Monday, December 29, 2008
Scenic Byways Historic Assets
Historic Quality encompasses legacies of the past that are distinctly associated with physical elements of the landscape, whether natural or manmade, that are of such historic significance that they educate the viewer and stir an appreciation for the past. The historic elements reflect the actions of people and may include buildings, settlement patterns, and other examples of human activity. Historic features can be inventoried, mapped and interpreted. They possess integrity of location, design, setting, material, workmanship, feeling and association.
Listed from North to South, our 15 selected assets:
1) Jones Chapel Church of Christ Cemetery, Great River Road Tennessee, north of Tiptonville, Lake County, Tennessee
© Dr. Carroll Van West
This National Register-eligible cemetery is the resting place for the mass burial of 75 Confederates from the Island No. 10 battle during the Civil War, the oldest identified marker dates to 1838.
2) Island No. 10 Battlefield Memorial, Great River Road Tennessee, north of Tiptonville, Lake County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
This state-developed marker for the Battle of Island No. 10 interprets this pivotal
Civil War battle for control of the Mississippi River and was erected c. 1960 as part of the state's Civil War centennial.
3) Reelfoot Lake, White's Landing Boardwalk, Great River Road Tennessee, Lake County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
This lone fisherman is an example of the fishing activity that takes place in the
midst of beautiful old cypress trees in this natural fish hatchery lake created as a result of the New Madrid earthquakes which occurred in the early 1800s.
4) Heloise Landing and the Mississippi River, Great River Road Tennessee, Dyer County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
This access point to the Mississippi River port was once a prominent stop for
agricultural trade during the time between the Civil War and World War II eras.
5) Alex Haley’s Boyhood Home, Great River Road Tennessee, Henning, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
This one-and-one-half story weatherboard bungalow where Alex Haley lived from
1921 to 1929, was the house of Alex Haley's grandfather, Will Palmer and his time there served as inspiration for his popular book Roots: The Saga of an American Family (1976).
6) Fort Pillow State Historic Park, Great River Road Tennessee, Lauderdale County,
Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
Civil War re-enactments are periodically held at this historic site to remember the
events that occurred at Ft. Pillow during the Civil War.
7) Lauderdale County Courthouse Ripley, Great River Road Tennessee, Lauderdale County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
The Lauderdale County Courthouse has a unique design among Marr and Holman's Public Works Administration (PWA) courthouses due to its use of buff-colored glazed brick as the main exterior material and its cruciform plan.
8) Tipton County Courthouse, Covington, Great River Road Tennessee, Tipton County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
This late nineteenth century Victorian-styled Courthouse and gazebo in Covington serves as an anchor to surrounding historic commercial and public buildings ranging in age from the 1870s to the 1970s.
9) Canaan Baptist Church, Covington, Great River Road Tennessee, Tipton County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
Built from 1916 to 1917, the Canaan Baptist Church has played a significant role
in the social history, religious history, and the ethnic heritage of African Americans in Covington and Tipton County.
10) Randolph, Great River Road Tennessee, Tipton County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
Randolph was founded in 1823 and undoubtedly occupied the best potential site available for water-borne commerce, due its direct access to the Mississippi River, and as such provided an excellent harbor for steam and flatboats at all stages of the river.
11) National Civil Rights Museum, Memphis, Great River Road Tennessee, Shelby County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
As showcased at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, the struggle for civil rights continues to play a major and historic role in our society. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was cut down by an assassin's bullet in 1968 at this shrine to his life's work and quest to secure the rights of equality, liberty and justice for all people in the world.
12) Mud Island River Park & Museum, Memphis, Great River Road Tennessee, Shelby County, Tennessee
© Mud Island River Park & Museum
The historic Mud Island River Park and Museum is a unique 52-acre recreational,
educational and entertainment facility dedicated to telling the story of the Mighty Mississippi River and its people. The River Walk on Mud Island is a 5-block long replica of the lower Mississippi river, from Cairo, IL, to New Orleans, LA.
