16 research outputs found
How to Reach our New National Park in the Great Smoky Mountains
This small foldout brochure was produced by the East Tennessee Automobile Club, which promoted the Great Smoky Mountains National Park as “America’s newest, most picturesque and charming playground.” The club, located in Knoxville, Tennessee, promoted its hometown city as the best way to access the park, showing two maps with Knoxville at their center and the park nearby. Where earlier brochures promoted horseback riding and camping, this brochure is specifically aimed at the motor tourist and promises access to the park via a “brief drive, over good roads.” Many of the photographs in this brochure were contributed by the Thompson Brothers Commercial Photographers
Great Smoky Mountains National Park
This map of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is part of the 1930 booklet “The Great Smoky Mountains National Park” published by the Great Smoky Mountains Publishing Company, Inc. The map features the main roads through the park and includes peaks, hotels, and camps
Tennessee Society to Maintain Segregation correspondence with Raymond B. Witt, 1955 October 18
Letter from the Tennesee Society to Maintain Segregation to Raymond B. Witt, chairman of the Chattanooga, Tennessee Board of Education offering a questionnaire for Witt to complete. The questionnaire asks pointed questions regarding public school integration
Report of the Planters' bank of Tennessee Nashville, Oct. 1, 1859.
Page Order: Multipag
Hydrogeology and ground-water flow in the Memphis and Fort Pillow aquifers in the Memphis area, Tennessee /
Includes bibliographical references (p. 53-56).Mode of access: Internet