Browse Items (3512 total)

  • Collection: Great Smoky Mountains - A Park for America

Reflections on Lake Santeetlah looking northwest from highway, about 2 or 3 miles above, or south of the Santeetlah dam. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club (est. 1924) and a…

View of Lake Santeetlah from the highway between Knoxville and Nantahala Gorge. Two of the Appalachian Trail work groups of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club drive 10 miles along the shore of this lake to reach their sections of the AT. The…

James Adams from Robbinsville, N.C. is riding a steer calf about 2 miles east on the Sweetwater Creek or Cheoah road. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club (est. 1924) and a charter…

Three volunteers are painting an Appalachian Trail (AT) blaze on a tree. 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…

Sarah “Pat” Noell nails an AT marker onto a tree beside the trail, between Stecoah Gap and Cheoah Bald. The latter is seen in the background. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), was a founding member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club…

Hikers (L to R) Evelyn Welch and Mary Louise Ogden sit atop Cheoah Bald. 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…

Hikers (L to R) Mary Louise Ogden, Evelyn Welch, Sarah “Pat” Noell, and Clyde Wilson stand on Cheoah Bald, looking at Lake Santeetlah. Thunderhead Mountain (over Evelyn’s head) is seen through the characteristic haze. The photographer, Carlos C.…

Cades Cove sign reading “Col. Chapman. You and Hoast are Notfy Let the Cove People Alone Get Out Get Gone 40 M Limit.” It is believed that these signs were planted to portray the residents as illiterate. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell…

Cades Cove sign reading “Col. Chapman. You and Hoast are Notfy Let the Cove People Alone Get Out Get Gone 40 M Limit.” It is believed that these signs were planted to portray the residents as illiterate. The photographer, Carlos C. Campbell…

Portrait of an ox yoke from Marshall Justus farm, on Indian Camp Creek above Cosby. 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…
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