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158 YEAR OLD LOG CABIN HIDDEN IN GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK | HANNAH CABIN

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  • Опубліковано 18 сер 2024
  • JIM HANNAH CABIN IN GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK

КОМЕНТАРІ • 985

  • @AdventuresIntoHistory
    @AdventuresIntoHistory  Рік тому +71

    Amazing old cabin here, that has definitely seen better days! There was a Hannah cemetery nearby and other buildings further down the trail I didn’t make it to. Next time!
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    • @robertjensen8023
      @robertjensen8023 Рік тому

      @@BlueRidgeParanormalEst loop

    • @Lizzy514
      @Lizzy514 Рік тому +1

      It looks fantastic

    • @BAMA-2019
      @BAMA-2019 Рік тому

      Screw JAWJA...Ohio St putting on that ass!!!

    • @la.vagibond
      @la.vagibond Рік тому

      When they stole all that land

    • @la.vagibond
      @la.vagibond Рік тому +1

      @@BlueRidgeParanormalEst wtf are u talking about ? You proved my point exactly. Stolen land just like I said🤣 make sure u have a nice day👋

  • @johnelliott7375
    @johnelliott7375 Рік тому +306

    160 years old and no maintenance I am impressed with it still being in as good of shape as it is in.

    • @cowgirlvillarreal
      @cowgirlvillarreal Рік тому +34

      They make homes today cheaply and they don't last like the old homes do that were built in 1800s and 1900s

    • @johnelliott7375
      @johnelliott7375 Рік тому +24

      @@cowgirlvillarreal Agreed with you on that one. 1903 my house in Western Pa was built in. The timber is a real 2×12 and has the rough saw marks in it. On a sandstone foundation.

    • @Cheshyre.
      @Cheshyre. Рік тому +15

      There's been some upkeep to it; the door frame is new, but it's been minimum.

    • @robertbates6057
      @robertbates6057 Рік тому +22

      I think it may have been from Chestnut logs. Rot resistant.

    • @Peachy08
      @Peachy08 Рік тому +26

      A lot of these old cabins were built using chestnut trees. That wood practically last forever!

  • @pallen9044
    @pallen9044 Рік тому +24

    Came for the cabin that looks eerily like the one in the Evil Dead films and stayed for the surprisingly entertaining tour. Well done and I appreciate the respect you obviously have for these old settlements!

  • @suzanne529
    @suzanne529 Рік тому +164

    I live in Oregon, but my grandparents lived in a similar cabin although it was bigger, having been added onto over the years. The style with the roof coming down to make the porch roof is the same. Grandparents raised 4 kids in that cabin. There was no running water, just a pump by the back door. Outhouse, wood cookstove. They had the old wooden phone box. By the time I came around there was a bathroom and electricity. But oh my, the memories. It would be over a 100 years old now. Thanks for sharing.

    • @stevemccarty6384
      @stevemccarty6384 Рік тому +4

      My mom, born in 1923 lived in a cabin in Kansas. There was an outhouse. She said that it was kept clean and they didn't think anything about it.

    • @suzanne529
      @suzanne529 Рік тому +4

      @@stevemccarty6384 I am 70 and I remember having an outhouse when I was little. At least I remember my Dad adding a bathroom to our house when I was 3 or 4. Different world now, everyone wants at least TWO bathrooms!

    • @3PercentNeanderhal
      @3PercentNeanderhal Рік тому +3

      Similar story here. I grew up dirt poor but loved in an Appalachian clapboard cabin in Perry County Eastern Kentucky. We had the wood stove, well pump and the whole nine yards and we didn't have hot running water until around 1980 or so. Taking a schitt in November was pretty rough and I was stung in the taint once by an outhouse wasp. Mom , Dad and three boys in a 3 room house. Our memories in those hills were awesome too and if I could go back I would. Damn.... I can almost smell that wild blackberry cobbler.

    • @Toltecgrl
      @Toltecgrl Рік тому

      Oh wow! Thanks for sharing that story. Not all of us have stories like that. How neat!!

    • @suzanne529
      @suzanne529 Рік тому

      @@stevemccarty6384 I traveled to Finland a few years back and encountered the best outhouse I'd ever seen. Two holer, decorated with a little stand with flowers, rugs on the floor, pictures on the wall and very very clean.

  • @Mari-B
    @Mari-B Рік тому +164

    A great example of how the settlers had live/ survive. People complain today and have no idea of what so many people went through back then. Thank you Robert for bringing us another great video.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  Рік тому +10

      That’s right, thank you!

    • @papasteel804
      @papasteel804 Рік тому

      @Dick Turpin People complain today because they are pussies. The people living in that cabin were probably too busy to complain, had no one to even complain to, and were likely thankful each and every day for what they had.

