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April 99
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Confederate Flag stirs controversy in Tennessee

Maryville High School meets to discuss same issue

Clarksville recovering from tornadoes

For what it’s worth

Vandals destroy historic cemetery

Tennessee Civil War Preservation Association
to hold open meetings

Crafters/Artists being sought for annual Rugby Silver Festival

Hunley Update

Shiloh to hold Living History Demonstration

Alabama Trail association working to
connect state to Appalachian Trail

Tennessee Department of Veterans Affairs
honors 102 year old veteran

State Historic Sites begin preparing for Spring

Shop Talk



Confederate Flag stirs
controversy in Tennessee

Nashville-A battle is brewing in the Capitol over whether or not the Tennessee Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans should have their own license plate. The state legislature is scheduled to decide the issue this year. The special vanity plate is available to any organization that has at least 500 members who will purchase it. The extra $25 collected goes back to the state and the organization. The bill passed the Tennessee Department of Transportation committee unanimously, but immediately caused controversy among some members of the Tennessee Black Caucus, who immediately hit the airwaves protesting the plate’s passage. Last year the Legislature approved the special vanity plates for the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Tennessee Historical Commission, which both featured similar Confederate symbols.
   “This is a first class civics lesson on American Politics in the 1990s,” said Tennessee High School history teacher and S.C.V. member Dean Schneitman. “everywhere this argument over the Confederate flag has been given, it has been defeated. It seems odd that this would all of a sudden this would become an issue when a Black member of the legislature started seeking a post on the T.V.A. Board. The people backing this measure have no knowledge of history and dismiss the efforts of Blacks who fought for the Confederacy.”
   In North Carolina and Virginia, the S.C.V. has successfully sued and overturned verdicts aimed at banning their licenses plates. After knowledge of the bill became public, Black Tennessee representatives went on talk shows in Nashville, Memphis, and other cities pushing to stop the legislature from approving the measure. As expected the activists are trying to enlist the support of the NAACP in the cause. Many political activists are watching the issue and say they will support the S.C.V.’s efforts.
   “I have never understood how and organization like the NAACP that proclaims itself to be the guardian of cultural diversity will spend so much of its time and resources trying to destroy the symbols of another culture,” said Tennessee Conservative Union Chairman Lloyd Daugherty. “This has become so predictable over the years that I am surprised it still works for them. I guarantee you if the roles were reversed, we would have the Supreme Court and Federal government on us so quick we wouldn’t know what to do next.”
   Not all black Tennesseans are supporting the measure. Former Tennessee Professor Milton Dantel says he has supported the NAACP in the past, but draws the line when they star attacking Southern culture.
   “I am reminded of the story of the Gettysburg reunion,” said Dantel. “All black veterans of the war were invited to it and, when blacks showed up wearing Confederate uniforms who had fought in the war, they were told there was no room and had to sleep in a barn. The whites who had fought for the South took them into their homes and held their own reunion. Why black activists continue to foster this myth that the Confederacy was a ‘Whites-Only’ Club is beyond me. I have problems with them fighting symbols of southern culture for the same reason I do them signing on to the gun manufacturers law suit. It insinuates that black Americans can’t handle basic Constitutional freedoms. It hurts us more than it ever helped.”
   The issue is expected to be resolved before this session of the legislature is finished.




Maryville High School
meets to discuss same issue

Blount County-About the same time this issue was underway in Nashville and West Tennessee, a similar complaint was filed with the Office of Civil Rights about East Tennessee’s Maryville High School. A black physician, who lives in a nearby school district, allegedly attended an event at the high school and became angry when he saw students waving the Confederate Flag. He told the OCR quote: “I felt like I walked into a Klan rally.” The Maryville “Rebels”, who won the state football championship this past season have had the name since the 1930s. A special meeting was scheduled by the Blount County School Board to discuss it on March 23. While many had wanted to speak at the public forum, the board limited it to only alumni, residents of the school district, and the individual who brought the complaint.



Clarksville recovering from tornadoes

Montgomery County-The City of Clarksville has begun the massive cleanup of the historic downtown section that was destroyed when a tornado ripped through the city. There was a proposal on the table to create a non-profit agency that would be responsible for the efforts, but the measure was killed by the council amid thundering applause.
   Residents were concerned that the non-profit agency would start playing with property values and were opposed to the idea. They will continue moving forward with rebuilding the historic district on their own terms and hope to have things resolved quickly.




For what it’s worth

Memphis-A man attending a World War II military antique show in Memphis was appalled by a flag in the show and summoned Memphis police to the scene to express his outrage. When the police arrived, the man allegedly told them he wanted a flag taken down in the convention center. The police dutifully searched the convention center and returned to the individual where they informed him they had not seen a Confederate Flag anywhere in the building. Appearing agitated, the man walked police back into the convention center and pointed to a German NAZI flag and state it was the one he wanted removed.
   The vendor, who was a well known antique dealer, informed the officers that the flag was an original German battleflag captured by American troops and was a historical relic that wasn’t about to come down as he was trying to sell it.
   When the man wouldn’t desist from demanding it be removed, police had no other option but to take him into custody and charge him with disturbing the peace.