13) Beale Street, Memphis, Great River Road Tennessee, Shelby County, Tennessee
© David Richtmyre
Beale Street, while primarily known for being the home of the Blues, is also steeped in African American history. In the late 1870's Memphis was fighting a Yellow Fever epidemic and lost its city charter in 1879. At this time, Robert Church purchased land around Beale Street which eventually lead to his becoming the first black millionaire from the south. In the early 1900s, Beale Street was filled with clubs, restaurants and shops, many of them owned by African-Americans. In 1889, NAACP co-founder Ida B. Wells was a co-owner and editor of an anti-segregationist paper called Free Speech based on Beale. Beale Street Baptist Church, Tennessee's oldest surviving African American Church edifice built in 1864, was also important in the early civil rights movement in Memphis.
14) C. H. Nash Museum & Chucalissa Archaeological site, Memphis, Great River Road Tennessee, Shelby County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
Operated by the University of Memphis, the Chucalissa site and museum serves as a gateway into understanding the science of archaeology and the interpretation of Native American history in the mid-south.
15) National Ornamental Metal Museum, Memphis, Great River Road Tennessee, Shelby County, Tennessee
© Amie Vanderford
The National Ornamental Metal Museum is located on the grounds of a former U.S. Marine Hospital on the Memphis bluff over looking the Mississippi River. This bluff was originally the site of Native American Indian mounds, then in the 1600s was the site of a French fort, and eventually the site became Ft. Pickering during the Civil War.
Monday, December 22, 2008
Happy Holidays from the Mississippi River Corridor - Tennessee!
Dear Friends,
2008 was an incredibly good year for the Mississippi River Corridor - Tennessee! We are so very grateful for our dedicated supporters, donors and advocates, whose contributions have enabled us to accomplish much towards advancing our mission to identify, conserve, and interpret the region's natural, cultural, and scenic resources to improve the quality of life and prosperity in West Tennessee.
Highlights from a few of our projects this year include the production of a new film, "The Fort Pillow Story," for the Ft. Pillow State Historic Park in Lauderdale County; participation in a 10-state Geocaching event with the Mississippi River Parkway Commission, that brought numerous visitors to the unique sites we selected to hide caches for the event, and we completed and submitted a milestone Corridor Management Plan to the Federal Highway Administration and TDOT for a National Scenic Byways designation. During this process, TDOT Commissioner Gerald Nicely designated our Great River Road - Tennessee as a Tennessee Parkway! Thanks to the regional effort and work done by all six of the MRCT counties, we have much to celebrate and be thankful for in the coming year.
While our work as a non-profit organization continues to grow and evolve, along with our influence and public outreach, we need your financial support now more than ever to keep the momentum rolling into the New Year! Next April 2009, we will be hosting a Conference for the Mississippi River Parkway Commission that will bring all ten Mississippi River states to Memphis. We will also be working toward the implementation of strategic plans created to help us all enhance and develop our Corridor resources for increased economic and community development in west Tennessee.
As we enjoy this holiday season and look forward to a exciting New Year, we ask that you consider the Mississippi River Corridor - Tennessee in your holiday gift giving and end of year financial support for charitable organizations. Please visit our website at www.msrivertn.org and click the "Donate" button to make a donation online, or just give us a call at (901) 278-8459. We would love to discuss the many donor options available to you.
Please support the only regional organization in west Tennessee dedicated to the restoration of our mighty Mississippi River, the enhancement and preservation of our most treasured resources, and improving the quality of life for our present and future generations.
Have a wonderful Holiday season!
From the Staff, Board of Directors and Advisory Council members, we thank you and Happy New Year to us all!
Friday, November 21, 2008
Mississippi River Canoe Trip
December 12-14, 2008
See Chickasaw Bluffs Nos 1, 2, 3 & 4 from Ft. Pillow to Memphis, Tennessee
58 river miles
Narrative: Fabulous views of the Chickasaw Bluffs along the Western edge of the state of Tennessee and adjacent bottomland hardwood forests, including the bluffs at Fort Pillow (1st Chickasaw Bluff), Richardson’s Landing (2nd Chickasaw Bluff), Meeman-Shelby State Forest (3rd Chickasaw Bluff) and finally the sweeping view of the Memphis skyline, including the Memphis Bridge and the Pyramid, and downtown Memphis (which straddles the 4th Chickasaw Bluff). The vista from the river is unparalleled! Points of interest include Anderson-Tully Wildlife Management Area, The mouth of the Hatchie River, Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park and the mouth of the Loosahatchie River. The vista from the river is unparalleled! You've never seen downtown Memphis if you haven’t viewed it from the river! Cost depends on number going. For 6 or more its $55/day/person + shuttle. 5=$65/day. 4=$75. 3=$85. Shuttle will be divided between participants, should run between $45 & $65 each (to pay for transportation & driver to start place).