    • @greeneyelady56
      @greeneyelady56 Рік тому +5

      They were strong and not soft people----God Bless them all

    • @lelaine61
      @lelaine61 Рік тому +6

      😌☕️Complaining is Why We All Have Improved Living Conditions and Continued Complaining will Iron Out All the Snags that Still Need Improvement🙂So Heres to Complaining🥂Better Tomorrow’s🥳2023 Bring It On🎉🙏🦋☮️❤️🌟🌎

    • @cyndyrn1
      @cyndyrn1 Рік тому +1

      Most of these cabins were made of chestnut trees. That wood lasts forever being rot resistant. Sadly due to the blight all the trees were wiped out completely in the early 1920’s 30’s. Most all Appalachian homes were built with these trees

  • @jameshanmer4062
    @jameshanmer4062 Рік тому +8

    Horace Kephart tells us in "Our Southern Highlanders" that Scotch-Irish settlers in Appalachia left their cabins drafty on purpose. They considered moving air healthy and a sealed off living space as something for the weak or infirm! Therefore they used little to no chinking. Kephart lived among the Scotch-Irish settlers of Western NC/Eastern TN for over a decade, not far from this site, so I believe he can be taken at his word. He also describes the Scotch-Irish as basically immune to cold, going about in sub freezing temperatures with little clothes and less discomfort. Hearty folks no doubt.

  • @skyhigh6
    @skyhigh6 Рік тому +111

    My wife's grandmother old log cabin was built exactly like that cabin. It was build around 1848 to 1850. The original owners were named Bates. My wife's grandmother came to Arkansas in a covered wagon about 1890, and her family name was Jimerson. They lived in the old cabin until about 1930. They fireplace was made of clay and stick construction.
    They covered the logs the same way but papered over the interior with old newspaper and catalogs. I was able to see dates from 1890 to 1930 on some of the exposed papers.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  Рік тому +12

      Wow, that’s great. I filmed another cabin up there that was less primitive that did have newspaper covering the walls.

    • @hansblitz7770
      @hansblitz7770 Рік тому +2

      This is a recreation by hobbyists, probably from the 1960s when this style became pop culture.
      The lack of cribbing and the swirl planing marks on the floorboards are a dead giveaway. Nobody ever "lived" here. It was a fun little hang out spot for some good ol' boys to make fun of the hippies circa 1968.

    • @Melissa-pt2ik
      @Melissa-pt2ik Рік тому

      Wow

    • @jimmysapien9961
      @jimmysapien9961 Рік тому

      Pictures please

    • @cmoney7748
      @cmoney7748 Рік тому +2

      I bet the original owners had slaves who would call them "Master Bates"

  • @marypettitt9150
    @marypettitt9150 Рік тому +43

    My husband's grandparents lived in a log/lumber cabin in the Missouri Ozarks. One of their children took it over and we talked to their daughter about it. She said that the foundation was left open and that when the winter winds came, it was "as cold as blue blazes." She was happy to leave that cabin. Thank you for sharing this cabin with us. I wonder what agreement the National Park Service made with the owners of this cabin. I'm glad it was left untouched.

  • @celleduffel1533
    @celleduffel1533 Рік тому +42

    Reminds me of my gma's "shack" when I was young..she did not have an upstairs..she did have a cistern at the back door..and an outhouse yards from her backdoor :) I sure love cabins like this..just so many memories and you can only imagine the family that lived there and how their life was.

  • @darleensanford7231
    @darleensanford7231 Рік тому +7

    It's amazing how people use to live. Now a days families want a 4BR 2 bath at least. We as a people think we NEED too much.

  • @sallybuskey952
    @sallybuskey952 Рік тому +27

    Seeing this cabin just made my day. Learned a few more things about how cabins were built back in the day. Amazing. Thank you.

  • @JoHarmon-hg7wz
    @JoHarmon-hg7wz Рік тому +42

    If they made this a park then they should maintain this cabin, it is a peice of history! Thanks for sharing this with us.

    • @hansblitz7770
      @hansblitz7770 Рік тому +2

      A piece of 1960's history by some fans of western movies.
      There are dead giveaways in the construction and state.
      This is not even from the early 1900s, this is a 1960s hobby build.

    • @Nobodyofimportance2u
      @Nobodyofimportance2u Рік тому +1

      @@hansblitz7770 I wondered the same thing. Some of the construction didn't make sense.

    • @maxideas9393
      @maxideas9393 Рік тому +3

      It looks like it's been maintained just enough to prevent it from complete decay. It's in too good of shape to have been abandoned as long as it has.

    • @TheHarleyhillbilly
      @TheHarleyhillbilly Рік тому +2

      @@hansblitz7770 well I don’t think it could have been built in the 1960’s it has to be prior to September, 2nd 1940.

