GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS -
(SOURCE: WBIR, WIRE REPORTS) - Crews in the Great Smoky Mountains
National Park have completed the most significant phase yet in the
longtime plan to restore 19 cabins and raze dozens of other buildings in
the Elkmont Historic District.
The national park received funding in 2017 to restore four cabins in the
Daisy Town area of Elkmont and demolish 34 others along Jakes Creek
Trail and the Little River Trail.
Now the restoration work is done, the "no trespassing" signs have been
removed, and visitors can freely walk inside the Creekmore cabin, the
Mayo cottage, the Levi Trentham cabin, and the Mayo servants' quarters.
The Levi Trentham cabin was originally built in 1830 and is one of the
oldest surviving structures in the Great Smoky Mountains.
I'm really proud the visiting public is going to get to see them in this
condition. It looks clean. It almost looks brand new, like the
homeowners just moved out and painted it for resale. It looks fabulous,"
said Randy Hatten, GSMNP buildings and grounds branch chief. "We had to
stabilize these structures, reinforce the floors, and make them sound
for visitor foot traffic."
The restoration involved hours of tedious and intensive labor for
Delayne Hodges. The NPS restoration expert says he and other workers
took great care to make repairs without changing the structures. That
included removing each stone in the leaning chimney and hearth of the
Levi Trentham cabin and reassembling it with each stone in its original
spot.
"We put our heart and soul into it. We really did. My wife is a
professional painter and volunteered to come help with all the windows,
the glaze, and we spent a lot of hours up here. It's almost like a
second home," said Hodges. "We know this project means a lot to people.
It was neat because I had a chance to meet some of the relatives of the
cabin owners who want to see the work and tell me all about the
history."
While Hodges was focused on restoration and preservation, this park also
hired a contractor to demolish dozens of the historic cabins. In the
areas along Jakes Creek and the Little River Trail, only stone chimneys
and foundations remain where the 34 cabins were removed earlier this
year.
This year's work is one piece of a larger project. In 2006, the National
Park Service decided to preserve 19 of 70 historic buildings in Elkmont,
demolish the rest, and chip away at the project over time as funding
became available. The plan was a compromise after decades of bitter
fighting and controversy over the fate of Elkmont's buildings.
Elkmont is historically significant as both a logging community and for
its role in transforming the area into a destination for tourism and
recreation. Most of the structures in Elkmont were vacation cabins built
and owned by families who eventually led the movement to preserve the
Great Smoky Mountains as a national park.
For the four recently-restored cabins, there are no interpretive rangers
in Elkmont to help with tours. Visiting the cabins is an entirely
self-guided experience, much like the empty structures in Cades Cove
where you can enter for a glimpse of the era's architecture.
A potentially confusing thing for visitors in Elkmont is the four open
cabins are surrounded by 13 crumbling buildings that remain off limits
until they can be restored. The restricted cabins may appear open to
because many doors on the deteriorating structures will not shut and
some trespass warning signs have been stolen.
Nonetheless, the restored cabins are easily identified with their fresh
coats of paint, repaired glass windows, and solid floors.
The plan to save 19 cabins was a departure from the original stance of
the park, which initially planned to demolish all of the buildings when
they were vacated in the 1990s.
The cabins were still occupied through 1992 because owners chose an
option that gave them a lifetime lease when the national park was
created in the 1930s. The lease allowed their families to use the
buildings until their death in exchange for selling their property to
the government at a reduced price. The lease agreements were
renegotiated over time and almost all them expired at the end of 1992.
Families were forced to pack up and leave their longtime vacation cabins
behind.
Four families were able to keep leases through 2002 because their
original agreements were never renegotiated with the rest of the
community. The Mayo family lease went through 2002 and included three of
the four cabins restored in 2017.
The NPS plan to demolish all the historic buildings in Elkmont was
thwarted when the structures were added to the National Register of
Historic Places. The public then tried to convince the park to renovate
the cabins and make them available for lodging. Others fought fiercely
to continue the stated plan to remove all structures to return the land
to nature. The empty buildings rotted and were not repaired while the
NPS debated the issue for more than a decade.
The ultimate choice preserved 19 cabins, but did not permit any to be
used for lodging. Two of the buildings would be made available for
daytime rentals while the remaining 17 were slated to become empty
museum exhibits.
With the latest round of work complete, six of the 19 spared cabins have
been restored. The Appalachian Clubhouse was renovated in 2009 and the
Spence Cabin was finished in 2011. Both are available to rent for
events.
The GSMNP still needs to restore 13 more cabins and remove 10 to
complete the project. If funding is approved in the future, Hatten
expects the entire project to be finished in 2025.
The park has requested funds to restore three cabins in 2019. They
include the Addicks cabin and a small playhouse named Adamless Eden in
Daisy Town. The third structure is the Byers cabin on Society Hill,
which is the only cabin still standing along Jakes Creek Trail. The
Byers cabin is also referred to as the Chapman cabin because it was
given to Col. David Chapman in appreciation for his efforts to create
the national park.
Funding has been requested to restore the Swan, Higdon, Smith, and Sneed
cabins in 2021. The remaining cabins would be restored in 2023 and 2025,
but specifics are not available because the NPS only submits official
funding requests for projects expected to begin within five years.
The 10 cabins awaiting removal are all located in the Wonderland Club
area of Elkmont. Hatten says if funding is approved, they could be
demolished in the next year or two.
© 2017 WBIR.COM
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