HISTORY OF THE CHEROHALA - HOOPER BALD

In 1908 the Whiting Manufacturing Company of England purchased a large tract of land in the Snowbird Mountains of Graham County, North Carolina. Mr. George Gordon Moore, an advisor for the company, was allowed to establish a game reserve on Whiting lands. About 1911 a 500-acre hog lot enclosed by split rail fencing was constructed on Hooper Bald, a 5,400-foot mountain near the Tennessee line.

In April 1912 a shipment of European wild hogs arrived in Murphy by rail. The eleven sows and three boars, purchased from an agent in Berlin, Germany, were said to have come from the Ural Mountains of Russia. Each of the hogs weighed between 60 and 75 pounds. One of the sows died during the rugged transport from Murphy to Hooper Bald by ox-drawn wagon.

From the beginning the hogs were able to escape the pen. A number were known to have rooted-out passages under the fence so they could come and go at will. The relocated animals found the extreme conditions favorable and immediately began to proliferate. In the early 1920s the population in the lot was estimated at 100 hogs, but many others were living free. A hunt with dogs was conducted in the pen and only two hogs were killed - the rest escaped in the frenzy, joining those already living in the dense wilderness.

Today the Russian Blue Boar population continues to grow in spite of hunting and the encroachment of civilization. A typical two-year-old male hog can weigh 180 pounds, but much larger boars have been taken. Now you can visit Hooper Bald in the luxury of your vehicle after a twenty-minute drive on the Cherohala Skyway. It is hard to imagine that an ox-drawn wagon could have ever made it to the top. An encounter with a wild hog is unlikely for the typical visitor. These animals tend to stay in the deepest forests.