    • @revelationakagoldeneagle8045
      @revelationakagoldeneagle8045 Рік тому +8

      @@hansblitz7770
      The Hannah Cabin was built in 1864 by John Jackson Hannah, son of one of the original settlers to the Big Cataloochee area, Evan Hannah.
      John settled in the Little Cataloochee area because all of the land in Big Cataloochee was taken.
      After he died his son lived in it until he sold it to the state government in what is now part of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
      This is an original 1864 cabin.
      I have visited there many times, all of Cataloochee, during my 13 years living in the Maggie Valley NC area.

  • @dakshaswal4-croll.no.21avn7
    @dakshaswal4-croll.no.21avn7 Рік тому +8

    Smoky mountains looks an intriguing place the cabin is quite intriguing small place too!

  • @dianadelahaye7660
    @dianadelahaye7660 Рік тому +9

    Charming! Nice brick chimney and fireplace. Amazing the cabin sits on stacks of flat rocks.

  • @karenshepler7128
    @karenshepler7128 Рік тому +7

    Very beautiful place, and I hope they preserve it as well .Thanks for sharing.

  • @marywright6759
    @marywright6759 Рік тому +18

    I hope the park works to keep it so it doesn't completely disappear.

  • @suzanneflowers2230
    @suzanneflowers2230 Рік тому +13

    Thank you, Robert. I can't travel at the moment so you just gave me a good field trip. I hope the NPS gets more preservation work going on the Hanna cabin.

  • @susanmcconnell-sink5443
    @susanmcconnell-sink5443 Рік тому +16

    Thanks for filming and sharing this exploration. Beautiful old cabin. Life must have been tough in those days.

    • @fredflintstone6163
      @fredflintstone6163 Рік тому +6

      Life was easier then no bills or debt and enjoy the rewards of your effort no govt to dictate your actions or take you money. If you made a mistake you learned and did better you were in charge of your destiny and servant to God and nature. Maybe the garden of Eden years later great grandpa been around a long time

  • @dinahnicest6525
    @dinahnicest6525 Рік тому +9

    The skillfully made dovetails at the corners are what have been holding this whole thing together for all these years. My mom was bornin a similar cabin almost a century ago.

  • @barbaraharshman9460
    @barbaraharshman9460 Рік тому +7

    House for Aaron! Thank you Robert for taking us for this tour!! Very beautiful ❤️

  • @Sammyman44
    @Sammyman44 Рік тому +2

    Love that this video came across my page. John Hannah was my g-g-g-g-grandpa on my mothers side. Scotch-Irish descent. The cabin was passed to his son Jim when he passed away. I believe Jims wife’s name was Melissa. Thanks for covering this, Haven’t had the chance to see it myself, Only family pictures.

  • @crescentmoonchild4031
    @crescentmoonchild4031 Рік тому +12

    We just got back from a visit to gatlinburg and have visited in the past. Love the smoky mountains and all the history. Hard life, strong people.

  • @pt2575
    @pt2575 Рік тому +23

    The cabin is beautiful. Thank you.
    Guess on the F/P -- from the condition of the bricks, which were laid with great care, and the changes in the hearth - guessing they may have come into some salvaged or unused brick and replaced an old stone fireplace. Just a guess.
    That cabin is so beautiful. We forget how hard life was just a few short years ago. Thank you for taking us with you.
    Be careful !

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  Рік тому +2

      That’s my guess also. Some of the brick does look old but the mortar is definitely new-ish

  • @SondraD7676
    @SondraD7676 Рік тому +31

    Thank you for working on your vacation to supply us with these videos! There is a log barn on our old farm in southeastern Kentucky, built in 1866 of similar construction. The steps to the upper level always were precarious. Can you imagine having to go up and down the stairs at night, even as an agile child? I guess a chamber pot would be in order if you could afford it and find one in 1864. Very nice tour, you are the master!

    • @prarieborn6458
      @prarieborn6458 Рік тому +2

      Haha, they used to call them “thunder mugs”. They had a canopy over the bed and a can’o pee under the bed.

  • @brettcreech3490
    @brettcreech3490 Рік тому +3

    Very cool thanks for sharing.

  • @robertmiller2830
    @robertmiller2830 Рік тому +9

    That chimney looks pretty well-made

  • @starlawilson4103
    @starlawilson4103 Рік тому +7

    Can you image raising 10 kids in such a small area?? Creative parenting for sure!!

    • @cclyon
      @cclyon Рік тому +2

      That's the only way they stayed warm in those old places in the winter!

    • @starlawilson4103
      @starlawilson4103 Рік тому +3

      @@cclyon hahaha

  • @pamelac2863
    @pamelac2863 Рік тому +6

    That is a great old cabin love exploring stuff like this
    Thank you for the video

  • @texas6060
    @texas6060 Рік тому +19

    Something to really think about, as to how rough life was back years ago. Makes you really appreciate life as we know it today with all our Modern Convenience. I'm with you Robert on hoping they do take the time to preserve this piece of History. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @jillgebauer1292
      @jillgebauer1292 Рік тому

      Makes me oftentimes long for that life knowing it was hard. But they did it! They worked together, kept the family together, appreciated everything! They really had the best of this country back then. Bless them forever.

