) #1
SEPTEMBER | OCTOBER 2019 60


ThInKiNg bAcK oN hIsToRy, ApPaLaChIa wAsN’t aN eAsY pLaCe tO lIvE.


I tHiNk pEoPlE mAdE dO wItH wHaT tHeY hAd aNd mAdE tHe bEsT oF iT.

—Appalachian native Karl Worley

D


riving through Appalachia in the wee morning hours of
a crisp October day is like stepping back in time. Rolling
fi elds of golden sorghum stalks await their harvest while

time-worn, paint-chipped barns and a patchwork of farms dot


the lush ruby-hued autumnal landscape. In this beautiful corner


of the country, life is slower and days seem longer, and it’s the
present-day pioneers who inhabit the spacious land who keep


the pace.


The Appalachian Regional Commission defi nes Appalachia as

420 counties in 13 states spanning as far north as southern parts of


New York and as far south as portions of Alabama and Mississippi.
But ask most locals and they’ll give you varying answers on what


the region entails; because with its trying history and diverse


population, Appalachia is, in truth, hard to defi ne.


The area was fi rst inhabited by Native Americans who were
mainly split into two groups—the Iroquois and the Cherokees.


It’s believed that Hernando de Soto or his fellow explorers


named the Appalachian Mountain range on an expedition during


the 1500s. In search of back country to grow their settlements
and trade businesses, Europeans began arriving in the area,


bombarding the land that Native Americans had inhabited and


hunted for generations. Confl ict arose as Europeans forced these


tribes out of their homes, beginning the Cherokee War in 1758.
By 1761, outmanned and outgunned, the Native Americans were


defeated by the British and expelled from the land they’d always


known. This continued for decades with the signing of the Indian


Removal Act and consequently, the Trail of Tears. Without the
knowledge of how Native Americans lived sustainably off the
land, the European settlers had to learn how to live in a new
foreign frontier.

Back then, self-suffi ciency and community were the only ways
to survive.

“Thinking back on history, Appalachia wasn’t an easy place to
live,” says Karl Worley, Appalachian native and owner of Nashville
restaurant Biscuit Love. “I think people made do with what they
had and made the best of it. They focused on things that could
travel well and feed the family.”

Families had livestock they would butcher for meat and
gardens that grew every fruit and vegetable that fi lled their
supper plates. At this time, this lifestyle was common in
settlements across the United States, but in Appalachia, it would
remain like this for much longer.

Cookbook author, chef, and musician Susi Gott Séguret’s
parents moved to Appalachia in 1961 when the region was in
another period of transition. Large-scale supermarkets hadn’t
quite made an appearance, but their time was soon approaching.
And as stores began to emerge across the country, home gardens
and self-reliance started to take a back seat. People began taking
jobs in cities and soon turned to grocery stores to supply the
foods they once grew. But given Appalachia's isolated areas,
urbanization was a much slower process there.
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