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HomeTennesseeSevier County → Gatlinburg

Gatlinburg City Historical Markers

Map of Tennessee State Historical Marker Locations in the City of Gatlinburg
 

Gatlinburg City Historical Markers

Gatlinburg Churches
Little Greenbrier School-Church
Little Greenbrier School-Church is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Gatlinburg General Interest
Alex Cole Cabin
Alex Cole Cabin is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Baskins Creek
As the story goes...a party of hunters come up from Knoxville an' kilt 'em a load o' bear an' drug 'em down to the head o' the creek an' skinned ... [click for more]

Bud Ogle Farm
Bud Ogle Farm is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Chimney Tops Trail ~ The View Is Worth the Climb
This popular trail climbs to the unique summit formations the Cherokees called Duniskwalguni, meaning forked antlers.

Mountain people thou... [click for more]

Elkmont Historic District, Great Smoky Mountains NP
Elkmont Historic District, Great Smoky Mountains NP is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

John H. Reagan
John H. Reagan was born near this spot Oct. 8, 1818. Moving to Texas in 1838, he represented that state in Congress in 1857. In 1861 he resigned to be... [click for more]

John Ownby Cabin
John Ownby Cabin is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

King-Walker Place
King-Walker Place is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Land of Diversity ~ Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Few places in North America sustain a greater variety of life than the Great Smoky Mountains. The forests, streams, and meadows here support more than... [click for more]

Lifeblood of the Mountains
More precipitation falls in the Great Smoky Mountains than anywhere else in the eastern United States. The yearly average is about 890 billion gallons... [click for more]

Martha Jane Ogle Cabin
This cabin is the first house built in what is now Gatlinburg. About 1802, William Ogle selected a building site near here, in what he called The Land... [click for more]

Messer Barn
Messer Barn is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

New Gap, New Road ~ Morton Overlook
New Gap, New Road
Morton Overlook
? Great Smoky Mountains National Park ?


I do not . . . f... [click for more]

Noah &lquo;Bud&rquo; Ogle Farm ~ Self-Guiding Trail
With axe, plow, and gun, the first settlers changed the mountains, cutting into forests that were centuries old. They called this place Junglebrook af... [click for more]

Perry’s Camp
Perry's Camp is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Roaring Fork Historic District
Roaring Fork Historic District is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

The Chimney Tops
These twin summits of quartzite and hard slate are familiar landmarks. The peak on the right has a hole like a flue. Mountain people thought these for... [click for more]

The Ephraim Bales Place
It would be difficult to find a better place to imagine mountain life than this. Picture yourself growing up here as one of Ephraim and Minerva Bales'... [click for more]

To the free people of America
?We meet today to dedicate the mountains, streams, and forests to the service of the American People.?
President Franklin Delano Rooseve... [click for more]

Tyson McCarter Place
Tyson McCarter Place is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]