Postcards From An East Nashville Attic Finding this unique lens into East Nashville's past is like discovering the gold at the end of the rainbow. Thanks for sharing Jason!
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Postcards From An East Nashville Attic Finding this unique lens into East Nashville's past is like discovering the gold at the end of the rainbow. Thanks for sharing Jason!
*Update* The Legend of Sugar Flat Road Guys. I've never been more disappointed in my life. I got a hot tip that das kapf - aka the…
Before we were painting the town pink, Nashville had it’s own Manequen piss. In honor of his newly pinked attire, a montage of the original Queen of Music City – Musica.
Putting the F back in Art Before we were painting the town pink, Nashville had it's own Manequen piss. In honor of his newly…
The Bell Witch
I’ve put off talking about the Bell Witch because honestly I’m scared of her. I grew up with the story in Hermitage, TN and I’m an Adams from where she was from so I was told not to tell it. But here I go. My mom bought me a Bell Witch book for Christmas this week simply called The Bell Witch. It’s edited Brent Monahan but is the memoirs of Richard Powell – who married Betsy Bell, the most…
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W.W.A.J.D.?
The spookiest, most offbeat story I can think of is the fraying fabric of a united America. Are you shaking in your boots yet? This tale begins with the American Oligarchy uncurling their long, pointy fingers from a dark corner, summoning you (whites only, though) to JOIN (a church) OR DIE (burning in hell losers who couldn’t afford health care). Next, a Trumpian Two Minutes Hate at a Muslim…
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Demon Weave
You’ve got to love the local news. Channel 4 WSMV’s recent coverage of DEMONIC HAIR WEAVE in Memphis is just the type of groundbreaking journalism I have come to expect from my hometown. Anyone with black girlfriends knows weave is crazy expensive, and like laundry detergent and pregnancy tests in my old hood, some people steal weave and sell it like drugs (see this interactive map of hair…
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Straight Outta Carthage I wrote this for y'all this morning after my friend reminded me about the PMRC: Straight outta Carthage a crazy mother fucker named Tipper Gore…
Recently Single Al Gore Finally Able to Listen to W.A.S.P.
Did you know that Andrew Jackson never had children of his own, but the brain child of the Indian Removal Act adopted a Creek child? Paradoxical enigma that he is, Jackson sent home a child found on a battlefield (disputed either the Battle of Talladega or the Battle of Horseshoe Bend) with his dead mother and raised him as his own. His name was Lyncoya. Lyncoya received the very best education and had hopes to attend West Point but because of his ethnicity he could not. Instead, he became a saddle maker and died of tuberculosis when he was around 16 years old.
As with anything Andrew Jackson, there is perhaps a darker side to the story.
Historians speculate that Lyncoya may have been brought home as a plaything or ‘pet’ for his other adopted son, Andrew Jackson, Jr. It was not uncommon for African slaves to tour the world in “Human Zoos,” and some think that his initial intentions may not have been so kind given Jackson’s betrayal of Native Americans just two short years after Lyncoya’s death.
For whatever reason, historians can document that Lyncoya was well cared for, although the romanticism that he warmed Jackson’s cold, black heart may be just that as his body has never been found. In 2003, cadaver dogs searched the property of the Hermitage looking for slave burial grounds and for Lyncoya. While the rest of the family, and even Jackson’s most loved slave Alfred are buried in the same area, but Lyncoya still remains lost today.
Below are the graves of Alfred (buried close but still separate) to the large gazebo-esque monument atop Jackson and his wife, Rachel. The rest of the family lie in the bottom right section of the grave site.
Alfred, Jackson’s most loved slave
The Mystery of Lyncoya Did you know that Andrew Jackson never had children of his own, but the brain child of the Indian Removal Act adopted a Creek child?
Tennessee by Alexander H. Wyant
Tennessee by Alexander H. Wyant
This may be a little high brow, but the MET released thousands of images for non-commercial use. If you like art, this is your worm hole for the day. I stumbled across this image of a painting by Alexander Wyant titled “Tennessee” from 1866. The MET describes the painting as odd for two reasons: There is no evidence Alexander Wyant ever visited Tennessee The painting was executed during the…
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Because Somebody Blundered
In 1918, what is still considered to be the worst railway accident in U.S. history occurred right here in Nashville. Sitting unassumingly in on White Bridge Road in between the Greenway and the Hospital is a memorial. Photo by Angela Schmidt Two trains collided head on, resulting in 101 people killed and 171 injured. One train was heading to Memphis, and the other from Memphis to Old Hickory when…
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Hootenany
Well, my heart’s just broken. A word that sounds like it should have traveled on the tongues of the Scotch-Irish immigrants who settled in KY and TN is undoubtedly a Midwest word. If’n you’ve never hear the word before, today it’s used for a wild party that is thrown together. It has an element of not being exactly planned, where one and all might “raise a ruckus” through hootin’ and hollerin’…
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Author. Check out Rachel Martin's blog with her featured articles about Tennessee. This one is truly incredible:
Who Invented the Radio?
Gugleimo Marconi is credited with inventing the radio, but my grandmother says otherwise. Grandma’s seen better days but can still tell you history of her family, the Stubblefields, and that her great-great something ‘er other’s patents lead to what we now call “radio.” And people all over Murray will tell you the same that the town is the “Birthplace of Radio.” His name was Nathan Beverly…
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The Parlow's of Alamo, TN
This photo is the only evidence of this mystery clock that I can find anywhere. Has anyone heard of this clock before? While trying to find out more about the clock and the Parlows I came across this obituary for N.W.’s son Oscar. I had someone special pass away just days ago and the deceased’s step daughter-in-law and I discussed how the obituary, while lovely and concise, was missing a certain…
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The Blue Fugates
If you’re a Southerner, I am sure that you have at least been made fun of once in your life for being inbred. If you’re from one of the other directions, then I’d be willing to bet that it has been you who have made this ‘hilarious’ joke a time or two. While most of us are not barefoot and pregnant with our uncle cousin’s baby, that doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. My mother, a proud Kentuckian…
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Prehistoric Tennessee
I know I talk a lot of bullshit on this page, but here’s something that is absolutely true: During the Paleozoic period, Tennessee was covered by a warm shallow sea. The sea was home to my favorite pre-dinosaur – the trilobite, along with corals and more sea creatures that today is mind blowing to think about living in the Volunteer State. You may have collected Indian Money as a kid (I still…
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