  • @nneichan9353
    @nneichan9353 Рік тому +3

    I wonder if they haven't done the needed restoration work for lack of funds or not having a skilled artisan to do the work. It would be a shame to let it fully collapse, and 'as is' it appears to be a hazard.

  • @Azoreanislandgirl
    @Azoreanislandgirl Рік тому +13

    I love to see nature and the log cabin is so beautiful. They knew how to build a solid structure.

  • @tacocin
    @tacocin Рік тому +10

    If those walls could talk!

  • @andrewowens9382
    @andrewowens9382 Рік тому +5

    I'm surprised it looks like it is then again at least it had a brick fireplace to keep warm they can't be many log cabins left it's a pity they can't keep the up keep for future generations very interesting Robert all the best Andrew south wales uk 👍 👌 😀 🇬🇧

    • @floridagirl386
      @floridagirl386 Рік тому +1

      The government doesn't care. There will be many homes plopped up there when that house finally loses its recognition, or falls

  • @gailatkinson1955
    @gailatkinson1955 Рік тому +4

    I love old cabins. Thanks for sharing. I’ve always wanted to live in something like it. That was a nice size upstairs space.

  • @prarieborn6458
    @prarieborn6458 Рік тому +2

    The cabin is surprisingly clean inside and out. It does not look as though birds or critters have taken up residence. The Park service must keep it sept out. and visit often enough to discourage wildlife. The slope it precariousy rests on looks like it is being washed away slowly. The cabin actually looks quite spacious for a family. , with a sleeping loft also. but as you say,it must have been very hard to heat in the winter. BRRR. My Great grandparents raised 11 children in a one room house made of sod, a ‘soddy” on the ND prarie, until they built a farmhouse. Earlier generations must have been a lot tougher and resilient than we are today, or none of us would BE here. i sure hope that the park service at least patches the roof, and soon.. The cabin has survived so long, it would be a shame to let it go. Thank you for taking us on another adventure.

  • @johnelliott7375
    @johnelliott7375 Рік тому +6

    They left it but didn't preserve it, or it would be better than the shape it is in and would at least have a marker.

  • @brendahogue5487
    @brendahogue5487 Рік тому +3

    Enjoy watching your videos and you bringing the past history out. May the Lord bless and protect you

  • @julie8378
    @julie8378 Рік тому +7

    Amazing!!! Thank you for all that you do to bring us this fabulous content!!!

  • @Marsha0364
    @Marsha0364 Рік тому +5

    Very interesting i love old cabins and too hear how life was like back then, made me just feel guilty for thinking it was chilly in our house today. My mother in law grew up in a cabin in Kentucky and said she had a hard and sometimes strict but very loving childhood. Love her stories of swimming back then in clear water creeks, exploring the forest and running around barefoot watching for snakes. I did find out and it’s really true, that they grew up down the holler from Loretta Lynn. My mother in law didn’t play with her because she was older, but her younger brother walked to school with Loretta for a few years. ❤

  • @larrysmith6499
    @larrysmith6499 Рік тому +3

    Awesome cabin. Thanks for sharing Robert

  • @edwardmckenzie3402
    @edwardmckenzie3402 Рік тому +6

    Very interesting. Something about abandoned cabins that makes you reflect on the people who lived in them! That was some hard living!

  • @bridgetmuehlberger5141
    @bridgetmuehlberger5141 Рік тому +11

    Recently spent a week in GSMNP. Lots of history and great efforts by the NPS to restore and retain the sites and cemeteries.

  • @carolwilliams9143
    @carolwilliams9143 Рік тому +4

    Look at the width of those boards! Must have had some large trees!

  • @peggyharris3301
    @peggyharris3301 Рік тому +13

    Imagining that little cabin in the snow and understanding why people didn't live long lives back in the day

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  Рік тому +4

      No doubt

    • @alexkulakovich9326
      @alexkulakovich9326 Рік тому +1

      Back in the day they only left the gaps during the summer they would use mosses and such to plug the holes as well as overlapping board it really comes down to where you family was from and how much knowledge was being passed down mine have always been builders and farmers very strong people not just physically there's no real way to describe how they did things except they had some snap to em my vocabulary does t quite cover it but I assure you a lot of these places were quite warm with a fire in the place and the walls sealed and covered also the floors need work but overall a beautiful old wood cabin

    • @arcturus8016
      @arcturus8016 Рік тому +3

      Many people did live long lives. Go to the cemeteries and there are lots of 18th and 19th Century people that lived 80, 90, even a hundred years.... but so many unlucky people died as babies, children or young adults of disease that it brings the average way down.

