(Photo from the Cloudland Trail Overlook on Roan Mountain by "Roland Jenkins")
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Letters from the Alleghany Mountains By Charles Lanman
(Photo from the Cloudland Trail Overlook on Roan Mountain by "Roland Jenkins")
History of the Term "Carpetbagger"
An excerpt from page 146 of the book:
For more information on the term see the Wikipedia entry for "carpetbagger"....Governor Brownlow was disabled from speaking by the partial loss of voice. It therefore fell to the lot of his Secretary of State, Fletcher, to defend the administration, in shaping the policy of which he had had much influence. He made but a single speech: that was sufficient.
The speech of Mr. Fletcher created a sensation throughout the State. I read it on its first appearance, and have recently reread it. The second reading has confirmed my first opinion— that it is a complete and masterly vindication of the State Government under Governor Brownlow, as the conditions then existed. It was bold in utterance, perspicuous in statement, skillful in argument, thorough in detail, caustic in condemnation, and withal, even-tempered, as of one who spoke from a consciousness of right, fortified by an irrefutable array of facts. It is the best defense of Brownlow's administration ever made, and the only one needed. The flood of misstatement and falsehood which was pouring in rapid currents over the State was dissipated by the clear and lucid statement of facts taken from the records.
Mr. Fletcher was one of the first, if not the very first, in the State to denounce the hordes of greedy office-seekers who came from the North in the rear of the army in the closing days of the War. He was ready to welcome the genuine settler,sbut for the adventurer who came to prey on the people of the South he had an undisguised contempt and hatred. In, a speech in Nashville he had the boldness to use an expression that has since become national, in reference to this class of men. He said:
"No one more gladly welcomes the Northern man who comes in all sincerity to make a home here, and to become one of our people, than I, but for the adventurer and the office-seeker who comes among us with one dirty shirt and a pair of dirty socks, in an old rusty carpet bag, and before his washing is done becomes a candidate for office, I have no welcome."This was the origin of the term "carpet bag," and out of it grew the well known term "carpet-bag government."
Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture
Friday, February 27, 2009
The Savage by Piomingo (John Robinson)
It was during this time, while in Philadelphia, that Robinson wrote The Savage, which was published in 1810. The work was described in 1873 as "A book of ethical essays, the author of which attempted a series of papers illustrative of American character after the manner of the celebrated British essayists".
A letter published in The American Historical Record in 1874 provides the background on John Robinson's life. The letter begins on page 466.
Monday, February 23, 2009
Four Years in Secessia by Junius Henri Browne
Geneaological Records at Ancestry.com
Death Certificate Abstracts
Carter County Tennessee Death Record Abstracts 1926-1934
Unicoi County Tennessee Death Record Abstracts 1908-1936
Abstracts of Death Records for Johnson County Tennessee 1908-1941
Microfilmed images of the original death certificates can be found at the Tennessee State Library and Archives.
Lost Heritage: The People of Old Butler, Tennessee and the Watauga Valley
In 1998, The Overmountain Press published Lost Heritage, written by Russ Calhoun, which documented the TVA records that were made prior to the construction of the Watauga Dam. The records included interviews with residents living in the area. This book is especially useful for those who are searching for geneaological information. The book is available on Google Books on a limited-preview basis, meaning not all pages are available for viewing. Check online book retailers or your local library for the full version.
(Photo of Watauga Lake by "Roland Jenkins")
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Elements of Useful Knowledge Vol II. by Noah Webster
Knoxville Car Wheel Company - Iron Ore Mine on Stoney Creek
Standard History of Knoxville by William Rule, George Frederick Mellen, John Wooldridge. Published in 1900. See page 198.
Journal of the United States Association of Charcoal Iron Workers. Published in 1886. See page 223.
Iron and Coal of Tennessee by Joseph Killebrew. Published in 1881. See discussion of Carter County beginning on page 9.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Life Pictures by Robert Love Taylor
The Wikipedia entry for Robert Love Taylor can be found here.