APPENDIX C Section 106 Consultation

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

APPENDIX C Section 106 Consultation APPENDIX C Section 106 Consultation Consulting Party and Native American Consultation List of Consulting Parties 2007, January 11 Consultation – Meeting o Agenda o Meeting Minutes o Comments from Consulting Parties re Eligibility o Presentation 2009, July 14 Consultation – Correspondence o KYTC Letter to Consulting Parties re Effects (sample to the SHPO representing all) o Attachment A: Map of Creelsboro Rural Historic District with Alternatives, and List of Contributing Elements o Attachment B: Minutes of January 2007 Meeting o Attachment C: KYTC Response to Consulting Parties’ Comments re Eligibility o Attachment D: SHPO Letter of Effect Determinations 4-22-09 o Comments/Responses re July 14 KYTC Correspondence— includes Clinton County Historical Society Correspondence and Log of KYTC Responses 2009, September 28 Consultation – FHWA Correspondence, to Six Tribes 2009, October 12 Cherokee Nation – Response to FHWA Correspondence State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO) Consultation 2003, April 23 Site Review Minutes 2003, July 30 SHPO re Area of Potential Effect (APE) – Correspondence 2006, August 14 SHPO re APE – Correspondence 2006, December 20 SHPO re Eligibility – Correspondence 2009, April 22 SHPO re Effects – Correspondence 2009, November 25 E-Summary of 11-24-09 Meeting with the SHPO re Mitigation Date DEA Date Granted CP recommended to Status by SHPO, or Section 106 Consulting Parties, Item 8-108 & 115, Russell/Clinton Counties SHPO that these be DEA on behalf of granted CP Status FHWA NAME ORGANIZATION ADDRESS CITY, STATE ZIP Anthony Goodman Federal Highway Administration 330 West Broadway Frankfort, KY 40602 not necessary BY-RIGHT David Waldner Kentucky Transportation Cabinet 200 Mero Drive Frankfort, KY 40601 not necessary BY-RIGHT Donna M. Neary Kentucky Heritage Council, SHPO 300 Washington Street Frankfort, KY 40601not necessary BY-RIGHT Brian Walters City of Russell Springs P.O. Box 560 Russell Springs, KY 42642 not necessary BY-RIGHT Judge Donnie McWhorter 100 S. Cross St. Albany, KY 42602 not necessary BY-RIGHT Mickey Garner Russell County Magistrate 210 Dixon Rd. Jamestown, KY 42629 not necessary BY-RIGHT Sam Hadley HC 67, Box 40 Albany, KY 42602 not necessary BY-RIGHT Charlie Stearns RR4, Box 336 Albany, KY 42602 not necessary BY-RIGHT Herlen Lawless Russell County Magistrate 380 Lawless Lane Jamestown, KY 42629 not necessary BY-RIGHT John Brack Flanagan 1494 Three Springs Road Bowling Green, KY 42104 22-Aug-06 BY-INVITATION Vic and Shirley Cooper P.O. Box 265 Russell Springs, KY 42642 8-Mar-06 BY-INVITATION Walton Haddix P.O. Box 435 Albany, KY 42602 19-Mar-03 2-Apr-03 BY-INVITATION Jimmie Sloan RR 4 Albany, KY 42602 19-Mar-03 2-Apr-03 BY-INVITATION Danny Craft Rt. 4 Box 997 H Albany, KY 42602 19-Mar-03 2-Apr-03 BY-INVITATION Ted A. Cummings 5105 Heather Hill La Grange, KY 400310. 19-Mar-03 2-Apr-03 BY-INVITATION Anthony Carnes 275 Jumpoff Rd. Jamestown, KY 42629 22-Feb-07 BY-INVITATION Willis McClure 240 Stella Rd. Jamestown, KY 42629 22-Feb-07 BY-INVITATION Jeffrey Loy 5592 Hwy. 370 Russell Springs, KY 42642 22-Feb-07 BY-INVITATION Coleman Coffey 332 Capitol Ave. Frankfort, KY 40601 6-Dec-07 BY-INVITATION APPENDIX C Section 106 Consultation Consulting Party and Native American Consultation US 127 – KY 90 To Jamestown Bypass AGENDA Consulting Parties Meeting January 11, 2007 Freedom Christian Church 1. INTRODUCTION/PROJECT OVERVIEW 2. REVIEW OF SECTION 106 PROCESS 3. REVIEW OF SECTION 4(f) 4. DISCUSSION OF AREA OF POTENTIAL EFFECT 5. DISCUSSION OF PROPERTIES ELIGIBILE FOR NATIONAL REGISTER 6. QUESTIONS 7. WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? MEETING MINUTES PROJECT: US 127 – KY 90 to Jamestown Bypass PURPOSE: Consulting Parties Meeting PLACE: Freedom Christian Church, Jamestown KY MEETING DATE: January 11, 2007 PREPARED BY: Kirk Reinke IN ATTENDANCE: Listed Below PHONE NAME ADDRESS EMAIL ADDRESS NUMBER 129 Ballard St. Brooks Bates Jamestown, KY 42629 P.O. Box 132 Steve Bledsoe Russell Springs, KY 42642 P.O. Box 265 Vic and Shirley Cooper Russell Springs, KY 42642 Rt. 4 Box 997 H Danny Craft Albany, KY 42602 5105 Heather Hill Ted A. Cummings LaGrange, KY 40031 1494 Three Springs