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The Setting
Using your community’s history and arts to
attract visitors is sound economic strategy.
Moving tourists to and between sites via
driving tours is a tried-and-true method.
But where did this concept of tying together
the odds and ends of an area’s heritage and
marketing them as a unit come from? One of the
first programs in the nation to recognize and
tap into an inherent industry—the past and its
rituals—originated in the mountains of North Carolina.
HandMade in America, which more or
less forged the original heritage trail, is now
the grandma of all heritage driving tours. Here,
a mature heritage tourism program shares its story.
In the ancient hills and dales of western North Carolina live
people who have eked livings from the steep, rocky earth and
carried
on Native and Old World traditions for centuries. Being rural
kept the traditions—crafts, specifically—pure. No
second-rate materials, no cutting corners to meet quotas. These
are as authentic a bunch of folks as you’re likely to meet
anywhere in the country. And so are their crafts, which, while
considered art forms today, grew out of necessity in a remote
wilderness: pottery, blown glass, wood-working, weaving.
In the 1980s and ‘90s, Western North Carolina felt the
drift outward by its home-grown children who sought stronger
economic markets in which to make their livings. Difficult terrain,
lack of infrastructure, and unimproved road systems prevented
many
industries from locating to the mountainous region. Of the 23
counties that eventually came under the crafts program, 14 are
considered “economically distressed” by the North
Carolina Department of Commerce.
Local economic development strategists realized they would need
to look inward for resources on which to build. They considered
the huge concentration of folk arts and realized they had an
existing invisible industry of craftspeople. To organize and
promote this inherent industry, strategists formed the nonprofit
HandMade in America in 1993. With funding from the North Carolina
Division of Tourism, Film and Sports Development, HandMade researched
the profile of heritage travelers to the region so they would
know their target market, then the group applied for and received
a three-year organizational development grant from the Pew Partnership
for Civic Change. More than 360 citizens participated in a regional
planning process to help determine how HandMade could establish
western North Carolina as the center of handcrafted objects in
the nation.
But getting from recognizing the value of its environmentally
friendly industry that employs 740 full-time and 3,300 part-time
workers who contribute more than $122 million to the local economy
annually, to organizing and marketing it as an economic development
tool took some seriously hard work and a whole lot of flying
by the seat of the pants.
Becky Anderson, HandMade’s executive director explains. “We
set out to find the elusive balance between
protecting sacred places and encouraging the growth of tourism.”
HandMade in America developed a system of trails to take visitors
down back roads and steep mountain lanes directly to the artisans
themselves. To tell tourists the who, why, and where, HandMade
published in 1996 a guidebook, The Craft Heritage Trails of Western
North Carolina, the first such guide to take visitors onto the
private property of artisans.
“My dad started our family business 15 years ago,” explains
Brad Dodson of Mud Dabbers Pottery and Crafts of Waynesville
and Brevard. “His philosophy is one of being open and sharing
his knowledge about his art. He welcomes visitors into the studio
and shares with them what he’s doing. This way customers
not only get to see the mug or the vase being made, they can
take part in the essence of seeing it produced by meeting the
artist and talking with him while he’s creating.” Brad,
his father, John, and his brother, their mother,
and sisters all create pottery and work in the shops. “By joining up
with the HandMade group,” continues Brad, “we were
able to market more widely than we would have on our own. Their
philosophy meshed perfectly with ours and the Heritage Trails
book is a great marketing tool.”
The trail concept worked. Statistics prove the viability of
this ingenious endeavor. But, as Anderson points out, “You
just learn so much every single day. We had
no one to copy, no one to emulate to demonstrate the best course
of action.
And we made mistakes. But we’re smart enough to learn from
them and make changes.” Although not fully formed at
the outset, the process of establishing
the trails provided practical lessons.
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