- UNC Ranked Top 10
- NC Economic News and Opportunities
- Your North Carolina Dream
- More Bear Stories
- 5 Adventurous Day-Trips Out West
- NC Wine Country News & Events
- Whiskey Rebellion Loses One More
- Some Good News for NC Tourism
- National Treasure
- New Year’s Celebration of Music & Dance
- Adventure
- Agriculture
- Architecture
- Art
- Autumn Leaves
- Bears
- Biking
- Blue Ridge
- Blue Ridge Parkway
- Carolina Coast
- Carolina History
- Civil War
- Development
- Education
- Family Activities
- Family Events
- Festivals
- Football
- Furniture Making
- Gardens
- Ghost Stories
- Great Smoky Mountains
- Green Living
- Haunted Trails
- Hiking
- Holidays
- Lakes
- Lighthouses
- Log Homes
- Military
- Museums
- Music
- NASCAR
- Native Legends
- Nature
- NC Land
- NC Living
- NC Trails
- Night Life
- North Carolina
- Outer Banks
- Parkway Drives
- Regional Crafts
- Resorts
- Restaurants
- Ski Resorts
- Snow Tubing
- Snowboarding
- Sports
- Summer Camps
- Timber Frame
- Tourism
- Vacation Homes
- Wildlife
- Wineries
- Winter Sports
Whiskey Rebellion Loses One More
March 17th, 2009

Legendary mountain moonshiner Popcorn Sutton died at his home in Cocke County, Tennessee of natural causes, a family member says. He was 62. Sutton managed to escape spending 18 months in prison after federal agents found some stills and hundreds of gallons of moonshine in a Haywood County storage shed last summer. He’d pled guilty to the charges, was sentenced this past January and was supposed to report to a federal prison in Kentucky.
Chalk one last mark on the board for the Whiskey Rebellion vs. The Revenoo’ers, as rumors abound that his death may not have been so ‘natural’ after all…
As ‘Moonshine’s’ daughter wrote in her book, “Daddy Moonshine”,
“It isn’t surprising that Popcorn has attracted so much attention. His slippery craft and his old-timey antics appeal to something in our collective past. His overalls can be seen as the blue denim flag of old pick-up trucks and cork-plugged clay jugs. His colorless hat is the nod of a gentleman, his beard the badge of a wild man. His high reedy voice carries the echoes of banjos and fiddles. His stealth and focus speak volumes for the cunning and moxie of who he is: a Smokey Mountain moonshine master.”
Public schools don’t spend much time on the Whiskey Rebellion generally, though it was one of our new nation’s first insurrections, beginning when our first Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, convinced Congress to impose new taxes on distilled spirits and carriages in 1791. The tax was inherently unfair by taxing small producers a third more than big producers, a particular burden on producers in the western frontier areas where whiskey was a tradable commodity. Civil protests on the frontier soon became armed rebellion, so President Washington decided to make an example of western Pennsylvania and assembled a militia. They marched west out of Harrisburg – with Washington himself in the lead – but found no sign of the rebels. Eventually fines were imposed, people were jailed, victory was declared, and folks started worrying about other things.
The suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania served to encourage distillers in Kentucky and Tennessee, which remained outside federal control for some years. These areas and portions of North and South Carolina began producing and selling on the sly, and moonshining remained a regional art form in some people’s books. For instance, did you know that NASCAR has roots in the Rebellion?
At any rate, our hats are off to perhaps one of the last notorious moonshiners from our mountainous region. Here’s to you, Popcorn! May there be banjos and fiddles in heaven.
Links:
Legendary Moonshiner Dies
Moonshiner Popcorn Sutton Dead
Popcorn Sutton
Wiki: Whiskey Rebellion
Whiskey Rebellion
Friendship Hill National Historical Site
Some Good News for NC Tourism
February 20th, 2009

The current dismal state of the economy everywhere has had some involved with North Carolina tourism at a loss as to what the state can expect in 2009. North Carolina ranks 6th in tourism out of all 50 states, with entire sectors and large swaths of land dedicated to hosting visitors throughout the year and for special occasions, holidays, seasonal offerings and fun festivals.
100 of North Carolina’s counties benefit from tourism as our welcome visitors spend more than $15 billion dollars here every year, making tourism one of the biggest contributors to our economy. Thus when last summer’s high gas prices and the autumn gas shortages cut into the number of visitors, many citizens got a pre-taste of the coming recession.
Tourism promoters and attractions are are stepping up their on-line marketing efforts, new attractions are opening and others are getting face-lifts, and tourism boards are defending – and in some cases increasing – their budgets to keep the tourism dollars coming in.
Filed under Development, NASCAR, NC Living, North Carolina, Tourism | Comment (0)Top 25 Reasons to Visit NC – 3
March 12th, 2008
Part 3: Reasons 11 – 15
Moving toward the east, there are more great reasons to consider North Carolina’s abundant offerings for family fun when planning getaways and vacations.

From the very top of Clingman’s Dome near the Tennessee border to the sand dunes at Jockey’s Ridge State Park on the strand of the Outer Banks, North Carolina’s 925-mile long Mountains-to-Sea Trail offers an adventurous way to explore the state’s natural treasures and human wonders. This is an adventure a visitor can embrace in small chunks or in an extended all at once while experiencing the best of NC’s towns and cities, rural agritourism initiatives and natural preserves.
Charlotte: Sports Lover’s Paradise
September 10th, 2007

Football season is upon us, and North Carolina’s Panthers soundly defeated the Rams in St. Louis, the first time since the franchise began that their opener was an away game. Charlotte is the city the Panthers call home, and is also the home town of NASCAR. For sports lovers, you just can’t beat it!
The home schedule for the Panthers at the beautiful downtown Bank of America Stadium and events schedule for Lowe’s Motor Speedway are below, and there are several overlapping weekends that sports lovers could take advantage of for booking a multi-purpose get-away in the Charlotte environs.
Filed under Football, Lakes, Museums, NASCAR, North Carolina, Sports | Comment (1)