Cabin mountain 

362 creative works found

  • This is John Oliver’s Cabin located in Cades Cove in the Great Smoky Mountains. This early morning I lucked up and had alittle fog and snow on the side of the mountains.

  • one of the barns off the roaring fort auto trail, that belonged to the ogle family, you can get to this auto trail thru gatlinburg, tn, and it leads up into the great smoky mountains

  • A Cabin in the Smokey Mountains. An American dream.

  • Beautiful view on Cades Cove Loop in the Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee. I love this old barn with the red roof. Other works in the Cades Cove Collection: Please enjoy these other images:

  • Morning sun filters through the trees at John Olivers Cabin with a few dogwoods in the background…The cabin is almost completly surrounded by split-rail fence also…...The Oliver’s bought land in the Cove in 1826 and this cabin site remained in the family until the Park was established. The house is typical of many found on the eastern frontier in the mid-1850s, and reflects the skills and techniques brought into the mountains by descendants of British and European immigrants. This cabin is located on the Cades Cove Loop Road, in the Great Smoky Mountain N.P.

  • The Tipton-Oliver Place – Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountain National Park USA “The Tipton Place” has been featured by the group “Smoky Mountain Masterpieces” 7/08. This grand old cabin belonged to Johnathan Wade Hampton Tipton. Colonel “Hamp” had a carpenter build this home after the Cival War. Hamp was a veteran of the revolutionary war. The land came from Tennessee Land Grants in 1821 aquired by his grandfather, William Tipton, better known as “Fighting Billy” for his heroism in the Revolutionary War. President Andrew Jackson was his friend and said that if he had a company of Tiptons, he could “lick the whole British Army”. Although Hamp never lived in the house, his two daughters did. Miss Lucy and Miss Lizzie were schoolmarms in the cove in the late 1870’s. The homestead eventually included a smokehouse, a woodshed, corn crib, blacksmith shop, cantilever barn, and an apiary for bees. William Tipton owned a great deal of the cove by 1836. He deeded much of the land to friends and family, including John Oliver and Peter Cable. The three of them established the Primitive Baptist Church. The home went on to be owned by Jim McCauley in 1879, and then by John Oliver’s grandson William Howell Oliver in 1887. William served as an ordained minister of the Primitive Baptist Church from 1882 until the time of his death in 1940. His family lived in the home until the land was aquired for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Other works in the Cade’s Cove Collection: Companion Piece

  • There have been multiple sales of this image. BYGONE ERA IMAGE COLLECTION Inside a cabin in the Pioneer Community out the back door of the Dickinson County Heritage Center in Abilene, Kansas. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Please don’t copy or download this image. My photos may NOT be reproduced and/or used in any form without my written permission. If you want this photograph, I would be honored for you to purchase it. ©2008-2009 Patricia Montgomery | Bucks Mountain Galleries All rights reserved.

  • An old cabin by the Lofoten mountains captured in spring. Thank you for stopping by for a wee look and for whatever feedback you may wish to leave. :-) / Andreas Stridsberg / www.mystic-pic.com

  • ......

  • Nipika Eco-Resort in the beautiful Canadian Rocky Mountains in British Columbia. Featured in Canada group, Nov. 21, 2009. / Featured in Canadian Rocky Mountains group. / /

  • 7215 I tell ya, I wish I could honestly buy this place if it ever comes up for sale! Captured outside of Estes Park, Colorado, during my Autumn photoshoot, Longs Peak made for an incredible backdrop to the colorful Aspen and this old wooden cabin. Shot in very early morning light, the whole scene just seemed to glow…I had to stop and get quite a few shots off, as it just really caught my attention and seemed to echo the meaning of the words ‘relaxation’ quite well. / Hope ya all like it! / —-John Minolta 5D / Minolta 18-200 DT Lens / SIngh-Ray CPL / f8-iso 100- 24mm

  • Thanks for stopping by! :-) / Andreas Stridsberg © My website -> www.mystic-pic.com / My Blog -> www.mystic-pic.com/apps/blog