    • @rossw73
      @rossw73 Рік тому

      @@arcturus8016 unfortunately, a lot of people don’t understand the concept of averages and that leads to all sorts of inaccurate beliefs.

  • @bonnielayfield1406
    @bonnielayfield1406 Рік тому +4

    Love this video Robert. Thank you. 👏👏🥰

  • @mireyabermudez1966
    @mireyabermudez1966 Місяць тому

    Thank you for taking your time to show what it used to be once in life. I am from the Caribbean but we were brought up in similar conditions, No running water lines, no clothes washers, no bathrooms, only outside makeshift, when it rained no one sleeps because we must put pots and pans over the beds to collect the water. Barely a 40 watt light bulb, wash dishes outside the house over a board...etc. our outside light was the moon. Nowadays we have it all. No matter how low income we may be, I consider ourselves being rich comparing to our ancestors. Guess what! I will NEVER change those days for today's modern life. Back then we were as happy as happy could be. Families shared time in every way. There were NO virtual communications, only in person communication. I thank the Lord for us being born in that era.

  • @fredrobinson6990
    @fredrobinson6990 Рік тому +3

    Neat old hose. Good video.

  • @Dav3Campb3ll
    @Dav3Campb3ll Рік тому +5

    Amazing cabin .Great video

  • @laurahurst1960
    @laurahurst1960 Рік тому +6

    I always think it would be neat to go Bain time and see the insides with life and furniture ❤

  • @donnaoglesby1278
    @donnaoglesby1278 Рік тому +15

    The Cabin in itself in still in amazing shape for the time that it was actually built, and for the size, was a pretty good space, with a good size in the upstairs attic space, for the kids to sleep , if there was any. Like even back then, they used every bit of space, with the little cubby door under the stairs for storage. Such a shame that Government came along and removed all the families from the homes they built, and form the family cemeteries, so that all that they worked so hard for, the government just came and took form them, as if they were not important. sigh. really appreciate your time on documenting all this and sharing with all of us.

  • @paulhoffman6371
    @paulhoffman6371 Рік тому +7

    Almost have to believe some level of care is taking place on the old cabin. Does one leave it as is and let nature reclaim it, or perform minimal preservation to prolong its life? Sounds like your hike was not easy, moving it to a historical location is probably not an option. Definitely a cool find.

    • @johnaustin9051
      @johnaustin9051 Рік тому

      Yes. The roof is not very old. Nature, physics, science, structual engineering and common sense tells me this cabin IS NOT 158 years old.

  • @lynnmacleod1879
    @lynnmacleod1879 Рік тому +10

    Hard to comprehend families spent their lives in what we perceive as small quarters, we owe our forefathers a great deal 💪

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  Рік тому +7

      It really is. When I see these relics it’s always hard to comprehend that that was home and those people were just as alive as you and me - living life. Such a different life though.

    • @robertbates6057
      @robertbates6057 Рік тому

      @@AdventuresIntoHistory May have been 6 or 7 in that cabin lol.

    • @doug3819
      @doug3819 Рік тому

      Modern humans in Western culture are spoiled for the most part. We live in homes to large and drive cars with to much technology and eat too excessively !

  • @kellycal124
    @kellycal124 Рік тому

    I’m just glad there was no graffiti and/or signs that people live/stay there…trash, waste, etc…cause us humans can be a beastly bunch!
    Great video!

  • @TaraBrown-uz3fr
    @TaraBrown-uz3fr 9 місяців тому

    I am working on my genealogy and discovered I am a direct descendant of John Jackson Hannah, via his daughter Judie. Thank you for this video. I showed my mother and she was very moved. I’m just blown away my ancestors were early settlers of the Smoky Mountains. We are planning a trip, would very much like to visit the Hannah Cemetery as well, where John Jackson Hannah, his wife, and his daughter Judie, her husband, and many of their children are buried (according to my research). Thank you so much!

  • @margaretgarls153
    @margaretgarls153 Рік тому +6

    I think the floors are called puncheon floors. I hope they take better efforts to preserve it.

  • @juliehattis
    @juliehattis Рік тому +5

    They use to build them to last. Such an awesome sight to see. Must Have been really cool to live there.

  • @rikspector
    @rikspector Рік тому +2

    Robert,
    It's good to see an adventure away from the Cemeteries, for a change.
    Those boards are amazing, there is no lumber that big around the Smokies anymore,
    I'm surprised the place hasn't been restored and put on the State or National records.
    That could be cozy if it were restored, oh well, it is what it it:)
    Cheers,
    Rik

  • @sherimcdaniel3491
    @sherimcdaniel3491 Рік тому +1

    My great grandmother and her husband were married the day before and I have a photo of them together in front of their covered wagon. They got to Oregon and stayed about a year but then decided to continue to Washington and settled in Port Angeles, Washington. I have a photo of her standing in the middle of the 101 Highway. She was in no danger because the Highway was a 2-lane dirt road!
    My family built several of the homes up on Pine Hill. On the outskirts of PA, you’ll see Fey Rd off of the 101. My grandma’s sister Lorena and her husband Michael Fey built that road.
    Sorry to be so long-winded. I love family history!