Vandals destroy historic cemetery

Graysville-Two men have been arrested for desecrating a grave site in Rhea County. The Lone Mountain Cemetery was vandalized and weathered stones scattered throughout the grounds. One of the subjects arrested by the Rhea County Sheriff’s Office was a juvenile. “We don’t know how many were involved in the incident,” said Sheriff Leon Sneed, “but we have made two arrests.”
   The suspects names were not released. The cemetery is located about 30 miles north of Chattanooga and is listed in the National register of Historic Places. At least 115 of its monuments were turned over and ten completely destroyed.




Tennessee Civil War Preservation Association
to hold open meetings

Nashville-The Tennessee Historical Commission is urging citizens to attend one of four public meetings to kick off the creation of a statewide civil War Preservation Plan. In addition, the recently designated Tennessee Civil War heritage Area will be discussed. The new federal Initiative will help preserve and interpret the state’s Civil War legacy. Congress has authorized the possibility for funding up to $1 million a year for the next ten years for this project.
   The meetings will be held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the following locations.

Monday - March 29, 1999
Jackson, TN
City Hall - 101 E. Main St.
Tuesday - March 30, 1999
Murfreesboro, TN
Stones River Nat. Battlefield Headquarters
Wednesday - Mar. 31, 1999
Knoxville, TN
E. TN Hist. Soc. Auditorium
Thursday - April 1,1999
Chattanooga, TN
Hamilton County Bicentennial Library

   The TCWPA is now organizing as a way to help cities and communities capitalize on the growing number of heritage oriented travelers. Last year Heritage oriented tourism was recognized as one of the state’s most overlooked industries. Anyone with questions or extra directions can call the Historical Commission at (615) 532-1550. Everyone is encouraged to attend.




Crafters/Artists being sought for
annual Rugby Silver Festival

Rugby-Area craftsmen and visual artists are invited to apply for space at the 25th annual festival of British and Appalachian culture set for May 22 and 23. The festival booth fee is $25 for each 12x12 space. Entries are juried through photographs and slides which must accompany an application form. The annual event is one of the biggest in the historic village and draws people from across America.
   The restored 1880s village is open year round offering guided tours, museum stores, and specialty restaurants. In addition, there are numerous hiking trails and lodging available for those who want to explore the nearby Big Southfork National Park.
   For more information or an application, you are encouraged to write: Historic Rugby, P.O. Box 8, Rugby, TN 37733 or call at (423) 628-2441.




Hunley Update

Atlanta-Many Tennessee Online visitors have been asking for more information on the upcoming TNT movie on Sumner County native Horace Lawson Hunley. What we have gathered from Turner Network Television studios so far is that the film is to be directed by John Gray (The Day Lincoln Was Shot, Glimmer Man) with Armand Assante and Donald Sutherland set to star. "The Hunley" is an Adelson Entertainment production from Gray’s original script. The movie will follow the crew of the submarine CSS Hunley - the first sub to sink an enemy boat in war time - during the 1864 siege of Charleston. It explores the complicated relationship between the eight men who led the Hunley into the history books. Donald Sutherland takes the role of General Beauregard, while Cal Johnson plays Captain Hunley.
   The movie is scheduled to be released this summer on TNT. Studio officials have been tight-lipped about the production, but a film trailer is expected to be out soon promoting the film. As for historical accuracy, many historians in South Carolina and Tennessee had said “let’s wait and see.”




Shiloh to hold Living History Demonstration

Savannah-Shiloh National Military Park is scheduled to hold a living history demonstration on the battle’s anniversary April 10-11. On hand will be numerous War Between the States’ reenactors. Admission is $2 for adults, $4per family, children under 6 are free. For more information, you can contact the park at (901) 689-5275.
    In a related story, sources in Washington were recently upset that monies designated to help repair the Park’s battlefield causeway and the 1,500-year-old Mississippian mounds by the Congress may be “rerouted” to NPS headquarters in Denver. Tennessee Online has received numerous letters about this issue and have contacted both Senators Frist and Thompson as well as Rep. Van Hilleary’s office. All are looking into the matter and say they will watch the disbursement of the funds closely. There has been no official word from the Park Service about the issue, but many were upset that the long sought repairs could be delayed while the NPS continues working on $300,000 outhouses for hikers.
   “The NPS had some severe budget cuts in the last two years on pet projects,” said one official, “and may try to funnel what they can to those projects to keep them going. We want to make sure that Shiloh National Military Park is repaired and the funds properly used to do what they were directed to in the first place.”




