All the ingredients are coming together at Kern’s Bakery Food Hall.
Demolition and construction, gravel and concrete, peeling paint and holes in the roof will disappear in the next few months. …
Little Flat Creek Baptist Church turns 225
Back in 1892, one item of interest in what was then known as The Knoxville Sentinel reads as follows:
Mr. Ben C. Smith, chairman board of trade, Macon, Ga., says “I …
Help Mabry-Hazen museum by partying!
Whether you like to party like it’s 1858, 1992 or 2022, you’re in luck. The Mabry-Hazen House Museum is getting into party mode, and Knoxville is invited.
The historic house, 1711 …
Questions remain about Cavett’s Station
Early inhabitants of today’s Concord/Farragut area were the Indigenous Woodland Indians, followed by the Early Mississippians (1000 A.D.) known as the Creek, Choctaw and Chickasaw, and later the Cherokee people.
With …
James Agee’s muse lies in Greenwood Cemetery
What all did they do out there? They put him down in the ground and then they put all the flowers on top. Then they say their prayers and then …
Connor family reflects 90 years of Knoxville Catholic High
Helen Mabry Connor is entwined with Knoxville history through family, religion and business. And a more delightful woman you will never meet.
The Connor family has been engaged with Knoxville Catholic …
Hardin Valley history lies at Marietta Cumberland
Strolling through the Marietta Church Cemetery, one of the first things that comes to mind is there’s an awful lot of history in this serene space overlooking Hardin Valley. For …
New book discusses mission work to the Cherokee
Knoxville native Dennis L. Peterson has released his second faith-based history with TouchPoint Faith, Evangelism and Expulsion: Missionary Work Among the Cherokees Until Removal. This book continues Peterson’s research into …