Showing posts with label Fall Homecoming Museum of Appalachia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fall Homecoming Museum of Appalachia. Show all posts

Friday, October 7, 2011

Day Two Hundred Eighty 2011

MUSEUM OF APPALACHIA FALL HOMECOMING  NORRIS, TENNESSEE
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Beautiful weather for day tripping to the mountains of East Tennessee to the Museum of Appalachia Fall Homecoming in Norris. Some of the trees are starting to show their true colors.
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This man makes reproductions of Henry Ford’s first gasoline engine and sells them worldwide. He gave us a demonstration and said he’d answer any questions. I had no clue what to ask, but hubby Neil did.
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We were looking around for John Boy Walton because it looks like he left the family Ford Model T parked here. Nothing fancy but it got you to where you wanted to go.
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A heart-shaped basket of cotton.
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We caught a glimpse of President Abraham Lincoln in his long coat and top hat striding toward the museum, passing all those Harley's parked there. I was hoping to meet up with him again so I could get a closer picture, but this is the last I saw of him today.
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One of the gigantic haystacks on the property reaching up toward that awesome blue October sky. Felt like Summer, though. Hot!
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Pretty good sized crowd there but we thought it was way down from last year. Economy related perhaps.
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Rawwrr! He was a fearsome black bear in a former life. Now he’s just a bear skin rug and the topic of a book somebody wrote, hoping to sell here. He smiled for my camera.
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Bluegrass, country and gospel music is probably the biggest draw to this annual event. Music lovers bring their chairs and camp out in front of the stages all day, tapping their toes to the thump of the bass fiddles.
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Neil and I enjoyed yummy pork BBQ sandwiches with sides of baked beans and potato salad for lunch. The food here is pretty tasty and they have most anything you might hunger for.
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I’m always drawn to the handcrafted wooden bowls but never buy one.
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This man displayed apples he’d grown from heirloom seeds. I didn’t know there were so many different kinds. Most I’d never heard of.
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This is a bubbling cauldron of lye soap in the making. Definitely not for sensitive skin. And it stinks.
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We always say hi to the mules and pet them. He was on a break. His job is to walk in an endless circle as the grist mill he’s attached to grinds sugar cane into pulp to make sorghum.
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Someone was selling honey and bees wax products that these busy little bees were in the process of producing. They never seem to rest.
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I don’t know if this was a Peacock or a Peahen—most likely the female. Beautiful blue feathers.
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This turkey—Tom or Hen, I’m not sure—apparently did not like sharing its space with the pretty Peacock/Hen—kept chasing it around the pen.
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These huge wagon wheels are everywhere at the museum. There is a wheelwright shop there from horse and buggy/wagon days that shows how these were made. It’s pretty cool.
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A little forgery going on here—I mean, forging. He always has these beautiful wrought iron pieces on display and for sell of course. This is a hot job on a hot day.
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Brooms. Can’t have too many. The broom maker had some nice ones but I didn’t buy any.
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I was pleasantly surprised to turn around and find Santa Claus standing there. I teased him that he was a little out of season right now. He said he always comes to this event, although how I missed him in the past I’ll never know. He drives down from Kentucky and hands out candy canes to the kids and spreads joy I’m sure. He made me feel joyful on this hot day. That snowy white beard is the real deal. What a cool guy!
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A rare quiet moment on an empty path—but the party is just around the bend.
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Chair caning is an art and a craft, something I’d love to learn how to do someday. Much patience is required, however.
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Neil checks out the Mark Twain family cabin. It actually belonged to Samuel Clemens family and was moved here from somewhere around Livingston, Tennessee.
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Gratuitous self portrait in the wavy distorted glass of an old mirror in the Mark Twain cabin.
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The Mark Twain cabin has a cozy fireplace and a table I’d love to have for big family get togethers at my own house. The resourcefulness of this generation of Americans always amazes me. One word: survival.
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Neil poses by the world’s largest “little brown jug”. It holds 750 gallons and was manufactured somewhere in New York.
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I always love taking pictures of these road signs. The man who made them wanted to put them on the moon and each planet. He had the message right but was a bit of a kook it seems.
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The funnel cake was tasty but really crispy. We were kicking ourselves for not getting the cobbler. And some homemade ice cream.
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Greetings from the Museum of Appalachia fall homecoming—Neil and moi, self portrait.
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Modern day outhouses. They were pretty clean actually. And this year, there was a long galvanized sink set up with running water and soap and paper towels so we could wash our hands. That was really nice.
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The little log  cabin school house is a far cry from today’s air conditioned and brightly lit classrooms. You can see one of the outhouses to the right—it was for boys. The other one of course was for the girls.
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Neil and I sat on the stone wall on the hill under the shade trees away from the crowd. This was our view. What a gorgeous day.
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This is such a beautiful place. We always enjoy the homecoming. I highly recommend attending—it is usually the first weekend every October. Here is a link to their website:  http://www.museumofappalachia.org/
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It was bumper to bumper traffic coming into Knoxville. I'm glad we were heading in the opposite direction. Big game here Saturday. Go Vols! Beat those Dawgs!!

