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I would agree that this was the second state park in Tennessee open to black people (after Booker T. Washington State Park near Chattanooga), but this assertion seems something of a stretch. I don't think that many state parks in the North ever had segregationist policies specifically aimed at excluding black people as segregation in the North, where it existed, was generally more de facto than de jure as it was in the South. 2600:1004:B11C:F56F:7424:958C:26AA:14BB (talk) 04:05, 19 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]