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Title: Blue Ridge Parkway, Virginia and North Carolina (1949) Author: Anonymous Release Date: June 26, 2019 [EBook #59817] Language: English Character set encoding: UTF-8 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY *** Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Lisa Corcoran and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net _Blue Ridge_ PARKWAY VIRGINIA • NORTH CAROLINA [Illustration: DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR] UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, J. A. Krug, _Secretary_ NATIONAL PARK SERVICE, Newton B. Drury, _Director_ Blue Ridge Parkway is a unit of the National Park System, which is owned by the people of the United States and administered for them by the National Park Service of the Department of the Interior. CONTENTS A Scene on the Parkway _Cover_ Blue Ridge Parkway, Virginia-North Carolina 3 The Four Seasons 4 What to Do and Where 5-6 Mile Posts, Special Information, Entrances 7 Blue Ridge Parkway by Sections: Shenandoah National Park—Roanoke, Va. 8-9 Roanoke, Va.—North Carolina State Line 10-11 Virginia State Line—Linville River, N. C. 12-13 Linville River—Great Smoky Mountains National Park 14-15 Regional Map _Back Cover_ REGULATIONS Enforcement of regulations is a part of the Parkway rangers’ job, but the rangers are eager also to help you enjoy your visit. A copy of the regulations may be seen in the superintendent’s office. The regulations are for your protection and for the protection of your property—The Parkway. While on the Blue Ridge Parkway please remember the following: Fire is the forest’s greatest foe; build fires only in places provided, and be cautious generally. Drive carefully. Speed zones are posted. Not all the guard rail has been built. The Parkway is for passenger cars. Commercial vehicles may not be used on it. Park only in parking areas along the way—not on Parkway shoulders unless in emergency. The flowers, the game, the woods, the land, belong to everyone; please be careful not to damage them. Address inquiries to: Superintendent, Blue Ridge Parkway, P.O. Box 1710, Roanoke, Va. [Illustration: Grandfather Mountain, North Carolina.] [Illustration: Fox Hunters Paradise Overlook, North Carolina.] BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY VIRGINIA—NORTH CAROLINA Blue Ridge Parkway, high road through Virginia and North Carolina, designed especially for the leisurely tourist, represents a new conception in roads. It is not an express parkway of the type built about the big cities, but a quiet way through a distinctive part of the American scene—a road intended for gypsy-like travel on the ride-awhile, stop-awhile basis. You travel the Southern Highlands, a land of forested mountains, exquisite during the flower of spring, cool in the green summer, colorful in the red autumn. The stretches of woodland, the clustered mountains, and the views out to the lowlands are enlivened by the fields and pastures of highland farms, where split rail fences, weathered cabins, and gray barns compose the “hill culture.” Not all is completed of this scenic parkway, the first of its kind to be developed by the Nation; but long portions are paved and were enjoyed by more than a million visitors last year. Among the national parks in the East are Shenandoah, in northern Virginia, and Great Smoky Mountains, in North Carolina and Tennessee. One of the purposes of the Parkway is to connect these wilderness areas over a mountainous distance of nearly 500 miles. The Parkway, about two-thirds completed, leads through an “elongated park” which protects a roadside of varied highland character. The roadway slopes are naturalistically planted in many places with rhododendron, azalea, white pine, and other native species. Parking overlooks to the side are convenient balconies. Along the Parkway at intervals are recreational areas with picnic grounds, campgrounds, trailer sites, and hiking trails which lead to exhibits of unspoiled nature and to spots of native folk lore. The Four Seasons The four seasons are definite in the southern mountains, each with qualities which set it apart. The Parkway motor road is open the year round, but is not recommended for winter travel. [Illustration: Native Flame Azalea.] Spring is the favorite season of many in the Blue Ridge, for nowhere is there a greater show of native flowers. In mid-April the shadblow blooms, lacy white on the hillside; but the real procession starts in early May,—pink azalea, dogwood, redbud. In mid-May the flame azalea appears like fire through the undergrowth. Purple rhododendron, native of certain areas in Virginia and prevalent in North Carolina south from The