Online Encyclopedia

CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS (or more correct...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 627 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS (or more correctly the Cumber-
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land Plateau or Highlands)
  , the westernmost of the three
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great divisions of the Appalachian uplift in the
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United States, composed of many small ranges of mountains (of which Cumberland Mountain in eastern
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Kentucky is one) . It extends from Pennsylvania to
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Alabama, attaining its greatest height (about 4000 ft.) in Virginia . The plateau is rich in a variety of
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mineral products, of which
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special mention may be made of
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coal, which occurs in many places, and of the beautiful
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marbles quarried in that portion of the plateau which lies between Virginia and Kentucky and crosses
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Tennessee . The plateau has an abrupt descent, almost an escarpment, into the great Appalachian Valley on its E., while the W. slope is deeply and roughly broken . The whole mass is eroded in Virginia into a
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maze of ridges . Cumberland Mountain parts the waters of the Cumberland and Tennessee rivers . This range and the other ranges about it are perhaps the loveliest portion of the whole plateau . The peaks here and in the Blue Ridge to the E. are the highest of the Appalachian
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system .
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Forest-filled valleys, rounded hills and rugged gorges afford in every
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part scenery of surpassing beauty . The Cumberland Valley between the Cumberland range and the Pine range is one of special fame . In the former range there are immense caverns and subterranean streams . Cumberland
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Gap,
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crossing the ridge at about 167 ft. above the sea, where Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee meet, is a
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gorge about 500 ft. deep, with steep sides that barely give
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room in places for a roadway .

The mountains,

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river and gap were all discovered by a party of Virginians in 1748, and named in honour of the victor of
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Culloden, William, duke of Cumberland . Afterwards the gap gained a place in
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American
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history as one of the main pathways by which emigrants crossed the mountains to Kentucky and Tennessee . During the
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Civil War it was a position of great strategic im portance, as it afforded an entrance to eastern and central Tennessee from Kentucky, which was held by the Union arms; and it was repeatedly occupied in alternation by the opposing forces . The mountaineers of Kentucky and Tennessee are a strange stock, who retain in their customs and habits the
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primitive conditions of a
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life that has elsewhere long since disappeared . They have been pictured in the novels of
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Miss Murfree and John Fox, Junr . They are a tall, straight, angular folk, of
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fine
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physical development; the
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volunteers for the Union army from Kentucky and Tennessee during the Civil War—most of whom came from the non-slave-holding mountain region—exceeded in physical development the volunteers from all other states . For the
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education of these mountaineers Major-General Oliver Otis Howard founded in 1895 at Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, the Lincoln Memorial University (co-educational; non-sectarian; opened in 1897), which has collegiate, normal training and
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industrial courses, and an affiliated school of
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medicine, Tennessee Medical College, at
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Knoxville . The university had in 1907-1908 14 instructors and 570 students .
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Berea College in Kentucky was a
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pioneer institution for the education of mountaineers .

End of Article: CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS (or more correctly the Cumber-land Plateau or Highlands)
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