The Lost Years Of Lake Toxaway

In the years after the 1916 dam burst that emptied the lake, there were several false starts, but no real new beginnings for Lake Toxaway, the Toxaway Inn, and the surrounding property.

At first many expressed hoped that a new, more secure concrete dam would be built, returning the lake to its former glory; but that wasn’t an easy proposition for then-owner E.H. Jennings to consider. Already dealing with sometimes hard-to-manage operational finances, he now faced a significant number of lawsuits from South Carolina farmers whose crops had been affected when the dam burst (this group, not surprisingly, also opposed a new dam).

At one point, Jennings actually ordered new survey work to be done on the former shoreline, but no actual work proceeded from it.[1] Tourism continued at the other resorts, while the Toxaway Inn remained closed for the indefinite future.

In 1917, Jennings sold a tract of the estate land, some 4,500 acres, to Jerome Moltz who expanded it into a major logging operation.

Tolvin and Cynthia Miller in an undated photo.

Thanks to John’s efforts in 2011 and 2012 to record oral histories from that era, we can listen in on recollections from Barbara McCoy Gillespie, one of Miller’s granddaughters, with other family members:

The country went through another World War and still the enormous Inn sat among rotting stumps. Finally, in the summer of 1947, a company out of Knoxville was contracted to tear down the Inn and sell any usable wood and furnishings.[4]

According to the Transylvania Times, “Locals, antique dealers, and scrap dealers purchased items from hand-painted china to hardwood flooring. Items up for sale included electrical wiring, plumbing fixtures, bathtubs, windows, furniture, mirrors and more.”[5]

The Gastonia Gazette, August 14, 1947.

As the columnist for the Gastonia Gazette notes in the above right article, this seemed an undignified finish to a glorious era, with the empty property then offered for sale. But what seemed a sad ending was, in fact, just the beginning of Lake Toxaway’s revival.

SOURCES:

[1] Glenville & Cashiers…From the Records, Carol M. Bryson
[2] Glenville & Cashiers…From the Records, Carol M. Bryson
[3] Brevard News, June 17, 1926
[4] Glenville & Cashiers…From the Records, Carol M. Bryson
[5] Transylvania Times, Picturing the Past, January 30, 2017