During the first decades of the 20th century, timber companies cleared much of the virgin forests that make up today's Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The Whiting Saw Mill, shown with its drying kiln, operated in Judson, North Carolina
By 1927, the probable date of this publication, the move to create the Great Smoky Mountains Nationa...
The Little River Lumber Company was one of 18 logging operations that, together, owned about 85% of ...
In this photograph, J. P. Murphy and H. B. Nields inspect wide poplar lumber at Townsend Mill. The L...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
This photograph of the 'Saw Mill at Smokemont' is featured in the booklet 'Glimpses of the Plant of ...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
The Little River Lumber Company was one of 18 logging operations that, together, owned about 85% of ...
Champion Fibre Company was in operation at Smokemont, North Carolina, north of present day Cherokee,...
This photograph is of a saw pit on Saluda Mountain. It was part of a logging operation at the head o...
While many believe that the Great Smoky Mountains was made up of small family farms, in reality, 18 ...
The Little River Lumber Company was one of 18 logging operations that, together, owned about 85% of ...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
By 1920, William S. Whiting's Boone Fork Lumber Company at Shulls Mills, North Carolina, was operati...
By 1927, the probable date of this publication, the move to create the Great Smoky Mountains Nationa...
The Little River Lumber Company was one of 18 logging operations that, together, owned about 85% of ...
In this photograph, J. P. Murphy and H. B. Nields inspect wide poplar lumber at Townsend Mill. The L...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
This photograph of the 'Saw Mill at Smokemont' is featured in the booklet 'Glimpses of the Plant of ...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
The Little River Lumber Company was one of 18 logging operations that, together, owned about 85% of ...
Champion Fibre Company was in operation at Smokemont, North Carolina, north of present day Cherokee,...
This photograph is of a saw pit on Saluda Mountain. It was part of a logging operation at the head o...
While many believe that the Great Smoky Mountains was made up of small family farms, in reality, 18 ...
The Little River Lumber Company was one of 18 logging operations that, together, owned about 85% of ...
At the turn of the 20th century, logging became a major industry in the Great Smoky Mountains, which...
By 1920, William S. Whiting's Boone Fork Lumber Company at Shulls Mills, North Carolina, was operati...
By 1927, the probable date of this publication, the move to create the Great Smoky Mountains Nationa...
The Little River Lumber Company was one of 18 logging operations that, together, owned about 85% of ...
In this photograph, J. P. Murphy and H. B. Nields inspect wide poplar lumber at Townsend Mill. The L...