Bluffs, are next to bloom (late May to mid-June). The mountain-laurel is everywhere and breaks during June. The white to pink rhododendron comes later in June and lingers well into July. There are many spring and summer blooming shrubs and ground flowers in the wild places along the Parkway. Among these is the galax,—glory ground cover of the Southern Appalachians. Summer in the Blue Ridge is a refuge from the warm temperatures, the altitude accounting for as much as five degrees of coolness per thousand feet. The eastern mountains, forest covered, are notable for their summer greenery. The intermittent highland valleys are a changing color pattern of growing corn, buckwheat, rye. Autumn comes to the highlands later than you might think. The sumac, gums, the famous southern sourwood, turn brilliant red early in October, but are usually not joined by the colorful display of the hardwoods until the last part of the month, even early November. Winter sometimes comes suddenly to the Blue Ridge. Travel then becomes uncertain at best. Ice storms, persistent fogs, and blustery winds make it so. There are many times when the mountains are clear and beautiful, but we advise local inquiry about travel conditions during the winter months before venturing on to the Parkway. What to Do and Where Motoring. Blue Ridge Parkway is meant to serve this American pleasure. In the course of a motor trip along the Parkway, plans should include a stop at one of the several recreational areas for a picnic lunch. Here comfort stations and drinking water will be found from April 15 until the first freeze, usually mid-October. In these areas we suggest a leg stretcher along an easy trail, or there are short trails leading from many of the parking overlooks to selected vantage points. Picnicking. Picnic areas, ideal for the family group, include parking spaces, tables, fireplaces, drinking water, and refuse cans. These areas are designated on the maps by the Parkway emblem. Tourist Facilities. Gas stations are being constructed at Rocky Knob, The Bluffs, and Crabtree Meadows. The one at The Bluffs will be ready during the 1949 travel season. Others are located within a short distance of the Parkway on the more important State highways. At Cumberland Knob, Mile Post 219, there is a sandwich shop operated during the travel season by National Park Concessions, Inc. This company will also operate the coffee shop and lodge being built at The Bluffs, but these facilities may not be available until well into the 1949 travel season. At the Peaks of Otter, Mile Post 86, a sightseeing bus service is offered by the Peaks of Otter, Inc., from the Parkway to the top of Sharp Top, one of the famous twin Peaks of Otter. Sandwiches, soups, and other like items are sold at the bus station during season. Tourist facilities along the Parkway are being planned only where accommodations are not reasonably convenient in the towns and cities nearby. For information about accommodations and points of interest in the Blue Ridge Parkway vicinity, write to the Virginia State Chamber of Commerce, Richmond 19, Va., or the State News Bureau, Raleigh, N. C. [Illustration: Picnic Grounds, Cumberland Knob, North Carolina.] Camping. At Rocky Knob in Virginia and The Bluffs in North Carolina are trailer sites and campgrounds. There you will find tent platforms, fireplaces, garbage receptacles, drinking water, and comfort stations. Camping supplies are not available. Length of stay is not limited. [Illustration: Highland Pastures, Rocky Knob, Virginia.] Hiking. Trail systems have been developed in the Parkway recreational areas. At The Bluffs there are more than 20 miles of foot trails, and in each of the other areas from 3 to 5 miles. Grades are easy and can be walked comfortably. Photography and Painting. The Parkway opens to you a photogenic and paintable country. Flowers, mountains, valleys, streams, wildlife, and the hill farms are fine subjects. Fishing. This is trout country. Rainbow and brook trout haunt many streams up and down the Parkway. State licenses are required. Outside the Parkway boundary State laws apply. Within the Parkway boundary special regulations, covering creel limit, bait, and season, prevail. The season in North Carolina lasts from April 15 through August 31, and in Virginia from April 20 through July 31. Golfing, Swimming, Tennis. Facilities for this type of active sport are not provided on the lands of Blue Ridge Parkway, but the Parkway is a convenient way to reach resort areas where there are fine mountain golf courses, tennis courts, saddle horses, lakes, and swimming pools. Several State areas and forests and portions of the national forests, through which the Parkway winds, have many