Did you know The New River is said to be the second oldest river in the world actually pre-dating the Appalachian Mountains? The New River starts as two rivers in the mountains of northwest North Carolina – the South Fork and the North Fork – before they join in Ashe county. The New then flows north into Virginia and West Virginia where it merges with the Gauley River and eventually into the Ohio River.
The South Fork of the New River is a designated National Scenic and Wild River and it belongs to the New River Paddle Trail which starts in Todd. The Todd Island Park is part of the Mountain Heritage Trout Waters program. The program stocks trout at the park several times a year. Learn more about this program and fishing regulations here or at the NC Wildlife Resources Commission.
Todd’s position directly on the South Fork of the New River is an important part of its past and present. The even grade along the river made for an excellent railroad route and has become a well-known bike and running route today. Residents and visitors can enjoy its natural beauty as the river slowly flows by farms, meadows, and woodlands providing animal and fish habitats. Paddlers, tubers and fishermen, and women enjoy the outdoor recreation that the river provides.
Todd is located in the High Country of North Carolina between Boone and West Jefferson and is a community situated in a bend of the South Fork of the New River. History, outdoor recreation, music, arts, and a sense of community make Todd a wonderful place to live and visit.
We invite you to come to visit us when you can. May through October is our busy season and you’ll find lots to do, from shopping and eating at the Mercantile Gifts & Bakery, MgE Gallery, or RiverGirl Fishing Co. to tubing and kayaking down the river with one of the area outfitters.
If you are looking for an outdoor venue for a private event, Contact Us. And check out the activities and community events calendar to plan an evening of free music in the park or kick up your heels at a contra dance. Or choose a vacation rental for a longer, relaxing stay. We look forward to seeing you soon!
History of Todd, NC
The most storied parts of Todd’s history involve trains and timber in the 1920s.
We’ll get to that. Let’s start from the beginning a long, long time ago.
Native Americans
The earliest documented human activity in the Todd area was at a soapstone quarry located about ½ mile northwest of the Todd Post Office’s current location. Archaeologists have dated the quarry back about 6,000 years and believe that native peoples used the soapstone deposit – a large outcropping of rocks on a mountainside – to fashion bowls and vessels.
A dig site not far from this quarry has also documented a structure that was likely a summer house. The High Country of North Carolina – owing to its harsh winters – is believed to have been only briefly inhabited by permanent residents sometime around 1200 A.D. during a particularly warm period in the Earth’s climate. Despite local folklore, there’s no evidence to support any theories of Cherokee here – instead, those who hunted and passed through this area were likely Siouxan-speaking peoples.
European Settlers
When German Bishop Spangenburg made an expedition through the High Country of North Carolina in 1751, he encountered no Indians.
Wolf’s Den on NC 194 in Watauga County where Col. Benjamin Cleveland was rescued in 1781. Col. Riddle was captured and taken to Wilkesboro where he was hanged. This photo, from John Preston Arthur’s book, History of Watauga County (1914), shows the old Tugman house which was demolished only in the last 25 years.
The first mention of the Todd area in recorded history comes in April 1781. A Revolutionary War colonel named Benjamin Cleveland had been ambushed at Old Fields, a settlement located about 14 miles downstream of Todd in Ashe County. Cleveland’s captors took him up the South Fork of the New River, followed Elk Creek to what’s known today as Pine Orchard Creek and then to Riddle’s Knob to a place called Wolf’s Den. Wolf’s Den is located on NC 194 between Boone and Todd. A group of colonists banded together and rescued Cleveland at Wolf’s Den several days later. This is the only skirmish of the Revolution to have occurred in present-day Watauga County.
The next record we have of activity comes from the Tatum family. James Tatum built a cabin, possibly as early as 1780, overlooking the New River. The cabin was located at what’s today called the Old Tatum place, about 2 miles up Big Hill Road from downtown Todd. Descendants of the Tatum family still live in the area and in the 1950s they donated the Cabin to the Southern Historical Society which moved the structure to Boone. You can visit the cabin at the Daniel Boone Gardens on the grounds of Horn in the West.
The Tatum Cabin, built about 1785, was donated to the Southern Appalachian Historical Society in 1958.
Between 1780 and 1833, we know that the area was settled to some degree – at least enough for the establishment of a church in 1833. The first building known as South Fork Baptist Church was also built overlooking the river on what today is Big Hill Road – about ¼ mile from Todd Railroad Grade Road. The building had two doors – one for men and one for women since it was not proper for men and women to sit together in those days.
The community may have been called Elk X Roads (Elk Crossroads) because it was literally a crossroads. Old maps from the 19th century show a road from Council’s Store (Boone) to Jefferson and a road from Wilkes to Taylorsville (now Mountain City, Tenn.) crossed here.
In 1837, the first post office was established at Todd. The name at that time was Elk X Roads. We know that Thomas Greer was the first postmaster, but we are unsure of the exact location.
The area, for the most part, leading up to the Civil War, was split into large farms. Farming families married each other, thus consolidating the land holdings. Brown, McGuire, Cooper, Bledsoe, Graham, Ray, Dobbin, Tatum, and Howell were some of the most prominent names. Hugh Dobbin and James Todd both operated stores in Todd before the Civil War.
During the latter half of the 19th century, the community’s commerce grew with large-scale timber harvesting and also mining of mica and copper.
In 1894, the Post Office has formally renamed Todd in honor of Joseph Warren Todd, a native son, who was a Civil War veteran and credited with restoring order and thwarting bushwhackers in Watauga and Ashe counties immediately after the Civil War. His brother, James, was shot in the back and killed by bushwhackers near Todd. Col. Todd practiced law in nearby Jefferson following the war until his death in 1909. He also served several terms in the North Carolina General Assembly.
Todd’s heyday came in the early 20th century with the timber boom. In 1910, the Carolina-Virginia Railway announced the company would extend tracks from West Jefferson to Elk X Roads. The train was known as the “Virginia Creeper” because of its slow but steady ascent of the steep grades.
At the peak of the boom, Todd boasted two doctors, a dentist, one bank, seven stores, three mills, and two hotels. The community was incorporated in 1915 and had a mayor, council, and a town marshal. Frank Ray and Walter Cook, co-founders and operators of the general store for more than 40 years, were the only two known mayors.
The Virginia-Carolina railroad came to Todd because of the vast tracts of standing timber in the area. By 1934, most of the mountains in the valley were stripped of hardwood trees and the railroad company was losing money running the extra 14 miles of track to Todd. It was the midst of the Great Depression and the train pulled up its tracks, the Bank of Todd was liquidated and the town’s commerce all but vanished in a few short years. In 1940, a devastating flood washed away buildings and much of the evidence of what had gone on here before.
By World War II, there was only a handful of businesses remaining and the Todd General Store is the sole continuously operating business to survive the boom years. Today, it is one of the oldest continuously operating general stores in North Carolina. The North Carolina General Assembly formally revoked the town’s charter in the 1970s.