Situated in the hills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, overlooking the French Broad River sits the famous Biltmore Estate. It goes without saying that the Biltmore has created its own story here in Asheville, and has perhaps fashioned itself as a beacon of Asheville’s history as well. But for the majority of locals and tourists alike, there is an underlying record of life surrounding the grounds of the Biltmore Estate: the story of the Shiloh Community.
Before the Biltmore Estate ever came to be, the Shiloh neighborhood occupied the space. Old Shiloh, as it’s known now, was located north of the estate. According to the Shiloh Community Association, the Black communities of Asheville, which included Old Shiloh, prospered through their churches, schools, and people. In the late 1880s, George Vanderbilt bought the land, relocating the residents of Shiloh and their church, both living and buried.
Now, almost 150 years later, UNC Asheville history and new media students are teaming up to unearth the buried history of Shiloh and tell the story in a compelling new way, using virtual reality.