Mount Sequoyah


Mount Sequoyah is a mountain in the Great Smoky Mountains, located in
the Southeastern United States. It has an elevation of 6,003 feet above sea level. While
the Appalachian Trail crosses its summit, Sequoyah is an hike from
the nearest parking lot, making it one of the most remote places in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
The Tennessee-North Carolina border traverses Mount Sequoyah, with Sevier County to the north and Swain County to the south. The mountain consists of four small peaks, with the easternmost being the true summit. Sequoyah rises approximately above its southern base along Left Fork Creek and approximately above its northern base along the Little Pigeon River. Part of the headwaters of the Little Pigeon accumulate along Sequoyah's northern slope.
Mount Sequoyah is named after the inventor of the Cherokee alphabet. While it's doubtful that Sequoyah ever visited the mountain, numerous Cherokee villages dotted the base of the southeastern Smokies when European settlers arrived in the early 18th century. Arnold Guyot crossed Mount Sequoyah on his survey of the Smokies crest in the late 1850s. Guyot referred to the mountain as "The Three Brothers", and measured its elevation at. The mountain rarely saw a human presence until a segment of the Appalachian Trail was constructed across its summit in 1935.
The summit of Mount Sequoyah is among the most distant summits traversed by a trail in the Great Smokies. Following the Appalachian Trail from Newfound Gap, Mount Sequoyah is to the east. From the Cosby Campground, Sequoyah can be reached by following the Snake Den Ridge Trail to its junction with the Appalachian Trail, and then following the latter to Tricorner Knob, crossing Old Black and Mount Guyot along the way. From Tricorner, Mount Sequoyah is to the southwest, just beyond Mount Chapman. The Hughes Ridge Trail, which connects the Appalachian Trail and the Benton MacKaye Trail, terminates just over two miles southwest of Sequoyah.