05/19/2026
The story of Graveyard Island is a haunting intersection of industrial progress and ancient memory. It is a place that shouldn't exist—a ridge that was never meant to be an island, holding spirits that were never meant to be moved. To understand the island, you have to look beneath the surface of Badin Lake to a time before the valley was drowned.
•The Rising Tide•
In the early 1910s, the landscape of the Uwharries was transformed forever. The Narrows Dam was being constructed to power the massive ALCOA aluminum plant, and the engineers knew that once the floodgates closed, the valley floor would vanish.
But there was a problem: the valley was dotted with the ancestral homesteads and burial plots of the early Carolina pioneers. Rather than leave the dead to a watery grave, a massive, somber relocation project began.
•The Hill of the Displaced•
A high, narrow ridge overlooking the river was chosen as the new sanctuary. Laborers spent months disinterring remains from various family plots—names like Hearne, Palmer, and Coggin—and re-burying them on this high ground.
When the Narrows Dam finally choked the Yadkin River in 1917, the water rushed in, swallowing the farms, the roads, and the old church foundations. The ridge was cut off from the mainland, transformed into a silent, wooded fortress of stone and soil: Graveyard Island.
•A Trinity of Cemeteries•
What makes the island truly fascinating is that it isn't just one graveyard; it is a "tapestry of the departed." It is divided into three distinct sections:
The Formal Plots: Where the more affluent families moved their ornate, engraved headstones.
The Fieldstone Graves: Dozens of simple, jagged rocks pulled from the river, marking the resting places of those whose names have been lost to time.
The Mystery of the Unmarked: It is estimated that nearly 300 souls rest on that small acre of land, many in graves that were moved with such haste or age that no record remains of who they were.
The Island Today: A Ghost in the Forest
Today, Graveyard Island sits as a jagged spine of land, accessible only by a determined paddle across the lake or a trek along the ancient railroad tracks.
The atmosphere there is distinct from the rest of the Uwharries. While the surrounding area is often filled with the sound of off-road vehicles or watercraft, the island remains eerily still. The trees have grown thick around the headstones, some even lifting the markers out of the ground with their roots, as if the forest itself is trying to reclaim the history that the water couldn't touch.
Graveyard Island stands as a literal "monument to the submerged"—the only part of the old valley that refused to go under.....