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Maggie's Story
Maggie
Mae Setzer Pylant, for whom Maggie Valley is named, was born
December 21,st 1890 in a small log cabin that still stands
in altered form at the foot of Setzer Mountain.
In the
early 1900s, Maggie's father, Jon Sidney Setzer better known
as "Uncle Jack", grew tired of riding his horse several
times down the mountain to the old Plott Post Office to get
the mail for residents of the valley and decided to do
something about it. He wrote U.S. Postmaster General Frank
Hitchcock in Washington D.C., asking for permission to
operate a post office in his home. He was told he had to
prove the need for one; and so, for a period of several
months, Uncle Jack kept records of the mail that passed
through his hands, the amount of stamps, postal cards (which
at the time cost 1cent each), etc.
He then
applied again and obtained permission to operate a post
office in his home. Thereupon Setzer submitted four names,
one for the creek running by his home (Jonathan), and one
for each of his three daughters: Cora, Mettie and Maggie.
Maggie was Washington's choice, and thus the Maggie Post
office opened May 10, 1904.
Maggie
helped run the Post office in the Setzer home while her
father delivered the mail until 1907, when she married Ira
M. Pylant and left her valley. The young family moved to
Tennessee, then California and finally Texas, where Maggie
died in 1979, at the age of 88.
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