Put in at Ashport, and take out at the foot of Beale Street in the Memphis Harbor. Total mileage = 58 miles on the Mississippi River. Meet in Memphis morning of Day I, camp two nights, take out afternoon/evening Day III.
Day I:
Shuttle: Meet at Memphis Yacht Club, 6am
Put-In: Put in Ashport Landing, 9am
Camp I: Lookout Bar (an island opposite the 2nd Chickasaw Bluff)
Points of Interest: Fort Pillow Bluffs (1st Chickasaw Bluff), Anderson-Tully Wildlife Management Area, The mouth of the Hatchie River, Richardson's Bluff (2nd Chickasaw Bluff: massive red, blue orange & grey bluffs collapsing into main channel. Fantastic scenery! A colorful muddy "glacier" calving into the river!)
Day II:
Camp II: Island 35
Points of Interest: Island Archipelago "Hen & the Chicks," Richardson's Bluff (2nd Chickasaw Bluff), Dean Island Chute.
Day III:
Take-Out: Memphis Harbor, 3 p.m. (subject to change)
Points of Interest: The mouth of the Hatchie River, Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park (3rd Chickasaw Bluff), Brandywine Chute, Hickman Bar, Mouth of the Loosahatchie River, Mud Island, I-40 Bridge, the Pyramid and downtown Memphis (4th Chickasaw Bluff)
All expeditions are outfitted with first-aid kits, rescue ropes, life preservers, cellular communication, and VHF marine radio. Please remember itinerary is dependent on river level and prevailing weather.
When on the river, there is no time but "River Time."
More more information, or to register for this trip, please email Keith Kirkland of the Wolf River Conservancy.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Call for Submissions: Documentary Expression and the American South
Proposals due January 30, 2009
Southern Spaces (http://www.southernspaces.org) invites proposals for essays, photography, and multimedia projects about documentary expression in the various regions and places of the U.S. South. We encourage submissions that combine innovative scholarship and commentary about documentary work with ideas for digital media elements such as images, maps, audio, or video. We also welcome the submission of original documentary projects.
For this series, Southern Spaces will to publish projects that explore documentary expression in audio, film, art, photography, and other media. Original pieces might examine the work of one or more documentarians; analyze coverage of particular persons, places, or events; or compare the treatment of ideas or images across several documentary works, genres, or decades. To engage with space and place, projects might examine geographically specific sites, imagined geographies related to the U.S. South, migrations and displacements, or relationships between places.
For information, please visit: http://www.southernspaces.org/abo_cfp_doc.html
This notice is being provided by the MRC-T for your information only. All correspondence regarding this submission should be communicated directly with Southern Spaces.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Your Views on the Mississippi River
Tell us your stories, send us some photos, or answer a few of the below questions. We want to hear from you.
- What, if anything, do you love about the Mississippi River?
- What does it mean to you to live by one of the world’s largest and most important rivers?
- How often do you visit the river?
- Are there road blocks to your experiencing the river? If so, what are they?
- Did you know that there are magnificent tall bluffs all along the river in West TN?
- What can we do as organization to help you understand and become better acquainted with the river?
- What do you see as the top issues facing our river?
- How do you feel the river affects our lives?
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
The Fort Pillow Story film
To see our film on the 'big screen,' please visit the museum at the Ft. Pillow State Historic Park off of TN Highway 87, west of Henning, in Lauderdale County, TN. Enjoy nature, history and more at one of west Tennessee's greatest state parks.
Monday, October 20, 2008
2nd Annual Paddle & Float
On deck for the sunset
Willy & Cheryl Bearden
Joe & Carol Lee Royer
Eden Brent
Nernii, Garland and Estie dance it up
And we celebrated a few birthdays while we were at it!
