Marshall Wilson’s automobile is on a typical “fire road” built by Camp David C. Chapman Civilian Conservation Corps boys from Greenbrier. Note the stone wall at left. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the…
A good example of the “fire road,” built by Camp David C. Chapman Civilian Conservation Corps boys from Greenbrier. The road leads to the old Messer place in Greenbrier. The tip of a turn-around is seen in the foreground. Greenbrier Pinnacle is in…
This is one of the secondary roads built in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park by boys from the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camps. Greenbrier Pinnacle, seen in the background, is the location where the CCC boys erected a fire look-out…
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…
Marshall Wilson (L) and Clinton Campbell (1920-1997) sit on rocks at the fork of False Gap Creek and Porter’s Creek. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club (est. 1924) and a charter…
Clinton Campbell (1920-1997) stands on a rock next to Middle Prong Little Pigeon River. In the middle of the frame is a bridge built of chestnut logs by Camp David C. Chapman Civilian Conservation Corps boys from Greenbrier. The bridge is located…
A fisherman is photographed fishing in Middle Prong Little Pigeon River from a bridge built about 3 miles above Greenbrier by Civilian Conservation Corps men. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky…
Marshall Wilson aims at an imaginary squirrel in his 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 (est. 1924) and…
Clinton Campbell (1920-1997) 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…
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…