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Last of the Eastern Wilderness: An Article on the Proposed Great Smoky National Park

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  • wcu_great_smoky_mtns-11061.jp2
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  • THE LAST OP THE EASTERN WILDERNESS An Article en the Proposed Great Smoky national Parle By Horace Kephart World*s Work, Veb«0=6* April, 1926 (Two national parks for the East are proposed—one, of about six hundred square miles in the Great Smoky Mountains on the North Carolina-Tennessee boundary, and the other, of about four hundred thousand acros, in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. This artiole deals with the Great Smoky proposal, and Is by the foremost authority on the history, traditions, customs, and folklore of the region.) Nobody knows who named them the Great Smoky Mountains. On the North Carolina side of the range was the ancient oapital of the Cherokee Hation, and there, on the Lufty River, about two thousand of the Indians are still living. If you ask one of them what is the Cherokee name for the Smokies ha will probably answer "Giuk-sus-tee," meaning smoke. But that is only their translation of the English word. The older Indians have assured me that the Cherokses have no native name for the Smoky range as a *feole. They give a name to eaoh and every peak, ridge, gap, stream, waterfall, or other definite location. Ahuluna is the "place of the ambush"! Atahahi, "the enehanted lake"* Datslyi, "where the water-monster lives," and so on. But the Smokies as a whole are not distinguished from neighboring ranges of the Unaka system. The white mountaineers of this region never say "Great Smoky." To them the range is simply "the Smokies.* How and then they use the word in the singular, as when a bear hunter sayst "I've seed the wind blow on top o* i*<*<y till a hoss couldn't stand up agin it."
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).