  • @pumpupjam9648
    @pumpupjam9648 Рік тому +5

    If I was hiking out there, and the I came across this cabin, why I'd split some wood, and make me a fire, stay there over night and then move on my hike! Beautiful old home that still serves a purpose!

  • @namuhtsuj4025
    @namuhtsuj4025 Рік тому +5

    I’m distantly related to the Hannahs. One of my great great grandfather’s daughters (or my great aunt) married Mark Hannah, the first park ranger for GSMNP. His father built the Hannah Cabin. The history of Little and Big Cataloochee is very near and dear to me, so it’s wonderful to see people getting out and seeing things like this.

    • @C.Church
      @C.Church Рік тому +3

      I'm distantly related to the people run off that land so... yeah.

    • @namuhtsuj4025
      @namuhtsuj4025 Рік тому

      @@C.Church My grandfather’s maternal grandfather was Will Messer. US govt. bought his property for 30k, which even back then he believed to be highway robbery.

    • @namuhtsuj4025
      @namuhtsuj4025 Рік тому +1

      @@BlueRidgeParanormalEst what does this even mean? Physical proximity has literally no bearing on genealogical relation.

    • @namuhtsuj4025
      @namuhtsuj4025 Рік тому

      @@BlueRidgeParanormalEst ok

  • @user-randi1987
    @user-randi1987 Рік тому +2

    Really interesting. Thank you, Robert

  • @daveperryman291
    @daveperryman291 Рік тому +1

    Thanks Robert

  • @walterharp1773
    @walterharp1773 Рік тому +3

    The Roof is the best part of the house.

  • @PokrRat777
    @PokrRat777 Рік тому +4

    That's remarkable. Reminds of the cabin they built on the Townsends channel. Its so hard to imagine living that lifestyle.

    • @prarieborn6458
      @prarieborn6458 Рік тому +2

      i enjoy theTownsends channel, too. they made that life , lived around the fireplace, look quite cozy and delicious meals cooked on the hearth, reviving a lost skill.I think that a bed warming pan filled with coals would have been essential for survival in winter. IMO. once you get under the blankets you don’t want to get up or you will lose your warm spot. lol. My Dtr in law amazed us during a very cold campng trip..she found a big rock, wrapped it in foil and put it in the fire to heat then put it in her sleeping bag to keep her feet warm..

  • @markgreen4091
    @markgreen4091 7 місяців тому

    Best version of this song. Takes me back about 60 years to those mountains of North Georgia. Have y’all ever heard someone sing a song and say “I wish I could have met them “. This is that someone I would like to have met.

  • @janetposs597
    @janetposs597 Рік тому

    So enjoyed this video. My fathers family lived in up close to boogeyman trail, that cabin is gone now thank you for showing the Hannah home

  • @conniealmeida3373
    @conniealmeida3373 Рік тому +5

    A beautiful cabin. I hope the government preserves it because it would be so sad to let the eliminates destroy it

  • @bettylorch3796
    @bettylorch3796 Рік тому +5

    Good to have you back Robert and interesting to see you see you so bundled up, My question is how did they get all those bricks up there in that difficult terrain.

  • @Mountaincrazy
    @Mountaincrazy Рік тому +2

    Hey it’s amazing how some of these things still stand. Trying my hardest to keep this place up. First 1865, addition 1909! Many other structures. Doesn’t your mind feel better the moment you get there! Great video!

  • @robertmiller2830
    @robertmiller2830 Рік тому +2

    Very nice video

  • @xarker
    @xarker Рік тому +4

    There's more to this cabin than meets the eye. It's on Little Cataloochee, rather than the big valley, which was, itself, extremely remote before the Park Service bought it and moved out the residents, but Dude Hannah was directly connected to Nance Dude, a grandmother from nearby Jonathan Valley who did decades in prison for the crime of abandoning her granddaughter to die of exposure in a rocked-up little crevice on a small mountain overlooking US 19 on the way up to Maggie Valley. Full story in "The Legend of Nance Dude," by Maurice Stanley.

  • @johnelliott7375
    @johnelliott7375 Рік тому +3

    It is in pitiful shape and I am not surprised that they have let it go.