recreational developments within easy reach of the Parkway. The Mile Posts [Illustration: Mile post] Along paved sections of the Parkway you will observe numbered mile posts. Zero marker is at Rockfish Gap just south of Shenandoah National Park, and each mile is numbered progressively southwestward on the Parkway. Thus each Parkway mile is identified by a specific number. Special Information [Illustration: Squirrel gun and powder horn] Interpretive signs carrying the squirrel gun and powder horn symbol will be found at various points along the Parkway where there is a legend, old building, or place of scientific interest. Entrances [Illustration: Parkway emblem] At the entrance to each of the recreational areas along the Parkway you will find a large carved wooden sign bearing the Parkway emblem. This is also the designation used on the maps herein to locate the recreational areas now ready for use. [Illustration: Elias Mabry Mill on the Parkway, Virginia.] BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY Shenandoah National Park—Roanoke, Virginia North of the James River the Parkway winds through large sections of the George Washington National Forest. This scenic route is very spectacular where it crosses the high cliff sections of Humpback Mountain. Purple rhododendron blooms here in early June. Through this region, too, are glimpses of isolated mountain farm groups, as well as distant views to the fertile “bread basket of the Confederacy” in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. The Parkway is paved from Rockfish Gap south for nearly 46 miles to U S 60. Three small bridges along this route are being constructed, but traffic is maintained with little inconvenience to the traveler. The Parkway section south of the James River to Roanoke features the lowest point on Blue Ridge Parkway, 670 feet elevation, where it will cross the river, and Thunder Ridge, where it climbs to almost 4,000 feet. South a few miles are the famed Peaks of Otter. This spectacular section lies partly through the Jefferson National Forest. The famous Appalachian Trail, making its way from Maine to Georgia, touches the Parkway at several points. For detailed information, write the Appalachian Trail Conference, 1916 Sunderland Place, NW., Washington 6, D. C. Shenandoah National Park conserves a large section of the Virginia Blue Ridge (74 miles southwest of Washington, D. C.). Well known for the Skyline Drive, a road wholly within that park but connecting with the Blue Ridge Parkway at Rockfish Gap, Shenandoah also has many miles of developed foot trails and varied tourist accommodations. For complete information, address Superintendent, Shenandoah National Park, Luray, Va. _Mile Post_ _Elevation_ 0 Rockfish Gap-Junction Blue Ridge Parkway and Skyline 1,909 Drive of Shenandoah National Park. 6 Humpback Rocks, craggy rock outcropping. Foot trail 3,210 from parking area to the Rocks. 15 Sherando Lake (George Washington National Forest). 1,500 Swimming, fishing, picnicking. Turn on VA-814 for 3½ miles. 27 Tye River Gap 2,969 45.6 U S 60 crossing. Parkway grade dead-ends 7 miles 2,312 south. 63.7 Junction U S 501 and Parkway section southward 670 74.7 Thunder Ridge Parking Area. One minute walk to superb 3,485 view of Arnolds Valley. 76.7 High point on the Parkway in Virginia. Apple Orchard 3,950 Mountain (El. 4,229). Forest Service fire tower. 80 Purple rhododendron blooms early June. 83.8 Wilkinson Gap. Foot trail to summit Flat Top Mountain 2,511 takes 1¾ hours. Trail down south side of mountain to vicinity Big Spring on VA-43 (1 mile off Parkway) takes 1 hour. 86 {Recreational area} Peaks of Otter. Sharp Top (El. 3,875). Flat Top (El. 4,001). Recreational area under development. Sightseeing bus trips to top of Sharp Top; sandwiches, soups, drinks, sold at bus station. VA-43 to Bedford. 90 VA-43 to Buchanan. Parkway closed to south. ROANOKE 1,000 (Magic City). Western Virginia’s largest city. Population 100,000. Parkway headquarters. [Illustration: BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY SHENANDOAH NATIONAL PARK TO ROANOKE, VA. PKY-B. R. 7005-1] BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY Roanoke, Va.—North Carolina State Line From Adney Gap (19 miles south of Roanoke by way of U S 221) the Parkway is paved south to the State Line and beyond to Deep Gap near Boone and Blowing Rock. This section of Parkway through lower Virginia is notable for its pictures of mountain farming. The Blue Ridge here is a high rolling plateau which breaks in a sharp escarpment toward the east and the lower Piedmont. The Parkway generally follows the crest, which is the water divide between Atlantic and Gulf drainage, affording occasional fine views over the low country. In other places the Parkway recedes into wooded and pastoral valleys of quiet charm. _Mile Post_ _Elevation_ 136 Adney Gap. Terminus 140 mile paved section to Deep 2,690 Gap, N. C. 144 Devil’s Backbone Parking Overlook. Fine view over 2,685 farming region. 