Tropical Storm Helene brought unprecedented flooding to western North Carolina, devastating communities and breaking historical records.
John Edmonds Kozma, the host of the Unimpressed Podcast, has various spiritual abilities that led him to a groundbreaking discovery in Lake Lure, North Carolina. He recognized that Chimney Rock is a ...
More than 100,000 residents in western North Carolina are now allowed to drink and bathe using water from their home faucets.
It's been almost two months since Hurricane Helene tore through Western North Carolina. More than 100 have died there ... He ...
A group of western North Carolina officials will travel to Washington next week to meet with White House staff and the ...
Inspiring acts in the face of disaster are the heart of an exclusive book, “Mountain Strong,” from the Asheville Citizen ...
One of the hardest hit areas in western North Carolina was along Highway 9 between Swannanoa and Chimney Rock.
North Carolina rescue helps black cats haunted by unlucky reputation “The water lines were at least six feet up inside the shop,” said Amanda Price, who works for Gale’s Chimney Rock Shop.
These men ran to the aid of North Carolina and are helping rebuild the road from Bat Cave to Chimney Rock—which some thought was impossible. Thank you for pulling the rope together and being ...
LAKE LURE - Chimney Rock Mayor Peter O'Leary said the village is on its way to entering a rebuilding phase in the downtown ...
Chimney Rock, a village that the U.S. Census estimates to be home to about 140 people, was one of the most devastated municipalities when Helene bashed Western North Carolina on Sept. 27.