  • @mvtv-montanavigilantetv5976
    @mvtv-montanavigilantetv5976 Рік тому +1

    Nice. I regretted moving out from the Front Range and a very dense old mining district with years of exploration right out my door (Marysville Mining District) a near half-thousand miles SE to remote Powder River County. But a no-brainer as renting a renovated 1880s cabin w/foot thick log walls. Unworked for 60 years but (despite all personal items removed and "not much left") has the original barn, sheds and workshops up to the 70s packed with the same tools used to carve out this place. From 1890s hand seeders to horsedrawn plows and range of machinery abandoned in place. Add the old dumps and ohboy, making my own museum (nobody will see) in half the barn, recovering what I can and preserving it all. Am hack historian; used to work for state historical society and still trying to absorb it all. Chance to grow crops, too. Wonderful to see these old places still out there. PS: due to, I believe, a coal boom that never happened, an eastern energy company bought up a lot of local farms and touring these abandoned entire ranches is always humbling. Good job. Babble over.

  • @stellamaggard3669
    @stellamaggard3669 Рік тому +2

    How Awesome!!! Love it🥰🥰🥰

  • @johnelliott7375
    @johnelliott7375 Рік тому +3

    That is the way it was, no luxury back then.

  • @peggyscott66
    @peggyscott66 Рік тому +9

    When you first showed the cabin, I thought it was livable. So amazingly well kept. I hope they fix the roof. And hey, Robert, when you look through some Foxfire books, there is info on cabin building, if memory serves me, and some people did chink on the outside. So its possible it had some at one time. Loved this video!

    • @robertbates6057
      @robertbates6057 Рік тому

      Yeah, it would have had some kind of chinking. It gets cold in the Smokies / Blue Ridge. Years ago (40), I dated a girl who worked on one of the Foxfire books at Nacoochee School / Rabun Gap in the early 70s.

  • @nneichan9353
    @nneichan9353 Рік тому +4

    definitely looks like it might be possible to put a foot through some of the floorboards, or decking boards. I had my fingers crossed that you'd make it back downstairs in one piece.

  • @troymassey71
    @troymassey71 Рік тому +2

    Nice old cabin! Would be a nice painting in the landscape

  • @daureenesmith579
    @daureenesmith579 Рік тому +1

    Just beautiful! The stories that old house could tell! Can't beat the beauty of The Great Smokey Mountains. ❤️

  • @diannagray5711
    @diannagray5711 Рік тому +3

    VERY INTERESTING. IT IS TRULY AMAZING THAT FAMILY'S LIVED IN SUCH A HOME.

    • @hendo338
      @hendo338 Рік тому

      Usually large families at that.

  • @carolb29
    @carolb29 Рік тому +4

    awesome little cabin! Did I see wooden crosses when you peeked thru the slat?

  • @MsgtMelton
    @MsgtMelton Рік тому +1

    I grew up in rural Tennessee and we would sometimes visit and stay the night at my great grandmothers home on Short Mountain TN. It looked very similar to this home and I hated spending the night there. No indoor plumbing, not even an outhouse (just find a spot and squat), even in the middle of a blizzard! Had to haul drinking water from stream not too far away. My great gran never had electricity and lived alone as long as I knew her. She also dipped snuff which is suppose to be unhealthy so that may what killed her at the age of 101.

  • @CGH250
    @CGH250 Рік тому

    My grandmother had a large farm with a 2 story farmhouse built by my g-g-grandfather in the early 1800s. I loved it so much! Completely heated by fireplaces, wood stoves and cooking on a wood kitchen stove! I would love to go back in time! Some of my best childhood memories were made on that farm. I’m in NC. ❤️

  • @michellemhessman4364
    @michellemhessman4364 Рік тому +3

    Really cool robert

  • @sherrilee230
    @sherrilee230 Рік тому +3

    There our boy. My late husband's great grandfather came from shooting creek n.c. And farmed the land. He died in 1880 and the son in law took the land over along with 3 of the children. Life was hard

  • @vickisawyer7405
    @vickisawyer7405 Рік тому +2

    That old cabin reminded me of some the cabins we would find backpacking in the Cascades. The first time I saw one I thought why pitch a tent, lets sleep in there. But all the critters in the woods had the same idea. Pitched a tent everafter. My little house from the 60's was built with giant, crooked wood beams. cinderblocks and 4x4's holding up the porch. It's not that old but it is rustic. I wish I had a fireplace though instead of a wood stove that doesn't work...but still better than a house in the city!

  • @oldjarhead1125
    @oldjarhead1125 Рік тому +1

    Nice video. thanks for posting. Been to this cabin many times. FYI, this is in Little Cataloochee. I'm sure you walked up further to the Little Cataloochee Church and maybe a little further up the trail to the restored Dan Cook cabin/house & then over Nolan Gap & down to Big Cataloochee via the group horse camp area. My wife's family lived up there on Woody Branch when their land was condemned & purchased for the Park. Many relatives buried at the cemetery next to the Little Cataloochee Church, just look for the Woody's head stones.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  Рік тому +1

      No, unfortunately I didn’t have time to walk any further. I also wanted to see the Hannah Cemetery which was up a different trail, but I didn’t have the time for that one either…

    • @oldjarhead1125
      @oldjarhead1125 Рік тому

      @@AdventuresIntoHistory I have a map of all the home site in both Big & Little Cataloochee if you're interested

  • @chicochi3
    @chicochi3 Рік тому +4

    Great cabin.

