361 Acres Added to Jocassee Gorges Heritage Preserve

The addition of the 361 acre Smoak/Cathcart tract will protect the Jocassee Gorges Heritage Preserve in northern Pickens County.

An important addition of 361 acres has been added to the Jocassee Gorges complex in northern Pickens County adjacent to the North Carolina state line.

The Smoak/Cathcart addition to Laurel Fork Heritage Preserve will protect the northern boundary of the Jim Timmerman Natural Resources Area at Jocassee Gorges.

The 361 acres is an addition to Laurel Fork Heritage Preserve within Jocassee Gorges. The S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) purchased the land from Chinquapin Hollow Inc. for $2,404,260 with funds from the Heritage Land Trust Fund. This was below the appraised value of $2,530,000. The owners of the property were Lois Cathcart of Chapin and Copley Smoak of Arkansas, formerly of South Carolina.

“I want to congratulate the DNR for its effort to acquire this property,” said state Sen. Larry Martin of Pickens. “This addition to the Jocassee Gorges will allow protection of the northern boundary of Jocassee and provide the people of South Carolina more beautiful areas to enjoy.”

The 361-acre addition to Laurel Fork Heritage Preserve, which features mature forests of oak, hickory, hemlock, white pine and yellow poplar, as well as the headwaters of Rock Creek, is land that was prime for development, according to DNR.

“If we had not gotten this land, there would have been large houses overlooking the upper portion of the Jocassee Gorges tract,” said Mark Hall, DNR Jocassee Gorges project manager. The land, known as Chinquapin Hollow, adjoins the north side of Laurel Fork Heritage Preserve in the heart of the Jocassee Gorges.

The former owners wished this land to be protected in a natural state and worked with DNR to sell the land below market value. “We can all be grateful that DNR saw fit to protect this area,” said Copley Smoak, one of the owners. “It will be part of a wild treasure, saved for us and for future generations.”

The Heritage Land Trust Fund, source of the funds to purchase Chinquapin Hollow, comes from a small portion of revenue collected from documentary stamps required in South Carolina property transactions. The funds may be used only for acquiring and managing significant natural and cultural areas. The Heritage Trust Program protects significant natural and cultural lands in South Carolina.

Formed by state law in 1976, Heritage Trust has protected 82,230 acres on 70 state heritage preserves found throughout South Carolina. Find out more about Heritage Trust managed lands at: www.dnr.sc.gov/managed/index.html.

For more information about the many projects undertaken by DNR, visit the web site at www.dnr.sc.gov.

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