Southern Appalachian Digital Collections

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Inventory of Horace Kephart collection

items 5 of 26 items
  • wcu_great_smoky_mtns-11298.jp2
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Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).

  • Calendar of Horace Kephart Papers. P.C. 46.1-P.C. 46. . These letters were brought by Dr. Richard VI. Iobst, University Archivist, to the Archives on February 26, 1973. They will be copied and returned in good order to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Sugarlands Visitor Center, Gatlinburg, Tennessee where they are currently under the control of Mr. Paul McCrary, Director of Exhibits, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and his Assistant, Mr. Glenn Cardwell, Park Technician. March 1, 1973 dAUI k Richard W. Iobst University Archivist; Assistant Professor Correspondence: 190?-1934 and n.d. Racine Boat Manufacturing Company (Muskegon, Michigan) to Horace Kephart (Daylton, Ohio), Muskegon, Michigan, Michigan, January 7, 199^. Fullerton, Albert (President, National Bakers' Egg Company) to Horace Kephart£Lindale, Georgia), Sioux City, Iowa, October 5, 1909* Kephart, Horace to Ezra H. Fitch (New York, N. Y.), Bryson City, N. C, April 5, 1911. Hathaway, R. (Manager, Cambridge Botanical Supply Company) to Horace Kephart (Bryson City, N. C), Waverley, Massachusetts, April 24, 19H. Keohart, Horace to Bristow Adams (Acting Editor, Forest Service, Washington, D. C.), Bryson City, N. C, July 26, 1912. Mills Woven Cartridge Belt Company to Horace Kephart (Brysta City, N. C), Worcester, Massachusetts, July 30, 1912. Kephart, Horace to Albert Britt (Editor, Outing Magazine, New York), Bryson City, N. C, August 21, 1912. Kephart, Horace to Albert Britt, Editor (Outing Magazine, New York), Bryson City, N. C, August 26, 1912. "... I am glad that you like what you have seen of the stuff. This much I may say, perhaps, with due modesty: that I know of no other writer who has lived so long and so intimately with the real mountaineers as I have, or who has been admitted so deeply into their confidence. They are an extremely suspicious and secretive people, who, from feral instinct, hide from outsiders their real character, and are as cunning as any wild things in covering their tracks. The hospitality with which they admit a stranger is perfectly true and perfectly charming; but their slyness and vindictiveness are equally true and anything else than charming. ..." Kephart, Horace to G. T. McCroskey (New York City), Bryson City, N. C, December 30, 1912. Pinkerter, Robert E. to Horace Kephart, Atikokan, Ontario, Candda, November 21, 1913. Hunter, F. F.-tto Horace Kephart (Bryson City, N. C), Seattle, Washington, June 10,
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).