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Ripley & Covington Historic Architecture
Its design is unique among Marr and Holman's PWA courthouses due to its use of buff-colored glazed brick as the main exterior material and its cruciform plan. Located at the center of the cruciform, in the first floor rotunda, is an inlaid terrazzo map of the country, showing its towns and transportation systems. The rotunda ceiling has coffered panels surrounding a ceiling medallion set within a central concave area. "Zig-zag-influenced angular Art Deco decorative decorative elements," noted architectural historian Trina Binkley, enliven both the exterior and interior, "framing doors, doorways, windows, and at the ceiling line." (7) Plus, the new courthouse did not overwhelm the Public Square; new landscaping helped to highlight the building. A county historian remarked in 1957: "few prettier spots exist in the United States than the lawn about the courthouse, for here are a few of the ancient trees, and many new pecans, maples, locusts, and shrubs which sit of a carpet of green grass with squirrels playing." [Text from C. V. West, The New Deal Landscape of Tennessee (UT Press, 2000)]
U.S Post Office - Ripley
One-story red brick Colonial Revival-styled post office. Works Progress Administration funds were used in 1941 to construct the post office, designed by Louis A. Simon in a Colonial Revival style. A mural, Autumn, produced through the federal artists' program, still decorates the post office interior. Painted by Marguerite Zorach, the mural reflects hunting and nutting in the West Tennessee country.
Wardlaw-Steele House - Ripley
A massive, decorative two-story Classical Revival portico added in the early twentieth century enlivened what had been a typical two-story frame Tennessee I-House initially built in 1842. One of the most striking examples of domestic architecture in the county.
Courthouse Square - Covington
The late nineteenth century Victorian-styled Tipton County Courthouse is surrounded by historic commercial and public buildings from the 1870s to the 1970s. Many buildings have been restored and adapted to new uses, and a recent streetscape project has improved the appearance of this important public space.
Ruffin Theatre - Covington
This deco-styled theater from the 1930s has been restored for community theater, concerts, and other events.
St Matthews Episcopal Church - Covington
This Gothic Revival-styled building from the mid-nineteenth century survived the Civil War to become one of the town’s defining settlement and religious landmarks.
Former Coca-Cola Bottling Plant - Covington
This impressive Art Deco building, built in the 1930s and designed by Memphis architect Everett Woods, has long been a landmark along U.S. Highway 51 in downtown Covington.
Hotel Lindo - Covington
This turn of the century downtown hotel served railroad travelers as Covington expanded its business and commercial district in the twentieth century. Few historic hotels still exist on courthouse squares in Tennessee.
Covington South Main Street Historical District House
Radiating south from the town square, this residential district is truly diverse in its architectural types, including a suburban version of a Louisiana plantation house, Queen Anne homes from the early twentieth century, and red brick bungalows.
Charles B. Simonton House - Covington
Friday, August 22, 2008
Save the Date!
Invites your Participation in a River Celebration!
The 2nd Annual
Date: Thursday, October 2, 2008
Time: 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Location: Memphis Queen III
Riverside Drive at Monroe - Cobblestone Landing
Come down to the great Mississippi River and enjoy a relaxing sunset cruise on the beautiful Memphis Queen III.
Featured Blues Artist
Eden Brent
Blues Foundation Award Winner 2007
We'll rock the night away with the best blues pianist in the Delta!
Enjoy cocktails and a wonderful dinner as we travel on the mighty Mississippi.
Please mark your calendar today and show your support for the only regional organization in west Tennessee dedicated to "connecting people to the great river."
Cruise and Dinner Ticket Price $75.00 per person
For More Information contact: Diana Threadgill - Executive Director at (901) 278-8459 or e-mail: dianathreadgill@comcast.net for event
details.
www.msrivertn.org
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Beale Street Landing Groundbreaking Ceremony
Dr. Benjamin Hooks & Mayor Willie Herenton
Councilwoman Barbara Swearengen Ware & Mayor Willie Herenton
Memphis Queen III
Riverfront Development Corporation Chairman Greg Duckett
Mayor Willie Herenton
Councilwoman Barbara Swearengen Ware
Dr. Benjamin Hooks
City Council Members Janis Fullilove & Scott McCormick
The Choir
Mayor Herenton Signals the beginning of the Groundbreaking.
Breaking Ground
John Stokes, City Councilman Scott McCormick, John Sheahan and Memphis Queen Captain
John Stokes & City Councilman Scott McCormick
RDC President Benny Lendermon, Mayor Willie Herenton & John Stokes
Photos © Amie Vanderford