I Explored An Abandoned Resort Town In The Great Smoky Mountains Where Wealthy City Dwellers Vacationed 100 Years Ago. Take A Look Around.

In Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Business Insider's reporter explored a 1900s resort town full of historic cabins that were abandoned by the end of the century. After restoration by the National Parks Service, 16 cabins are now open to the public.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
- There's a resort town in Great Smoky Mountains National Park that was abandoned in the late 1900s.
- The National Parks 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 insides of cabins built more than 100 years ago.
Hidden in the lush woods of 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 the cabins preserved and restored by the National Parks 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 was actually able to step inside them for a more intimate look at what life was like 100 years ago.
Google Maps
I traveled to the town by taxi. Drivers can take the US-411 from Gatlinburg and turn at the "Elkmont Campground" sign, according to Visit My Smokies, a tourism site run by Sevier County. From there, take a left at the sign that says "Elkmont Nature Trail."
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
According to the site's historical markers, the land was used for farming in the 1800s. Then a railroad was built in the 20th century, bringing loggers and tourists to the area. This led to the establishment of a resort town.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
Families spent their summers relaxing on the porches of their vacation cabins and playing outdoors, one NPS marker said.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
Residents had the option of selling their cabins for full price or at half-price with a lifetime lease, according to Visit My Smokies.
ehrlif/Getty Images
In 1992, the NPS stopped renewing leases and the abandoned cabins deteriorated.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
Volunteers removed trees, repaired roofs and ceilings, and added insulation to the cabins, Knox News reported.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
There are 16 of them, 10 News reported.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
The one-story building stood out to me because I thought it looked older than the rest with a distressed, wooden facade that remained unpainted.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
I thought the weathered, empty home felt eerie.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
But I thought details like built-in kitchen counters and cabinets gave them a sense of a past life.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
I pictured waking up to natural views with no agenda. I thought it seemed like the ideal getaway for city dwellers like me.
Joey Hadden/Business Insider
I left Elkmont with a sense of what the once-abandoned resort community was like and felt grateful for the preservation crew that made it possible for me to visit.