"Maggoty Gap" describes a natural gateway of the
Great Wagon Road (locally known as The
Carolina Road) that made it possible for wagons and livestock traffic to pass through the
Blue Ridge Mountains at
Roanoke, Virginia near Maggoty Creek (now called Maggodee Creek). It carried enormous amounts of traffic in the late 18th century and much of the 19th century until a railroad was extended over the ridge in 1892. During the years from 1760 to 1776 it was said to be the heaviest traveled road in all of America.
Morgan Bryan (1671–1763) cut the path for the first wagon to cross the gap from
Starkey, Virginia to Boone's Mill, Virginia in 1746 (at age 78). He reported that he had to disassemble his wagon and carry it piecemeal up the last slope. (It reportedly took three months for him and his sons to travel a distance of about 80 miles from Roanoke to their destination at the "Shallow Ford" of the
Yadkin River in the vicinity of
Winston-Salem, North Carolina.) In 1753, the original 15
Moravians used Bryan's road to get a wagon to their
Wachovia Tract located at present-day Winston-Salem, but took a wrong turn and missed Maggoty Gap; instead with great difficulty they traveled over nearby
Windy Gap and rejoined Bryan's road at present-day Boone's Mill. In 1838,
Claudius Crozet (1789–1864) surveyed the road for its improvement as the Pittsylvania, Franklin, and Botetourt Turnpike, still made of dirt but with grades generally to be less than 4 percent and the carriageway to be a minimum of 18 feet wide (right-of-way to be a total of 40 feet wide). In his field notes, he had two sketches showing "Maggoty Creek" winding around in the vicinity of the present-day junction of State Roads 613 and 726 (Wades Gap Rd.), and also a road continuing up past the Jacob Naff homestead and John Arthur Road to the "top of the Blue Ridge" where he labeled the present-day Simmonds Gap as "Maggoty Gap". His sketch showed the road continuing due north down to the cultivated fields of Starkey. He also noted that a nearby path (now called Daybreak Lane) was not "the lowest and best gap". The turnpike was built immediately afterward, following the route over Simmonds Gap that eventually has become State Road 613 (Naff Road and Merriman Road). It suffered deterioration during the Civil War years, however, and the turnpike was abandoned by its owners around 1865. Maggoty Gap lost its economic importance when the paved highway US-220 was completed directly from Roanoke through Murray Gap to
Rocky Mount, Virginia around 1930. ==Notes==