TENNESSEE
Municipal Camp Sites
| Town or City | Charge or Free | Toilet | Drinking Water | Fireplace or Stove | Lights | Bath or Shower |
| Camden | F | Y | Y | |||
| Chattanooga—1 | Y | Y | ||||
| Chattanooga—2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Columbia | ||||||
| Gallatin | F | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Greenville | F | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Jacksboro | F | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Jellico | F | Y | Y | |||
| McEwen | F | |||||
| McKenzie | F | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Monterey | F | Y | Y | |||
| Pulaski | ||||||
| Smithville | F | Y | Y | |||
| Tullahoma | F | Y | Y |
Among the lands acquired by the Government in 1918 were tracts in the State of Tennessee which have been formed into the Cherokee National Forest (83,875 acres) and the Unaka National Forest (11,854 acres). Information as to camping sites and roads leading thereto may be had by writing the supervisors of these forests, for the former at Athens, Ga., and for the latter at Johnson City, Tenn. [[292]]