HIKING SIPSEY:
A Family’s Fight
That Saved Eastern Wilderness
Long before Jim and Ruth ever met, their
mixed Cherokee families had instilled a love for the beautiful and serene
canyons of Sipsey; these canyons were formed from a thousand waterfalls that
create the eternal sounds of wilderness as they cascade from sandstone bluffs
into the streams entering Sipsey River.
This was a land that Jim and Ruth knew as the Black Warrior Forest
before it was changed to recognize a white politician known as William B.
Bankhead.
In the 1960s, their precious forest as
they knew as children was being attacked by the very people who supposed to be
its protectors; the forest was being dismantled by the United States Forest
Service in the form of clear cutting and conversion of old growth hardwood
forests into commercial pine plantations.
Sipsey River along with feeder streams were being filled with silt from
extreme timber harvesting and pine stand conversion activities; many rare and
endangered plants and animals were being adversely impacted and affected by the
actions of an out of control big government agency driven by politically
powerful timber corporations.
Jim and Ruth Manasco started the biggest
fight of their lives which culminated in the preservation of Sipsey Wilderness Area. Other eastern wildernesses in United States
were create by being piggy backed on the Sipsey Bill introduced by Senator John
Sparkman. Ruth said, “Wilderness is the most important thing I
ever done except having children!”
Jim, Ruth, and their children sacrificed
to protect the sacred grounds their ancestors had walked for thousands of years
before the coming of white man. For years, the Manascos spent three days per
week walking, photographing, writing, and trying to draw attention to the
plight of the Sipsey River canyons; this was one family’s fight to save and
protect the Sipsey area that they had been taught to love as children and knew
as the Black Warrior.
Jim and Ruth wanted to honor their
Native American ancestors by naming the SipseyRiver area they were struggling
to protect and preserve the Black Warrior Wilderness. From the early 1730’s, the French explorers,
trappers, and traders had referred to this upper drainage area of the
BlackWarrior River the by its Indian name Riverie de Tuscaloosa; in Muskogee
language, tusca means warrior and loosa means black. Therefore, Jim and
Ruth felt that it was fitting to call the Sipsey old growth forest they were trying
to preserve the Black Warrior Wilderness.
In addition, the Manasco Family knew that the Creek Indian lands lay to
the south of the High Town Path that followed along the Tennessee Divide; the
divide also defined the northern boundary of the Sipsey River drainage basin.
After deciding on the name of Black
Warrior for this new eastern wilderness they were seeking to preserve for
future generations to enjoy, Jim and Ruth faced another dilemma; the Black
Panther organization became a radical militant group and congressional approval
may have been swayed by the close association in the names. In order not to create a huge controversy in
the United States Congress over the name, Jim reluctantly said, “Just call the area the Sipsey Wilderness;”
thus, the name of the area came from the Creek Indian word meaning poplar or
cotton wood tree and to this day is known as the Sipsey Wilderness Area.
Read
more about the Sipey Wilderness in the future book that Jim Manasco and I will
co-author, “HIKING SIPSEY: A Family’s Fight That Saved Eastern Wilderness!”
Jim Manasco wrote about one of my Cherokee ancestors with the surname Brown in his book: Walking Sipsey. If anyone knows how I might be able to contact him or can get a message to him to contact me, please E-mail me at smestes@bellsouth.net.
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