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The Spanish Flu: How 1918 was the same–and very different
April 3, 2020 In Other 11 Comments

PANDEMIC: THE SPANISH FLU: HOW 1918 WAS THE SAME, BUT VERY DIFFERENT by Jack Neely These are strange days. You don’t need me to tell you that. What we’re going through now may be “unprecedented” in some ways, as dozens […]

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The Spanish Flu Poem, 1918
March 26, 2020 In Other 1 Comment

This bit of relevant literature appeared in the Knoxville Journal & Tribune, in mid-October of 1918, during the worst of Knoxville’s experience with the “Spanish Flu” pandemic. The poet is a local black man of whom we know little except […]

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A Beautiful Flower in a Garden of Weeds: Socialist Norman Thomas in Knoxville,1934
March 4, 2020 In Other No Comment

In 2020, a confessed Socialist running for president strikes some folks as a novelty, and something that surely would have shocked our grandparents. But maybe not as much as we might assume. On an unseasonably warm Thursday evening late in […]

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Beauford Delaney in Knoxville
February 26, 2020 In Other 4 Comments

You’ve seen the posters all around downtown this winter, a happy, round-faced, exuberant-looking fellow in a black beret. That face might be a nice touch for any city. But Beauford Delaney, the actual person, is the perfect antidote to Knoxville […]

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The Possibly Exotic Origins of Burlington
February 25, 2020 In Other 3 Comments

Earlier this month we enjoyed a summer evening in Burlington. The East Tennessee Community Design Center invited us to an educational soiree among the tall trees and historic downtown-style buildings clustered around the eastern end of the avenue we know […]

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The Legends of Western Plaza: How a Strip Mall Can be Historic
February 24, 2020 In Other 3 Comments

PART ONE When they hear we’re working on a book about Bearden, some wags picture its strip malls, and have some fun with the idea that Bearden can have anything to dignify with the word “history.” They may not grasp […]

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The Jazz Legend of Gordon’s Town House
February 24, 2020 In Other 6 Comments

  For decades I’d heard rumors and fond and unbelievable memories of Gordon’s Town House. It opened at the corner of Cumberland and 17th Street in the 1950s. It had a big dining room with a dance floor, like those […]

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The Conjure Man
February 24, 2020 In Other 2 Comments

In late October, 1935, well after midnight, a mysterious man was running across old East Church Avenue near Mulvaney Street carrying a dead chicken. A college boy, driving his car back to campus after a night on the town, collided […]

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Fame, Ice, and the Elusive Owen Davis
February 21, 2020 In People No Comment

In the list of the eight Pulitzer Prizewinners listed as alumni of the University of Tennessee are some who are famous by name even to those who haven’t read their work, like movie-spawning novelist Cormac McCarthy and rock-star biologist E.O. […]

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