'', 1888, by
David Edward Cronin The origin of
Lake Drummond is not entirely clear, as there is no apparent network of natural streams emptying into the lake. Archaeological evidence suggests varying cultures of humans have inhabited the swamp for 13,000 years. The
Powhatan empire extended to the northern edge of the Great Dismal Swamp around the time of the settling of
Jamestown (circa 1600), displacing the Chesapeake tribe residing there before. In 1650,
Algonquian-speaking Native Americans of coastal tribes lived in the swamp. In 1665,
William Drummond, the first governor of North Carolina, was the first European recorded as discovering the swamp's lake, which was subsequently named for him. In 1728,
William Byrd II, while leading a land survey to establish a boundary between the Virginia and North Carolina colonies, made many observations of the swamp, none of them favorable; he is credited with naming it the Dismal Swamp. The company later turned to the more profitable goal of
timber harvesting. Based on archeological findings, Native American communities fled to the Swamp for refuge from the colonial frontier. Along with the Native American communities, there were also multiple populations of African Americans taking refuge in the Swamp in early American History, many of them fleeing slavery due to the
Atlantic slave trade. These
Great Dismal Swamp maroons consisted of thousands of escaped Black
refugee slaves by the year 1860. They were able to find shelter, community and society in the swamp that was not readily available in the world outside the swamp. J.D. Smyth wrote of the maroons in his 1784 novel:
A Tour in the United States, "Run-away(s) have resided in these places for twelve, twenty, or thirty years and upwards, subsisting themselves upon corn, hogs, and fowls that they raised on some of the spots not perpetually under water, nor subject to be flooded, as forty-nine parts out of fifty are; and on such spots they have erected habitations and cleared small fields around them." Excavations reveal island communities existing until the
Civil War. Charlie, a maroon who worked illegally in a
lumber camp in the swamp, later recalled that there were whole families of maroons living in the Dismal Swamp, some of whom had never seen a White man. The
Underground Railroad Education Pavilion, an exhibit set up to educate visitors about the
fugitive slaves who lived in the swamp, was opened February 24, 2012. The
Dismal Swamp Canal was authorized by Virginia in 1787 and by North Carolina in 1790. Construction began in 1793 and was completed in 1805. The canal, as well as a railroad constructed through part of the swamp in 1830, enabled the harvest of timber. The canal deteriorated after the
Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal was completed in 1858. In 1929, the United States Government bought the
Dismal Swamp Canal and began to improve it. The canal remains the oldest operating artificial waterway in the country. Like the Albemarle and Chesapeake canals, it is part of the Atlantic
Intracoastal Waterway. ==Preservation==