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A Kayaker's View

See Watauga Lake up-close from a Kayak

Watauga Lake Triathlon

Swim over 1,000 yards in a deep lake, race in your bike over 21 miles through the mountains, THEN... run 5 miles ...

Daniel Boone Trail Marker at the Butler Museum near Watauga Lake Tennessee

A local treasure:
The Butler Museum: Part 2

All photos and illustrations by Pat Johns ©2007
All Rights Reserved

See links to article references at the end of the article.

Go to part 1    part 2
See Also . . . Old Butler Days

July, 2007
A particularly captivating part of this story is when the TVA in late December 1983 lowered the water level to the original river bed level to make needed repairs to the dam. Many former residents and curious visitors went back to the former town where foundations and road beds were revealed. This was a moving and sometimes sad experience for the former residents and their families. The museum plays a video tape of a Dan Rather newscast made during that time which includes interviews with some of those returning family members.
a tribute to the citizens of Old and New Bulter Tennessee effected by World War II

The Watauga Dam project began in the early 1940s but was stopped when materials and men were diverted to World War II.

The museum has an exhibit dedicated to the contributions and effects of World War II on the Watauga Valley people. Some who left to serve were killed in action. The ones who did return came back to see their homes and town in the process of moving to the new Butler location.

Original farming tools from Old Butler Tennessee at the Butler Museum

The history of the Watauga Valley goes back much further than The Dam, of course. Daniel Boone made visits through the area as early as 1769 as he traveled to and from western North Carolina and Kentucky.

A grist mill was established by Zeke Smith by 1820 and the area was know as Smith's Mill as late as 1860. It was eventually named for Colonel Roderick Butler a senator and a lawyer from Mountain City. (see link at the bottom of this page)

( Russ Calhoun's book, "Lost Heritage: The People of Old Butler, Tennessee, and the Watauga Valley" ( The Overmountain Press 1998 ) is a comprehensive resource of the people of the area and is available in the bookstore on this site and at the Butler Museum. )

Donors to the museum are honored with embossed bricks at the Butler Museum entrance Many people and organizations have contributed to the creation and maintenance of the Butler Museum. As you walk to the front door you will pass over embossed bricks with the names of those contributors.

One visit to the museum shows the truly unique story it tells. And how fortunate today's visitors are to hear the story from people who lived it.

Present-day Butler and Watauga Lake:
The moved town of Butler near the Butler Museum Watauga Lake Tennessee

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Boats on Watauga Lake near the Butler Museum

Go to Part 1 of this article

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