Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Little Greenbrier School

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Nearest city
  
Gatlinburg, Tennessee

Area
  
3,642 m²

Added to NRHP
  
11 January 1976

NRHP Reference #
  
76000168

Year built
  
1882

Little Greenbrier School

Location
  
2 mi south of Wears Valley in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Address
  
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Metcalf Bottoms Trail, Gatlinburg, TN 37738, USA

Similar
  
Great Smoky Mountains, Walker Sisters Place, Greenbrier Picnic Area, Meigs Falls, Baskins Creek Falls

Abandoned little greenbrier school taking a step into the late 1800s


The Little Greenbrier School is a former schoolhouse and church in the ghost town of Little Greenbrier in Sevier County, Tennessee, United States. Located near Gatlinburg in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, it was built in 1882, and was used as a school and church almost continuously until 1936. When the residents of Little Greenbrier asked Sevier County to provide it with a teacher, the county replied that if the community would build a proper schoolhouse, the county would pay the teacher's salary. The land on which the school was built was donated by Gilbert Abbott, and the logs were provided by Ephraim Ogle and hauled to the site by oxen teams. Dozens of Little Greenbrier residents, among the John Walker, father of the Walker Sisters, gathered on an agreed-upon day in January 1882 and raised the schoolhouse.

Contents

Classes were first held at the Little Greenbrier School in Fall 1882. Richard Perryman was the first of 39 teachers who would teach at the school until its closure in 1936. Students throughout the Little River Valley attended the school, some making a 9-mile (14 km) daily journey from the Meigs Mountain community. The school was also used for church services by a local Primitive Baptist congregation, which established the cemetery on the other side of the road.

The schoolhouse, located near what was once the center of the Little Greenbrier community, is one story with an attic, and measures approximately 20 feet (6.1 m) by 30 feet (9.1 m). The walls are built of hewn yellow poplar logs resting on a stone foundation. The interior consists of a sawn oak board floor and a sawn chestnut ceiling, and was accessed by a white pine door on iron hinges. The school's gabled roof is covered with rived oak shingles. The chimney, located in the center of the building, was built of bricks, and fitted with an iron pipe and cook stove.

View from overlook on little greenbrier trail into wears valley


References

Little Greenbrier School Wikipedia