Rd. John Brack Flanagan Bowling Green, KY 42104 210 Dixon Rd. Mickey Garner Jamestown, KY 42629 P.O. Box 435 Walton Haddix Albany, KY 42602 RR #3, Box 374 Lyle Huff Albany, KY 42602 304 J. McQueary Rd. Jimmy McQueary Russell Springs, KY 42642 389 Monk Springs Rd. Greg Popplewell Jamestown, KY 42629 1834 W. Steve Warriner Dr. Gary Robertson Russell Springs, KY 42642 RR4, Box 948 Jimmie Sloan 606-387-5126 Albany, KY 42602 P.O. Box 129 Nicky Smith Albany, KY 42602 234 Jumpoff Rd. Carl Carney 270-343-3434 Jamestown, KY 42629 275 Jumpoff Rd. Anthony Carver 270-343-6350 Jamestown, KY 42629 5592 Hwy. 379 Jeffrey Cloy 270-343-3276 Russell Springs, KY 42642 PHONE NAME ADDRESS EMAIL ADDRESS NUMBER 1215 W. Hwy.92 Kenneth Hay 270-343-4173 Jamestown, KY 42629 RR2, Box 513 David Honeycutt 606-387-5647 Albany, KY 42602 240 Stella Rd. Willis McClure 270-343-3749 Jamestown, KY 42629 2535 Swan Pond Rd. Billy and Carol Severns 270-343-6455 Jamestown, KY 42629 850 Boat Dock Rd. Craig Shoe 606-679-6337 Somerset, KY 42501 RR4, Box 948 Ned Sloan 606-387-5126 Albany, KY 42602 RR2, Box 36 Pam Theele 606-387-4847 Albany, KY 42602 5717 South Hwy. 127 Billy Tupman 270-343-3388 Jamestown, KY 42629 Billy Williams P.O. Box 1038 270-566-0982 Russell Springs, KY 42642 Amanda Abner KYTC DEA 502-564-7250 [email protected] Cathi Blair KYTC District 8 606-677-4017 [email protected] Joe Cox KYTC District 8 606-677-4017 [email protected] Helen Powell H. Powell and Co. 859-233-9416 [email protected] Tom Springer Qk4 502-585-2222 [email protected] Kirk Reinke Qk4 502-585-2222 [email protected] Joe Cox, KYTC District 8, welcomed everyone to the meeting. He introduced the consultant team members that were present, and gave a brief overview of the project’s history. Then he stated the focus and goals for the meeting: to discuss historic sites in the area and the Area of Potential Effect for the project. Tom Springer, Qk4, made a presentation about the project, the joint KY-FHWA\KYTC Section 106 process, Section 4(f), the Area of Potential Effect (APE), and the four sites currently believed eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. He then led the group in a discussion of those issues, and opened the floor for questions. Discussion centered on the Creelsboro Rural Historic District and the portions of the alignments crossing it. The attendees asked few questions about the APE and the four sites deemed eligible, except for the Wolf Creek Dam. Most of the discussion was about the crossing of the Creelsboro Rural Historic District, including specific routes of the alignments, height and length of the bridge over the Cumberland River, and coordination efforts with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers concerning the dam and fish hatchery. The attendees felt that the alignment that crosses Swan Pond Bottom would better minimize the effects to and use of the historic district since it is the furthest from the historic Creelsboro area and on the other side of the river. They noted that it would also provide improved access in and out of Swan Pond Bottom. Attendees were provided copies of the Eligibility Report and maps of the APE, and asked to provide any comments to the KYTC District 8 office within thirty days. END OF MINUTES KJR/kjr cc: Attendees File No. U:\01110\Docs\ Mtg Minutes\Jan 11, 2007 CP Mtg Project Overview US 127 Realignment Meeting Agenda: KYTC Item Nos.: 8-108, 115.01 1. Project Overview 2. Review of Section 106 Process Insert map First Section 106 3. Review of Section 4(f) 4. Review and Discuss Area of Potential Effect Consulting Parties Meeting (APE) 5. Review and Discuss Eligibility of Properties 6. Questions January 11, 2007 7. Next Steps Section 106 Project Overview Project Overview PURPOSE: Process Realigned US 127 Between KY 90 and Jamestown • Meet transportation demands and capacity needs Bypass 1. Undertaking • Improve safety —yes • ~ 20 miles in length • Enhance tourism and economic growth • 2-lane undivided road with truck 2. Information NEED: climbing lanes Gathering • Increasing traffic and congestion • Partial-controlled access — underway 2002 daily average = 2,200 VPD; 2026 daily average = 3,600 VPD • Three interweaving alignments • Narrow, winding road, 15% - 20% heavy trucks, high accident rate • Ability to “mix and match” segments • Area tourist