EDITOR’S NOTE: Strangeville explores the legends, folklore, and unexplained history of Western North Carolina. From Cherokee mythology and Appalachian ghost stories to Bigfoot sightings and UFO encounters, the Blue Ridge Mountains have long been a hotspot for the strange and mysterious. Join us as we dig into the past and uncover the truth behind the region’s most curious tales.

NANTAHALA GORGE, N.C. — Long before settlers carved paths through Western North Carolina, stories spread through these mountains about a witch made of stone. Her name was Spearfinger, a shape-shifting spirit with a hand of sharpened rock and a hunger for human livers.

For generations, the Cherokee people told her story. To them, Spearfinger was not a ghost story meant to scare children but a warning. She represented danger disguised as something familiar and the power of nature when it turns against those who take it for granted.

Anthropologist James Mooney, who lived among the Cherokee in the late 1800s, recorded the legend in Myths of the Cherokee in 1900. He wrote that Spearfinger haunted the high ridges of Whiteside Mountain and the deep ravines near the Nantahala River. Cloaked in fog, she could call out in the voices of loved ones, luring travelers and children toward her. Her skin was said to glimmer like flint, and her right hand ended in a blade of stone.

In Cherokee, Spearfinger is known as Utlunta, meaning “she who had a stone hand”. The legend tells how she roamed the Smoky Mountains, taking the form of a trusted grandmother or friend. When people came near, she struck quickly, cutting deep with her stone hand and taking what she came for.

Her power was tied to the land itself. The Cherokee believed she was born of stone and could return to it. When she was finally defeated, the story says that animals of the forest helped reveal her weakness. Her heart was hidden in her right hand. When she fell, her body broke apart and became the rocks that still line the mountains. The echo of her fall, they said, could be heard in the winds that move through the ridges at dusk.

Spearfinger’s story remains one of the most enduring tales in Cherokee oral tradition. It has been passed down for centuries, told to remind people of balance and respect for the natural world. In the legend, she is a force that mirrors the mountains themselves – beautiful, powerful, and capable of harm if not treated with care.

Today her story is still told in Cherokee communities. Storytellers share it at autumn festivals, and hikers still visit the cliffs near Whiteside Mountain said to mark the place where she fell. On foggy mornings along the Nantahala River, when the wind moves through the valley and taps against the rock, some say it is the sound of Spearfinger searching for her lost heart.

More than a century after Mooney wrote down her account, the legend of Spearfinger endures in the mountains. She remains a reminder that every hollow and ridge holds stories older than memory, waiting for those who listen closely enough to hear them.