  • Thanks for stopping by! :-) / Andreas Stridsberg © My website -> www.mystic-pic.com / My Blog -> www.mystic-pic.com/apps/blog

  • this cabin is John Oliver’s place, just one of few buildings still standing from the over 700 homesites in Cades Cove, Smoky Mountain National Park, TN

  • Thanks for stopping by! :-) / Andreas Stridsberg © My website -> www.mystic-pic.com / My Blog -> www.mystic-pic.com/apps/blog

  • This image was the Monochrome challenge winner in the West Virginia group challenge on March 16, 2009. On March 16, 2009 this image was featured in the West Virginia group. On July 12, 2009 this image was featured in The Heartland group. The Brinegar Cabin at Milepost 258 on the Blue Ridge Parkway in West Virginia. The Brinegar Cabin is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. This cabin was originally settled by Martin Brinegar in 1885. His wife, Caroline, brought along her mother’s four-poster weaving loom, which is still located on the site. The Brinegars occupied the cabin until 1935 when the land was purchased for construction of the Blue Ridge Parkway. The cabin was preserved, along with Mrs. Brinegar’s 100+ year old loom which is used for craft and weaving demonstrations during the summer months. Guided nature walks and discussions, led by park rangers, are also available. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Please don’t copy or download this image. My photos may NOT be reproduced and/or used in any form without my written permission. If you want this photograph, I would be honored for you to purchase it.

  • This is Kananaskis country…........this is where I ride…......... March 20, 2009 THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOUR VIEWS MY FRIENDS! xo

  • As a kid living on a farm located a short drive from Knoxville, Tennessee, I enjoyed my special getaway places. These places were select areas I visited when I desired some quiet and solitude. My acrylic painting, Seasoned, was created to be my imaginative special getaway place. I can visit here any time. / Specs: 24”x36” canvas, acrylic painting. 144 views as of 11.11.09

  • The Addicted Photographer our son Kevin caught in the act / taken at 5500-6000 ft in West Central Alberta / Grande Cache / with Olympus E510 14-42 / p mode ae brkt auto expo

  • 16” x 20” Box Canvas.Oils.(Bob-Ross-Technique) / I am uploading all of my pictures in the next few days so please bear with me and I hope you don’t get bored.!

  • A beauty resting on a Historic Cabin. / Great Smoky National Forest. / Eastern Tennessee. / Nikon D300, Nikkor VR 18-200 lens. / Handheld. / PLEASE NOTE: All images copyrighted to © JKKimball (All Rights Reserved – Worldwide). No image (in whole or in part) is to be reproduced, downloaded, copied, duplicated, modified, sampled, redistributed or archived without the written authorization of JKKimball /

  • Reflections in Elk Lake, include Broken Top an extinct volcano, part of the Cascade Ranges.

  • Taken in Hope Valley near Carson Pass in the Sierra Nevadas.

  • Featured in A View Somewhere – Oct 18th, 2009 / Featured in ImageWriting – Oct 12th, 2009 / Featured in Americas ~ Rural, Urban, Wild, Free – Oct 12th, 2009 / Featured JPG Cast-Offs – Oct 11th, 2009 When I went to Grand Tetons I had a few places in mind that I just had to photograph. Moulton barn on Mormon Row was one of them. I stopped by the barn a couple of times, took some shots and my many visits finally paid off when I saw a buffalo herd grazing peacefully very close to the barn. I waited a little bit for them to come close enough so I could take some shots with them and the barn. / This beautiful, old homestead brings memories of the past but a wild buffalo roaming free makes it even more special. Taken in Grand Tetons National Park, Wyoming, USA Canon XSi with 18-55mm lens, f/6.3, 1/400sec, ISO-200, 25mm.

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 331,900 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Cabin Mountain T-Shirts

Cabin Mountain Wall Art

Cabin Mountain Journal Entries

Cabin Mountain Writing

Cabin Mountain Calendars