144.8 Pine Spur Parking Overlook. Named for the white pine 2,703 which is the tree depicted on Parkway emblem. 150 Magnificent flame azalea; blooms mid-May. 154.5 {Recreational area} Smart View, 500 acres, hiking 2,500 trails, large picnic grounds, comfort stations, drinking water. The cabin home of T. T. Trail, immediately adjacent entrance road, is picturesque. Rim trail in this area is part of Appalachian Trail system. Smart View is center of Parkway’s dogwood bloom in early May. 164 Fine azalea show. Also mountain-laurel in late May. 165.2 Tuggles Gap. VA-8, turn-off for Fairy Stone State 2,752 Park 16 miles. Swimming, boating, picnicking. 167 to {Recreational area} Rocky Knob, 4,000 acres. 3,225 170 Picnicking, camping, trailer sites, hiking, comfort stations, drinking water, fishing 5 miles of Rock Castle Creek. Foot trail from Saddle Parking Overlook (Mile 168) to summit of Rocky Knob (El. 3,570) takes 10 minutes, continues along rim to Grassy Knoll (Mile 170). Fine for flame azalea late in May. 176.1 Mabry Mill, grist and sawmill, wheelwright and 2,855 blacksmith shops, illustrating typical mountain “industrial plant,” fascinating and ingenious. Buildings will later be opened for inspection. 177.7 Meadows of Dan. U S 58 longest east-west road across 2,964 Virginia. Inquire locally about Lovers Leap and the Pinnacles of Dan. 189.2 Groundhog Mountain Parking Overlook, high point 3,030 affording 360° view. Observation tower, simulating old tobacco barn. Examples of various types of old chestnut rail fences, such as snake, post and rail, and buck. 189.9 Puckett Cabin, home of Arlena Hawks Puckett, storied 2,850 midwife of the local hills. 199.5 Fancy Gap. U S 52, where local products, such as 2,920 cabbage, are gathered to be trucked down the mountains. [Illustration: BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY ROANOKE VA. TO N. C. STATE LINE PKY-B. R. 7005-2] BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY Virginia State Line—Linville River The northerly 60 miles shown finished on the map facing this page, like the section north toward Roanoke, thread a country remarkable for its mountain fields and pastures; but the country is more rugged, the Blue Ridge becoming more defined and higher. It is completed as to landscaping between the State Line and The Bluffs. A sandwich shop is open at Cumberland Knob. Sixty miles of Parkway are available southward from Linville. From Deep Gap, near Boone, it is not far to Blowing Rock and Linville, resort towns at the edge of Grandfather Mountain. This “patriarch,” elevation 5,939 feet, is one of the oldest, shaggiest mountains of the Appalachians. The road across Grandfather, U S 221, is known as the Black Bear Trail (Yonahlossee in the language of the Cherokee). _Mile Post_ _Elevation_ 216.9 North Carolina-Virginia State Line 2,547 217.5 {Recreational area} Cumberland Knob, 1,000 acres, 2,740 sandwich shop (sandwiches, drinks, soups, picnic box lunches), picnic area, comfort stations, drinking water. 15-minute loop trail to Cumberland Knob (El. 2,855). Loop trail into Gully Creek Gorge, 2 hours. 218.6 Fox Hunters Paradise Overlook and Parking Area. 10 2,805 minutes by trail to the Paradise, where old-time hunters listened to their hounds. 219 Fine display of pink azalea; blooms early May. Flame azalea blooms mid-May. 228 Fine beds of pink azalea; blooms early May. This section also fine for mountain-laurel in early June. 238 to {Recreational area} The Bluffs, 6,000 acres—picnic 3,710 245 grounds (Mile 241), campgrounds (Mile 239), trailer sites, comfort stations, drinking water, 20 miles of trail. This area affords fine examples of bluegrass downs, terminating in precipitous bluffs. Purple rhododendron in meadows and on trails late May. At Mile 238.5 is the picturesque Carolyn Brinegar Cabin. Be sure to visit Wildcat Rocks (Mile 241.1), from which you may look down 1,500 feet upon what was once the homestead of the Caudill family, dramatic exhibit of isolated mountain life. 10-minute trail to Fodderstack Mountain. Gas station and coffee shop open. 271.9 Cascades Parking Overlook. Woodland trail along a 3,570 mountain stream to cascades tumbling several hundred feet. Delightful 8-minute walk. 276.5 Deep Gap. Between Deep Gap and Beacon Heights there 3,140 are good connecting paved roads. The Parkway between Mile Posts 282 and 292 will be paved during 1949. 