Old Black gets its name from the thick, dark-green spruce forest that coats its higher elevations.[1] From afar, this forest takes on a dark green character, especially in cooler months when contrasted with the brown hardwood forest in lower elevations. This forest also adds to Old Black’s blunt appearance— that of a low pyramid with a wide base.
Geology
Old Black comprises Thunderhead sandstone, a type of Precambrian Class II rock common throughout the Smokies.[2] The rock is part of the Ocoee Supergroup, which was formed from ocean sediments nearly a billion years ago.[3] The mountain was created over 200 million years ago during the Appalachian orogeny, when the North American and African plates collided, thrusting the rock upward.[4]
History
Arnold Guyot first measured the elevation of Old Black on his survey of the crest of the Smokies in the late 1850s. Guyot measured the mountain’s elevation at 6,373 feet, missing the modern measurement by just three feet.[5] While Guyot initially named the mountain “Mount Henry” after the director of the Smithsonian Institute, “Old Black” was the name that stuck.[6]
Laura Thornborough, a writer who made several excursions to the area in the 1930s, recalled the thick spruce forest that dominates in the Eastern Smokies:
As the A.T. swings around the Tennessee side of Guyot, it passes through what is believed to be the densest stand of spruce and balsam in the Great Smokies.[7]
In 1984, an F4 fighter plane crashed into the ridge between Inadu Knob and Old Black.[8] Some of the wreckage from this crash remains scattered about the area, with a number of fragments located in an area along the Appalachian Trail about a quarter-mile west of the trail’s junction with the Snake Den Ridge Trail. A short spur trail winds through the wreckage.
In 1935, the CCC constructed a segment of the Appalachian Trail across the western slope of Old Black.[9]
Access
Like most of the key peaks of the Eastern Smokies, Old Black can only be reached via a lengthy hike. The mountain is just over six miles from the nearest parking lot at the Cosby Campground. The quickest route involves following the Snake Den Ridge Trail out of Cosby (the trailhead is behind Campsite B51) for 5.3 miles to the Appalachian Trail junction at Inadu Knob. From this junction, Old Black is nearly a mile to the northwest. The trail comes to within less than a 10th of a mile from the summit, but the thickness of the forest atop the mountain will considerably slow any bushwhack attempt, and make off-trail navigation difficult.
As the Appalachian Trail crosses Old Black’s western slope, various clearings allow for spectacular views of Cocke County and Sevier County, Tennessee to the north and northwest. Along the mountain’s northeast slope, near a clearing used for a high-altitude helicopter landing pad, much of the Eastern Smokies and the Balsam Mountains can be seen, including Mount Sterling and Luftee Knob. Some of the finest views of Mount Guyot can be seen from this point.
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