  • @johnelliott7375
    @johnelliott7375 Рік тому +3

    That is what it needs and a marker for it would be nice. Is it in the national forest.

  • @alanatolstad4824
    @alanatolstad4824 Рік тому +3

    Any chance there was a lean-to on the back, accounting for the lack of chinking & presence of that row of post holes across the top?---Knowing nothing about the Great Smoky Mountains except a name in the history books, this trip is invaluable. So glad you were there.

  • @southernappalachianrecon
    @southernappalachianrecon 6 місяців тому +1

    I absolutely love these old settler cabins that are still hanging on out in the National Forests. They are such an incredible window into the rustic soul of old Appalachia. We have to document these places while we still can because they will not last forever 💯👍

  • @shellydehart8217
    @shellydehart8217 Рік тому +2

    This old wooden cabin is AWESOME. I really liked looking at the front of it. To see how it was made to level with the ground. You can see the large opening at one end n amazingly those stacked rocks being level with the other end. It’s also amazing that it’s still standing. Think of the many winters it’s been through. I fell in love with this cabin n wish all the logs could talk. To tell the history of those who lived there. Your so right to think even when first built it still would of been cold inside. A bit curious as how tall the ceiling was on the first floor. I could go on n on about this awesome wooden cabin as I’m so fascinated by it but I won’t bore you with all my crazy thoughts n questions. Thanks Robert for sharing this to all of us. By the way. Since your in N.C. did you happen to go see Aaron? I’m just happy you got away on a mini vacation before Christmas.
    Have a Merry Christmas Robert with your family n friends.
    This cabin deserves lots of gold 🌟’s.
    ♥️😊👍👍🌟🎄

  • @garrettwilliams922
    @garrettwilliams922 Рік тому +4

    Georgia boy here in the smokies. Pre COVID hiking guide. Huge fan, come check out the wears valley side of the park! We have unknown confederate graves, tales of lost treasure and more! Thanks for the great videos!

  • @yarnhappykim9294
    @yarnhappykim9294 Рік тому +4

    Wow I hope the park service does take care of it, amazing and the history, Aaron showed that place from the outside when he was on his healing walk

    • @kellycal124
      @kellycal124 Рік тому +1

      I believe Aaron showed us the cabin left standing at Lost Cove

  • @kevinblair191
    @kevinblair191 Рік тому

    This reminds me when I was a young boy, my Dad took me to an old 1800's cabin that was near our home. This video took me back there. Thanks!

  • @leannesmith3480
    @leannesmith3480 Рік тому

    Wonderful history, thanks for sharing. Makes you appreciate what you have

  • @firemanfireman7228
    @firemanfireman7228 Рік тому +5

    Old cabin's are nice to see especially when they are in the woods
    Fireman 🔥🔥🔥

    • @chilltime4878
      @chilltime4878 Рік тому +1

      Dude, are you a fireman?

    • @firemanfireman7228
      @firemanfireman7228 Рік тому +1

      @@chilltime4878 No I'm not it's just a name for zelo an other app I'm on

  • @cowgirlvillarreal
    @cowgirlvillarreal Рік тому +4

    Robert you make my day just seeing you ❤️

  • @mls617983
    @mls617983 Рік тому

    That is so cool. To be 158 years old I think the cabin is in great condition.
    I bet it was cold in the winter and pretty hot in the summer. They may have hung quilts or other fabric over the windows and/or any gaps it the boards. I wish the National Park Service would do a better job keeping it up. The old washtub could possibly be somewhat restored.
    When the cabin was first built I’m sure it was very nice and the family was proud of it. Really it was all the room they needed. Sleeping upstairs and living downstairs. Whenever the glass windows and wooden floors were put in they would’ve been considered a step up for many people. A lot of cabins from that time period on up to more modern times had dirt floors and wooden shutters on the windows.
    Thank you for sharing this important piece of American history.

  • @cumberlandquiltchic1
    @cumberlandquiltchic1 Рік тому +2

    Benign neglect. Nps loves it! I lived within a national park until 11 years ago. I’ve seen many a good building fall in due to no roof being replaced. Fastest and most effective way.

    • @cumberlandquiltchic1
      @cumberlandquiltchic1 Рік тому +1

      You’ve got a lazy hiker hat on! I live about a mile from there !
      Theres an old cemetery next to my house up the mountain that a friend discovered and not many people know about. The gravestones have very primitive, if any writing on them. Id love to show ya I’d you get back this way.