Chicken House and Pig Pen, Roaring Fork, Tenn.
Dublin Core
Title
Chicken House and Pig Pen, Roaring Fork, Tenn.
Subject
Buildings
Swine -- Housing -- Great Smoky Mountains (N.C. and Tenn.)
Chicken houses
Description
This sheet is one of 19 unbound pages in the Charles S. Grossman collection. An architect by trade, Charles S. Grossman (1900-1972) worked with the Civilian Conservation Corps, but spent most of his time on historic preservation in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Grossman, together with Hiram Wilburn who played a similar role on the North Carolina side of the park, produced the park’s first document on cultural resource management. In the 1930s, Grossman began an inventory of existing structures in the park, perhaps, one of the first systematic surveys of vernacular architecture in the U.S. He catalogued more than 1,500 structures. While Grossman left the park in 1943, he continued to advance historic preservation into the 1950s.
Creator
Grossman, Charles S., 1900-1972
Source
Charles Grossman Papers
Publisher
Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723
Date
1935-12-01
Rights
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
Format
jpg;
manuscripts (documents)
photographs
Language
eng
Type
StillImage
Identifier
18557
https://southernappalachiandigitalcollections.org/object/18557
Date Created
2013-11-13
Rights Holder
All rights reserved. For permissions, contact Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, TN 37738;
Spatial Coverage
Great Smoky Mountains (N.C. and Tenn.)
Extent
8.25" x 11.25"(dimension)
Is Part Of
Great Smoky Mountains - A Park for America
Collection
Citation
Grossman, Charles S., 1900-1972, “Chicken House and Pig Pen, Roaring Fork, Tenn.,” OAI, accessed April 30, 2025, https://sadc.qi-cms.com/omeka/items/show/18557.