304.9 Beacon Heights. Make inquiry at Linville or Blowing 3,140 Rock for entrance to Daniel Boone Boy Scout Trail over the seven peaks of Grandfather Mountain for which the larger part of a day must be allowed. 308.2 Flat Rock Parking Area. 10-minute trail to superb 3,995 prospect of Linville Valley and Grandfather Mountain. Easy climb and most worth while. 316.4 Linville River Parking Area. Here is one of the 3,250 Parkway’s largest stone arch bridges, three spans of 80 feet each. Fishing in Linville River under State laws. [Illustration: BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY VA. STATE LINE TO LINVILLE RIVER PKY-B. R. 7005-3] BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY Linville River—Great Smoky Mountains National Park The Parkway between Linville Falls and Asheville traverses one of the great mountain sections of North Carolina where the Blue Ridge, the Blacks, and the Craggy Mountains merge. Mount Mitchell, 6,684 feet in elevation, and the highest peak in the East, is prominent from the Parkway. The large holdings of the Mitchell Division of the Forest Service and the Asheville Watershed have protected the area from despoliation. _Mile Post_ _Elevation_ 320.7 Chestoa View offers an unusually fine view from one 4,110 of the many vertical cliffs on Humpback Mountain. 339.5 {Recreational area} Crabtree Meadows, 160 acres lying 3,735 within the Pisgah National Forest and now partially developed. Hiking, picnicking, and comfort stations available. The 40-minute walk to Crabtree Falls is not to be missed. 355.4 Swannanoa Gap, Mount Mitchell State Park. 4.8 miles 5,185 on spur road. South to Mile Post 367.5 the Parkway is under contract to be completed early in summer of 1949 when this spectacular section will be opened to traffic. Make local inquiry. Paving of the Parkway through the Craggy Mountains is scheduled for 1950, and over the crushed stone surface special care in driving should be exercised. 367.5 Bee Tree Gap, turn off for Craggy Rhododendron 4,769 Gardens. Forest Service development. The peak of the rhododendron bloom is in mid-June. Make inquiries in Asheville for highway connection to Parkway from the city. ASHEVILLE, a leading city in the South. Population, 50,000. 407 Mount Pisgah. The Forest Service Pisgah motor road, Cutthroat Gap to Wagon Road Gap, is still open, and 5 miles of Parkway, graded with loose gravel, extend beyond Wagon Road Gap and are available for a “preview.” 468 The Great Smoky Mountains National Park, where the Parkway will one day terminate, is located equally in North Carolina and Tennessee. Its 460,000 acres of mountainous wilds may be viewed from paved roads and many wilderness trails. Tourist accommodations are in nearby towns. Inquire Superintendent, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tenn. [Illustration: Parkway through Devils Garden, North Carolina.] [Illustration: BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY LINVILLE RIVER TO GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK PKY-B. R. 7005-4] [Illustration: BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY VIRGINIA AND NORTH CAROLINA PKY-B. R. 7005] MILEAGE TABLE MILEAGE VIA PARKWAY SHENANDOAH ROANOKE VA. ASHEVILLE GREAT SMOKY N.P. N.C. MTNS. N.P. NEW YORK N.Y. 301 513 803 859 WASHINGTON D.C. 74 286 576 632 ATLANTA GA. 605 498 208 172 COLUMBIA S.C. 397 290 162 218 BIRMINGHAM ALA. 761 654 364 309 NASHVILLE TENN. 717 610 320 233 LOUISVILLE KY. 497 470 348 331 INDIANAPOLIS IND. 524 497 483 447 PITTSBURGH PA. 208 317 607 663 HARRISBURG PA. 135 347 637 693 COLUMBUS OHIO 416 389 467 465 Revised 1949 U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1949 D-F—827633 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Great Smoky Mountains National Park North Caroline—Tennessee THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL IN THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK The Appalachian Trail follows the North Carolina-Tennessee State Line, along the crest of the Smokies, for a total distance of approximately 70 miles in this park, from its eastern terminus at Davenport Gap to its Western terminus at Deals Gap. The trans-mountain highway (Tenn. No. 71, N. C. No. 107) intersects this trail at its approximate half-way point at Newfound Gap. The eastern section of the trail is a graded four-foot standard horse trail. The western section is an ungraded, brushed-out, foot trail, rather rough in places. It is marked with white blazes on trees; across the mountain meadows (“balds”) prominent boulders are marked with white paint. A new cut-off trail has been marked and brushed out leaving the state line near Doe Knob and proceeding southward to Fontana Village by way of Twentymile Ridge, Sassafras Gap, and Shuckstack. This trail is very steep between Shuckstack and