Shorty Lovelace Historic District
The Shorty Lovelace Historic District includes a series of cabins built in Kings Canyon National Park by trapper Joseph Walter "Shorty" Lovelace between 1910 and 1940. Lovelace was the first non-Native American to live year-round in the upper Kings River Canyon.[2] Lovelace may have built as many as thirty-six structures in the area, with possibly a dozen surviving. Lovelace built his first cabins in 1912 at Crowley Canyon. The cabins were typically five feet by seven feet with dirt floors.[3]
Shorty Lovelace Historic District  | |
![]() Cabin at Woods Creek, 1967  | |
![]() ![]()  | |
| Nearest city | Pinehurst, California | 
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 36°44′26″N 118°31′3″W | 
| Built | 1910 | 
| Architect | Shorty Lovelace | 
| NRHP reference No. | 78000293 | 
| Added to NRHP | January 31, 1978[1] | 
Structures include:
- Williams (Quartz) Meadow Cabin
 - Sphinx Creek Cabin
 - Crowley Canyon Cabin
 - Granite Pass Cabin
 - Vidette Meadow Cabin
 - Gardiner Creek Cabin
 - Woods Creek Cabin
 - Cloud Canyon Cabin
 - Lower Bubbs Creek
 
References
    
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
 - "Granite Pass Shorty Lovelace Cabin". List of Classified Structures. National Park Service. December 9, 2008.
 -  William Tweed (1977). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Shorty Lovelace Historic District" (pdf). National Park Service. 
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External links
    
 Media related to Shorty Lovelace Historic District at Wikimedia Commons
- Photographs of Shorty Lovelace's cabins at the National Park Service's NRHP database
 
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