Friday, October 8, 2010

Day Two Hundred Eighty One 2010

Fall Homecoming At The Museum Of Appalachia In Norris, Tennessee

Neil and I did a little day tripping today over past Knoxville to Norris, Tennessee, where the Museum of Appalachia is having its Fall Homecoming, an annual event that Neil and I have attended off and on for twenty years or more. We enjoy it very much each time we go, because we get to spend a day in October roaming around this fascinating reincarnation of a frontier/pioneer village. There is a festival atmosphere with bluegrass and country bands providing background music to great food, old time crafts and demonstrations of how our great great (great!) grandparents lived. There are no reproductions here. Mr. John Rice Irwin and his family spent years collecting these pieces of history from the 1700's and 1800's and displaying them in a way that makes you feel like you are walking around in those days when life was certainly a day to day struggle and everything was made by hand.

Neil and I always gravitate towards the pottery. Mr. Akin is from Franklin, Tennessee, and demonstrates his craft.

We bought a couple of his bowls (with handle) that will be great to use for soup and chili.

This hide was cool but kind of gross. It still had bits and pieces of animal innards on it. This craftsman had all sorts of pelts and such to sell.

Back in the day, mules were put to work turning the press that squeezed the syrup out of the sugar cane you can see piled up by the press. Sometimes he'd have a piece of cane in his mouth. A treat, I guess, for his hard work.

He's a hard working guy but I think he shared his duty with another mule during the course of the day.

I think they were making sorghum from the sugar cane.

I like hand made wooden bowls, and there were some beauties here.

Lunch! Pork BBQ sandwich, potato salad and baked beans. There is so much food to choose from. You could eat all day and not eat the same thing twice. This was so yummy.

Besides the crafts, music is the center piece at this event. This band was really good. They sang a song lamenting how many times must I cross the Caney Fork River to get to her....or some such. Kathy Mattea is singing here Saturday. Would like to have heard her.

The smithy forges some way cool and useful iron tools. Hot stuff.

I imagine an actual bed to lay your head down in after a long day growing your own food would have been a luxury back in those times. The cabins these folks lived in were usually just one room, maybe two if they were industrious or had tons of kids. Cozy.

There are usually Civil War reenactment soldiers here at this event which is always interesting and we always learn something new--like the process the soldiers on the battlefield went through just to fire off one shot of a canon. But it was accurate up to a thousand yards. Not too shabby.

The simple life. It seems so to us until you start thinking of the challenges they endured just to stay alive. I might be able to spend a weekend getaway in a little cabin like this--but I'd probably never survive the winter.

This is Daniel Boone's actual cabin. It was used to film the TV series back in the sixties. (Remember Fess Parker? No? Remember Daniel Boone?) When I was in high school, my best friend told me that her mother had a friend who thought we all had dirt floors here in the South. Big surprise for that lady when she finally came to visit. I think she may have watched too much Daniel Boone.

Dessert! The best funnel cake. Ever.

We're having more fun than human beings should be allowed to have.

This sign was on an old bank safe. I'll bet they never had a break in.
A general store recreation.

Roadside signs erected by H. Harrison Mayes as a promise to God for sparing his life when he was crushed in a coal mining accident.

Abraham Lincoln made an appearance this afternoon. I don't know who was playing the part, but he's a dead ringer for Honest Abe.

Someone had stopped Mr. Lincoln and asked to take his picture. While she was taking hers, I took this one (cell phone camera --it's all I had with me today). I like the way it turned out in silhouette against extremely bright sunlight. We really enjoyed the museum's fall homecoming today. Anyone who has any interest in history should visit this place. It's well worth the trip. Here is a link so you can check it out for yourself. http://www.museumofappalachia.org/