Fontana. Trailside shelters are located at approximate nine-mile intervals along this trail, at Cosby Knob, Tri-Corner Knob, Hughes Ridge, Ice-Water Spring on Ft. Kephart, Little Indian Gap, Silers Bald, Spence Field, and Moore Spring on Gregory Bald. These shelters are log and pole frame, enclosed on three sides with one large opening on the front, long side. In each shelter is a bunk made of a wooden frame with heavy wire screen for the springs, raised off the ground about two feet; this should accommodate six persons. Each shelter has a fireplace, water supply, garbage pit, pit latrine, hitching rack, and watering trough for horses. There are no means for heating the shelters; a fireplace is located outside the roof line of the building. In addition to these shelters, camping places along the trail have been designated at approximately nine-tenths mile from Davenport Gap, and at the Halls Cabin site between Silers Bald and Thunderhead, and at Sassafras Gap, just north of Shuckstack on the State Line-Fontana Village cut-off. Camping or fire-building is permitted along this trail only at the trailside shelters and designated camping sites except when some unforeseen emergency may arise, and the stay at any one shelter is limited to one night only unless inclement weather prevents the resumption of the trip. A camping permit is required for camping along this trail. Such a permit may be obtained from any of the rangers or wardens or upon application to the office of the Superintendent, Great Smokey Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Because of the scarcity of fuel at the shelters, hikers are advised to carry primus-type stoves. All who use any park trail are urged to be extremely careful with fire and to completely extinguish all fires before leaving them. SMOKERS, BE CAREFUL! LODGING AND CAMPING FACILITIES There are no Government-operated cabins nor lodging accommodations in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Under the policy approved by the Secretary of the Interior, tourist facilities within the boundaries of this park are limited to automobile campgrounds and picnic areas. Cabins and lodging accommodations may be obtained in any of the towns surrounding the park, and such information may be obtained from the Chambers of Commerce of such cities. The only accommodations inside the park are LeConte Lodge on the summit of Mt. LeConte, accessible only by foot or horseback, and Wonderland Club Hotel, Elkmont, Tennessee. These are operated under permit from the National Park Service. Information regarding these may be obtained by writing direct to LeConte Lodge, Gatlinburg, Tennessee, and the Wonderland Club Hotel, Elkmont, Tennessee. There are at present two permanent public campgrounds in the park—the Chimneys campground located about seven and a half miles from Gatlinburg, Tennessee, and the Smokemont campground located about four miles from the Oconaluftee Ranger Station in North Carolina. These campgrounds are furnished with water supply, fireplaces, tables and benches, comfort stations, and tent and trailer spaces. Campers must bring their own tent or trailer and other camping equipment. There are also meagerly furnished temporary primitive campgrounds located in Cosby, Greenbrier, Elkmont, Walkers Valley, Cades Cove, Happy Valley, and Bunny Branch on the Tennessee side, and about the mouth of Lost Cove on Eagle Creek, at the old ball grounds at Proctor and at the confluence of Bone Valley and Hazel Creeks in Hazel Creek, at the head of the bay on Forney Creek and four miles up Forney Creek at the warden station, and on Noland Creek, and Deep Creek Straight Fork, Cataloochee, and Big Creek on the North Carolina side. The campgrounds are open the year round, but during freezing weather the water is cut off and the comfort stations closed. Caretaker services are provided in the Chimneys and Smokemont campgrounds from about the middle of May until October. The campgrounds are operated on a first-come-first-served basis and reservations are not taken for camping space. No special permit is required for camping at any of the designated campgrounds in the park, but a camping permit is required for camping elsewhere in the park. Such a permit may be obtained from any of the rangers or wardens or upon application to the office of the Superintendent, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Transcriber’s Notes —Silently corrected a few typos. —Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication. —In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_. —Where the printed edition included an inline icon, for the text versions only, included icon meaning in {braces}. 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