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Logging in the Smokies, Christmas Card

During the late 1800s, the most accessible trees in the Smoky Mountains, such as the ultra-valuable Cherry, Ash, Walnut, Hickory, and the giant Yellow-Poplar, or "Tulip Tree" were logged. Buckeye, Linden, Spruce, Hemlock, Pine, etc., were also harvested. The people who lived there did the logging and sawmilling; family enterprises. Then, adding to the economy of the area came the logging companies (i.e. The Little River Lumber Co., W.M. Ritter Lumber Co., Montvale Lumber Co., Norwood Lumber Co., Champion Coated Paper Co., and others), who were part of the lifestream of the Great Smoky Mountains. Logging reached its peak in about 1909.
Bulls, horses, and mules were used for transporting logs to the mills. Some splash dams were also used in those days. Little River Lumber Co., perhaps the most elaborate logging operation in the Smokies, used the chute (such as the one shown in this painting) to take logs to the mill.
Cherry was the most valuable wood. However, the most profitable of all saw timber was the Yellow-Poplar, that tall (80- to 150-ft.), straight, c1ear-trunked tree that attained diameters of 4- to 6-ft.
Logging in the Smokies came to a halt on March 30, 1931, when Champion Fibre Company, under hard-fought conditions, agreed to sell 90,000 acres of prime timberland to the federal government. On September 2, 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, a part of Tennessee and North Carolina.

Logging in the Smokies, Christmas Card
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Christmas Cards Pricing:

25 cards
$50
50 cards
$87
75 cards
$129
100 cards
$171
150 cards
$201
200 cards
$224
250 cards
$270
300 cards
$315
400 cards
$384
500 cards
$445
600 cards
$498
700 cards
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800 cards
$560
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over 1000 cards
$.62/ea

Available Qty: 10000
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For orders of less than 100, the following standard pre-printed sentiment will appear:
"Times change but not Friendship. May you experience Happiness, Peace, Joy and Prosperity in the coming year."



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