FranklinWhat A local's calendar for Franklin & the Nantahala

Field guide · the long story

Heritage, the local way.

Franklin holds two state-recognized heritage identities that you wouldn't expect of a small mountain town: Quilting Capital of the World — officially designated by Governor Jim Hunt in 1980 — and the home of the only Scottish Tartans Museum outside Scotland. Add Cherokee heritage at Cowee Mound just north of town and the original 1850s jailhouse (now a museum), and the layers add up.

The spots worth your morning

Scottish Tartans Museum (Main Street, Franklin)
Free admission. The only Scottish Tartans Museum outside Scotland. Permanent exhibition on tartan history, weapons, regalia. Anchor of the annual Taste of Scotland festival in June.
In Franklin
Macon County Historical Museum
Local archive + rotating exhibits. Genealogy resources for visitors tracing Macon County roots. Smithsonian-affiliated.
In Franklin
Franklin Gem & Mineral Museum
Housed in the 1850s old jailhouse — worth visiting for the building alone. Native gemstone collection, free admission, donations welcome.
In Franklin
Cowee Mound + Cowee School (15 min north)
Cowee Mound is one of the largest surviving Cherokee mounds — the principal town of the Middle Cherokee until 1761. Sacred site, viewable from the road. Cowee School next door hosts heritage programming and concert series.
15 min · Cowee
Museum of the Cherokee People (Cherokee, NC · day trip)
An hour northwest in Cherokee. The canonical introduction to Cherokee history, by Cherokee people. Pairs naturally with Oconaluftee Indian Village and the Mountainside Theatre's 'Unto These Hills.'
60 min · Cherokee
Nikwasi Mound (Depot Street, downtown Franklin)
A roughly 1,000-year-old Cherokee ceremonial mound sitting right in the middle of East Franklin — a principal Middle Cherokee town until it was burned in 1761. Viewable from the street with interpretive signage; stewarded today by the Nikwasi Initiative and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
In Franklin
Whistle Stop Antique Mall (Highlands Rd)
100+ dealers across 26,000 square feet inside the old 1948 Cullasaja School — original classrooms and all. The rainy-day rabbit hole you lose two hours in.
6 min · Franklin
Bryant's Antiques (Main Street)
A three-floor, 20,000-square-foot antique mall with 104 booths right downtown — furniture, books, toys, and collectibles, plus local honey, jams, and old-fashioned candy. Open daily.
In Franklin
American Relics (6391 Georgia Rd)
Part antique shop, part free little museum in a relocated 1800s log cabin between Franklin and Otto — Civil War items, antique tools, even an 1860 Cherokee New Testament. Thursday–Saturday, 10–4.
10 min · Franklin
T.M. Rickman Store (Cowee)
A preserved 1895 country store in the Cowee–West's Mill Historic District, kept by Mainspring — potbelly stove, original shelving, and live music on Saturdays from spring through December. A genuine step back.
12 min · Cowee
Women's History Park & Trail (592 E. Main St)
A small downtown park by the Little Tennessee bridge anchored by a Wesley Wofford bronze of three Macon County women — Cherokee, enslaved, and pioneer — and the trailhead for a self-guided trail of markers around town. Opened 2024.
In Franklin
Siler-Jones House (East Main St)
An early-1800s log house on Main Street — a National Register site and one of the few Trail of Tears 'Witness Structures' in NC. Mainspring is restoring it; not yet open inside, but worth knowing as it heads toward a public future.
In Franklin

"The Tartans Museum, the Old Jail, the Cherokee Mound, the quilts — Franklin is the kind of town where four different threads of history converge on the same five-block downtown."

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Good to know

Why is Franklin the Quilting Capital of the World?

Governor Jim Hunt officially designated it in 1980, recognizing the regional fiber-arts tradition centered in Macon County and the annual Mountain Quiltfest events held here. The designation is real — not a chamber-of-commerce nickname.

Is the Scottish Tartans Museum really the only one outside Scotland?

Yes. It opened in Franklin in 1994. Permanent collection includes tartans, weapons, Highland regalia. The town's Scottish-heritage focus comes from the wave of Scots-Irish settlement of the southern Appalachians in the 18th century.

Can I visit Cowee Mound?

The mound itself is a sacred Cherokee site and is not open for public climbing or recreational visits. It's visible from the road. The story is best told at the Museum of the Cherokee People in Cherokee, NC, or at the Cowee School Arts & Heritage Center adjacent to the mound.

What's the old jailhouse?

The original Macon County jail, built around 1850. It now houses the Franklin Gem & Mineral Museum — the building alone is worth a stop. Free admission, donations welcome.

Is there a local genealogy resource for visitors with Macon County roots?

Yes — the Macon County Historical Museum's archive and the Fontana Regional Library's genealogy section are both helpful. Several local historians publish guides through the historical society.