Southern Appalachian Digital Collections

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Appalachian National Park: Synopsis of work accomplished

items 34 of 35 items
  • wcu_great_smoky_mtns-14493.jpg
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Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).

  • Jr 2 a. /& vrVii^ ■f»i^ ■■;/"<"' The most experienced travellers and those whose interest in the lumber trade gives them a wide knowledge of our forestry and the great scenic beauties of America have uttered warnings time anfl again against the denudation of our forestlands and the defacement of the grand scenery of the mountain regions of the Southern Appala- chianfana £h<& .recruits thorofrom in the nonr future. Ifi For many years there has been more or less talk of the opportunities and great advantages to the country at large to be derived from the establishment of a Forest Reserve in the Blue Ridge ob great Smdky Mountains. The lumber supply of the United States is rapidly diminishing, the value of timber is proportionately rapidly increasing. Within a v^ry few years these forests which have hitherto been considered of small value on account of their being located on the ilopes of our inaccessible mountains will become so valuable that it will enable the lumbermen to market the same., even by the expensive methods ^shich will be necessary. These forests will be destroyed unless something is done for their protection. In the destruction of these forests the whole water shed of the Southeastern states has been and will be further influenced; streams will dry up during the dry season and become raging torrents in the wet season. The financial loss in the agricultural sections; the loss of water power; the inability to raise crops on account of ^irrigation; changes in climate, together with the fact that we are rapidly making inroads on the only hard wood forests remaining in the country should I induce every citizen to become interested in this matter.
Object
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).

  • This 32-page booklet is titled, “Appalachian National Park: Synopsis of work accomplished” since the founding of the Appalachian National Park Association. While the booklet is titled “fourth edition,” the first three editions have a different title and content. The first, second, and third editions are titled, “Reasons in Favor of the Establishment of a National Park in the Mountains of Western North Carolina.”