Joey Hadden/Business Insider
- There's a resort town in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park that was abandoned in the late 1900s.
- The National Park Service began restoring the ghost town in 2009, and now it's open to the public.
- I visited the town, called Elkmont, and toured the interiors of cabins built over 100 years ago.
Hidden in the lush woods of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, a once-abandoned resort town known as Elkmont is full of 100-year-old cabins.
I visited in the spring of 2023 and was amazed to find that the cabins preserved and restored by the National Park Service were open for public viewing.
When I made plans to visit the historic district, I expected to wander outside cabins and see their facades, so I was excited to find I could step inside them for a more intimate look at what life was like 100 years ago.
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