This photograph, with others in this series, are included in the records of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club, formed after a group of outdoor enthusiasts hiked up to Mount LeConte in October 1924.
Cardinal flower (Lobelia cardinalis) in bloom near Gatlinburg. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club (est. 1924) and a charter member of the Great Smoky Mountains Conservation…
Jean Campbell and the photographer drinking coffee at “Campbell’s Hump,” the hill located above the head of Hill Creek between Gatlinburg and Emerts Cove. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain…
Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978) was a founding member of the Great Smoky Mountains Conservation Association. Formed in 1923, the association promoted the establishment of a national park in the Great Smoky Mountains. The archival material in this…
Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978) on Silers Meadows, the open field between Double Springs Gap and Silers Bald. Campbell was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club (est. 1924) and a charter member of the Great Smoky Mountains Conservation…
Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978) is nailing up an Appalachian Trail sign where the trail forks a few hundred yards east of Silers Bald. It is here that the AT leaves the graded trail to the left and makes the direct and steeper ascent to Silers. The…
Carlos C. Campbell poses with Marshall Wilson’s rifle, in Marshall’s yard on Oglewood Avenue beside Adair (First) Creek in Knoxville, Tennessee. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club…
Carlos C. Campbell stands with Harry C. Wade’s rifle in front of Horace Whaley’s home in Greenbrier, which is located a short distance above Camp David C. Chapman. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky…
Carlos Campbell at Deals Gap in August 1932 after the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club's first trip through entire length of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Each man had his portrait made, unshaven after their nine-day hike. This photograph taken…