Alabama Trail association working to connect state to Appalachian Trail

Birmingham-The Appalachian trial which runs through Tennessee may get a little longer. Volunteers from the Alabama Trail Association are working to finally complete the Appalachian trial. Currently, the Appalachian Trail runs 2,160 miles from Katahdin in Maine to Springer Mountain in Georgia. The Benton MacKaye Trail, extending from the Appalachian Trail's southernmost end, eventually will connect with the Pinhoti.
   "Several years ago, some people realized that the original Appalachian Trail was designed to go into Alabama," said Jim Austin, a spokesman for the Alabama Trails Association. The Appalachian Mountains themselves continue through Mount Cheaha, the state's highest point, to what is essentially a foothill: Red Mountain in Birmingham.”
   The Pinhoti, a trail named after an American Indian word for "Home of the Turkey," begins in the Talladega National Forest and goes northeast 111 miles to U.S. 278 north of Piedmont. The volunteers from the Alabama Trails Association have worked for eight years to extend the trail beyond U.S. 278 north to Indian Mountain near the state line. “On the third weekend of every month,” said Jim Austin, a spokesman for the Alabama Trails Association, “about 10 members of the association or their friends go out to work on the trail, mostly using hand tools.”
   The group has extended the trail 7.5 miles so far, and have another 2 miles to go to reach the Georgia line. Another 100 miles after that, and Pinhoti — being worked on in Georgia by parks service officials, and a Georgia-based Pinhoti Trail volunteer group — will link up with the nearly completed Benton MacKaye Trail (named after the writer who first proposed the trail). The 7.5-mile section of the trail the Alabama Trails Association has been working on is on the property of Gerald Willis, a former state legislator, who granted an easement for the trail to be completed and used. The rest of the trail, Austin said, is on public lands.




Tennessee Department of Veterans Affairs honors 102 year old veteran

Sevier County-Representatives of the American Legion, the Marine Corps League, and other veterans organizations were on hand when World War I veteran Charlie Clabo was honored by Sevier County and the State of Tennessee in March for his service aboard a Prisoner of War transport ship in France. Mr. Clabo, who now resides in Fort Sanders Nursing home in Sevierville , was the latest surviving veteran of the war to be honored. Fred Tucker, Director of Tennessee Veterans Affairs Office, bestowed the Certificate of Appreciation recognizing Clabo as the County’s oldest living veteran and also a special proclamation from the Governor making Mr. Clabo a Colonel of the State of Tennessee.
   Sevier County Executive Larry waters also issued a proclamation declaring March 6 “Charlie Clabo Day” in Sevier County. “It was the reporter who guaranteed freedom of the press,” said Tucker, “or the preacher who guaranteed freedom of religion, or the lobbying groups that protected other sacred American rights. It was soldiers like Charlie Clabo who answered their nation’s call and protected those rights for all Americans. That is a fact that should never be forgotten.”
   Mr. Clabo’s paperwork is also in the process that could see him receive a National Legion of Honor Medal from France, who has been bestowing them on surviving WWI veterans in Tennessee that served in France during the war.




State Historic Sites begin preparing for Spring

Nashville-Many Tennessee Historic sites are beginning to come out of hibernation and are looking forward to the coming season. Both Fort Loudoun State Park and The Sequoyah Birthplace Museum are expecting good crowds for the “Garrison Weekends” and upcoming Crafts Faire. Last year, the numbers of visitors increased dramatically in all of Tennessee’s State Parks and officials say they expect more than last year as many are discovering the parks are excellent weekend getaways for families. There is also a new push for residents to join the numerous “Friends” organizations that help the parks in the off-season as well as serve as hosts during special events. For more information, state officials say to contact your local state park and ask to join.



Shop Talk

Gatlinburg-Tennessee Online has added a new set of links on our Resource page to help those trying to locate information on Native American tribes in Tennessee. As many have noticed, the government e-mail section of the site has been updated and improved. Every official in state government as well as federal representatives can now be accessed from the site. We encourage everyone to take advantage of the page and contact their representative whenever possible.
   The response to our Medal of Honor recipients list has been tremendous and we will continue working to get the citations on line as soon as possible. Because of the numerous requests for information, we must refer questions not relating to Tennessee recipients to the National Medal of Honor Museum in Chattanooga web site. This is the OFFICIAL Medal of Honor site for the nation and can help answer any questions you might have.
   We have also added a new artifacts page devoted to Weston Fulton. The Knoxville inventor who literally revolutionized American industry. We want to thank all the dedicated employees of the company for their assistance in procuring photographs of their company founder. We are working on other Artifact pages and hope to have some more up in a couple of months. If you have any information you think would go in to such a page, please let us know. These are among the more popular pages of Tennessee Online and we like to keep building them for readers. Finally, many have been asking how they can acquire copies of Ed Hooper’s “Looking Back” column on Tennessee history. The Tennessee Star Journal web page is located at http://www.tennesseestarjournal.com/ and you can obtain the information there about subscription. Ed has a couple of other articles due out in other publications soon and we will keep you advised.




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