Plans are in the works to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Cumberland Homesteads Community on Saturday, July 25. “Folks are really getting excited about it. We are going to make some history while celebrating our history,” said Vickie Houston, Cumberland Homesteads Tower Association president. “We have several well-known and distinguished guests who will be speaking from the back of an antique lumber truck, like the one Mrs. Roosevelt spoke from when she made her historic visit to the Homesteads. They will be helping us to honor the original Homesteaders and the beautiful community they worked so hard to build.”
Part of the official celebration will be a reenactment of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt’s speech that she gave when visiting the Homesteads in July 1934. The Crossville Chronicle gave a detailed report of Mrs. Roosevelt’s visit in an article on July 12, 1934. The planners of the reenactment are using this article to compose a simulation of Mrs. Roosevelt’s speech. Houston explained, “It will be impossible to recite her speech word-for-word because there is no known record of it in its entirety. But the Crossville Chronicle report has given us important details of what she said to the Homesteaders that we can draw from.”
In the article, Mrs. Roosevelt praised the progress that the Homesteaders were making. She told them to keep faith in their undertaking and laid the responsibility for the success of the project entirely upon their continued enthusiasm and their will to make it successful.
C.H.T.A. has enlisted the talented actress Patty Payne to play the part of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt for the reenactment. Payne has played the part of Mrs. Roosevelt many times in the Homesteads Album, an original production of the Cumberland County Playhouse and her performance is expected to one of the highlights of the celebration.
Special honor is planned for the surviving original Homesteaders during the ceremony. C.H.T.A. is making a special effort to invite all the descendants of the original families to attend the celebration along with many high-ranking officials and historic preservation leaders from around the country.
The 75th anniversary celebration, which is expected to draw significant media attention, will focus on raising public awareness of the national significance of the Cumberland Homesteads, which is the largest of the 100 New Deal communities planned and built during Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal. The community is recognized in several areas of historic importance including its architecture, which architect William Macy Stanton designed and oversaw the construction of, in the earliest days of the community’s construction. Several of Stanton’s descendants will be attending the ceremony, as well as descendants of several of the local leaders who were instrumental in getting the Cumberland Homesteads Project under way in the 1930s. Watch for more details about the event in coming weeks.
Lifestyles
Homestead celebration set for July 25
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The River WILD!
The Big South Fork of the Cumberland River winds its way through the 125,000 acres of the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area before flowing into the Cumberland River and Lake Cumberland in Kentucky. It’s a free-flowing river, with no dams to control release of the water, but the scenery and the magnificent rock formations make it a favorite of paddling enthusiasts who watch the weather to see if they can get out and explore areas that are hard to reach by foot.
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Farmer's Market opens for business June 2
The Cumberland County Farmer’s Market will officially open the growing season as it has every year since 1978. This year’s “opening” will be Saturday, June 2, at the traditional location on Livingston Rd., next to the fairgrounds. Selling will begin early (6:30 a.m. or so), although some vendors may set up a few hours later in order to provide the freshest vegetables picked just that morning. There is usually a good selection until well after noon.
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Around the Town: Children's letters to God
I received the cutest e-mail earlier this week and could not resist sharing it with Chronicle readers. The email contains a list of letters that children have written to God. I found them to be quite hilarious and feel sure you will as well. Please pardon the spelling as the notes were typed as the children wrote them:
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Cookbook sale benefits nutrition program
The Upper Cumberland Human Resource Agency (UCHRA) is currently selling cookbooks as a fundraiser to benefit the Nutrition Program for older adults and adults with disabilities.
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Crab Orchard DAR chapter hands out awards
Joe White, Cumberland County Korean War Veteran, was honored as the recipient of the prestigious Community Service Award by The Crab-Orchard Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution at its annual Awards Dinner on Thursday evening, April 20, at the Art Circle Public Library community room.
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Seniors plan day of fun, games
The 127 South Seniors met May 18 for bingo, dominos, coffee, sweets and conversation. Buckeye Home Health furnished the gifts and Arlene Simmons and Wendell Lester called the numbers.
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Marriage licenses
Published May 23, 2012.
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Memorial Day ceremony set
The Cumberland County Veterans Council will sponsor a Memorial Day Ceremony May 28 at the Cumberland County Veterans Memorial Park. The ceremony will begin at 11 a.m. with the Cumberland County Band performing, flag/colors presentation, an incredible singer, guest speakers and a special key-note speaker.
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Plateau Gardening: Make Plateau Discovery Gardens your information destination
Most home gardeners enjoy learning about plants and are all ears when new yard and garden techniques are discussed. If this description fits you, plan to attend the upcoming 2012 Classes at the Gardens series hosted by the Cumberland County Master Gardeners at Plateau Discovery Gardens on the grounds of the University of Tennessee Plateau AgResearch and Education Center next to the main office (320 Experiment Station Rd.; telephone, 484-0034).
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Pleasant Hill Ramblings: Spring Festival celebrates inaugural event
After six weeks of rainstorms missing the town, Saturday morning dawned with a drizzly rain, needed, but not that day. Always optimistic, the volunteers went to work setting up the festival, and by the 10 a.m. starting time, there was no more rain. The PH Ensemble, led by Bob Savage, began the day with a variety of melodies.
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