Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring a waterfront view and a structure across the water. This picture may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip.
Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring a waterfront view and a structure across the water. This picture may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip.
This photographic postcard depicts the Edward F. Worst Craft House during the summer of 1935. The structure was built on land owned by Lucy Morgan and later deeded to Penland School of Handicrafts (now Penland School of Crafts). The building,...
By the time this postcard view of the Jarrett Springs Hotel in Dillsboro, N.C., was mailed in 1910, the hotel was already twenty-five years old. The property opened in 1884 as the Mount Beulah Hotel and was conveniently located along the Murphy...
This view captioned the 'Fontana Dam site'� from the report by the Tennessee Valley Authority, 'The Fontana Project: A Comprehensive Report on the Planning, Design, Construction, and Initial Operations of the Fontana Project'� (Washington: ...
Hotels -- North Carolina -- Haywood County; Hotel Gordon (Waynesville, N.C.)
This page from the late 1920s brochure for the 'Hotel Gordon'� has a line-drawing illustration of the hotel, which was located in Waynesville, North Carolina. Automobiles are shown in the drawing parked in front of the hotel and the brochure...
Hydroelectric power plants -- North Carolina -- Swain County;
The August 13, 1929 issue of 'The Ruralite' (Sylva, N.C.), headlined this article entitled '5 New Hydro-Electric Projects Planned for Nantahala Section'� that detailed plans for five new hydroelectric projects on the Little Tennessee River, the...
The booklet titled 'Woman's Christian Temperance Union Southern Assembly and School of Methods, Waynesville, N.C., 1892' carried this picture of the Haywood White Sulphur Springs Hotel. The earliest part of the building had been a home constructed...
The front page of the 'Cherokee Scout' (Murphy, North Carolina) for November 18, 1927, announced the opening of a new Cherokee County courthouse in its article 'Formally Open Cherokee's New Courthouse.'� A fire in 1926 had destroyed a previous...
Schools -- North Carolina -- Swain County; Alarka School (Swain County, N.C.)
This photograph shows the new school building in Alarka, North Carolina, a community in Swain County, N.C. The decision to build a new school in Alarka provided the opportunity to consolidate smaller schools into the new structure through the use...
Kephart, Horace, 1862-1931; Camping -- Equipment and supplies
In October 1904 Kephart moved from Dicks Creek, near Dillsboro, North Carolina, to the Hazel Creek area of Swain County, North Carolina. His departure was shown in the Album as ''Addio! Sunday, Oct. 30, 1904.'' The photograph shows the remaining...
Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring a structure which may be a home or hunter's cabin in a woodland setting, and which may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip.
Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring four men with rifles in front of the same log cabin structure as seen on Album page 70. This picture may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip. The man...
Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring a structure which may be a home or hunter's cabin in a woodland setting, and which may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip.
Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring a waterfront view and a structure in the background. This picture may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip.
Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring a log cabin structure and fence. This picture may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip.
Kephart did not provide a caption for this photograph featuring a view from above of a mountain valley with a structure in the lower right. This picture may have been from a series taken on one of his travels or a hunting trip.
The caption on the back of the photograph, which indicates that this structure is "One of the larger mills on Hazel Creek around 1920," does not appear to be in Kephart's handwriting.
In October 1904 Kephart moved from Dicks Creek, near Dillsboro, North Carolina, to the Hazel Creek area of Swain County, North Carolina. His departure was shown in the Album as "Addio! Sunday, Oct. 30, 1904." The photograph shows the remaining...