attractions becoming more popular Section 106 Section 106 Section 106 Process Process Process 3. Initiate 4. Public 5. Potential Effect? Consultation Notification —yes Oct. 31, 2002 Sent Letter to Public Jan. 30, 2003 6. Consult on APE Officials Public Meeting — Objective of - Clinton County Tonight’s -Russell County Meeting - Albany - Jamestown 7. Decision on APE - SHPO — Shortly After - FHWA Tonight’s Meeting Section 106 Section 106 Section 106 Process Process Process 10. Assess Adverse 8. Identify Historic 11. SHPO Effects: Properties Determinations 1. Consultant — Objective of of Effect Prepares Tonight’s Presented to Draft Effects Meeting Consulting Determination Parties 9. Decision on 2. Reviewed by — Next Eligibility KYTC Consulting — After Historian Parties Meeting Tonight’s 3. Sent to Meeting SHPO Section 106 Process Role of Section 106 Role of Section 106 12. If Adverse Consulting Parties Consulting Parties Effects: Consulting Parties include: • Provide information on potential historic — Identify • Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP) properties Mitigation or - if they elect to participate Enhancements to • Federal Agency – FHWA • Review pertinent information about the “Resolve • Applicant – KYTC project Adverse Effects” • Native American Tribes • Share views and offer ideas about effects to —Hold CP Mtg.
Recommended publications
  • Brochure Design by Communication Design, Inc., Richmond, VA 877-584-8395 Cheatham Co
    To Riggins Hill CLARKSVILLE MURFREESBORO and Fort Defiance Scroll flask and .36 caliber Navy Colt bullet mold N found at Camp Trousdale . S P R site in Sumner County. IN G Stones River S T Courtesy Pat Meguiar . 41 National Battlefield The Cannon Ball House 96 and Cemetery in Blountville still 41 Oaklands shows shell damage to Mansion KNOXVILLE ST. the exterior clapboard LEGE Recapture of 441 COL 231 Evergreen in the rear of the house. Clarksville Cemetery Clarksville 275 40 in the Civil War Rutherford To Ramsey Surrender of ST. County Knoxville National Cemetery House MMERCE Clarksville CO 41 96 Courthouse Old Gray Cemetery Plantation Customs House Whitfield, Museum Bradley & Co. Knoxville Mabry-Hazen Court House House 231 40 “Drawing Artillery Across the Mountains,” East Tennessee Saltville 24 Fort History Center Harper’s Weekly, Nov. 21, 1863 (Multiple Sites) Bleak House Sanders Museum 70 60 68 Crew repairing railroad Chilhowie Fort Dickerson 68 track near Murfreesboro 231 after Battle of Stones River, 1863 – Courtesy 421 81 Library of Congress 129 High Ground 441 Abingdon Park “Battle of Shiloh” – Courtesy Library of Congress 58 41 79 23 58 Gen. George H. Thomas Cumberland 421 Courtesy Library of Congress Gap NHP 58 Tennessee Capitol, Nashville, 1864 Cordell Hull Bristol Courtesy Library of Congress Adams Birthplace (East Hill Cemetery) 51 (Ft. Redmond) Cold Spring School Kingsport Riggins Port Royal Duval-Groves House State Park Mountain Hill State Park City 127 (Lincoln and the 33 Blountville 79 Red Boiling Springs Affair at Travisville 431 65 Portland Indian Mountain Cumberland Gap) 70 11W (See Inset) Clarksville 76 (Palace Park) Clay Co.
    [Show full text]
  • The Other Side of the Monument: Memory, Preservation, and the Battles of Franklin and Nashville
    THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MONUMENT: MEMORY, PRESERVATION, AND THE BATTLES OF FRANKLIN AND NASHVILLE by JOE R. BAILEY B.S., Austin Peay State University, 2006 M.A., Austin Peay State University, 2008 AN ABSTRACT OF A DISSERTATION submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of History College of Arts and Sciences KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY Manhattan, Kansas 2015 Abstract The thriving areas of development around the cities of Franklin and Nashville in Tennessee bear little evidence of the large battles that took place there during November and December, 1864. Pointing to modern development to explain the failed preservation of those battlefields, however, radically oversimplifies how those battlefields became relatively obscure. Instead, the major factor contributing to the lack of preservation of the Franklin and Nashville battlefields was a fractured collective memory of the two events; there was no unified narrative of the battles. For an extended period after the war, there was little effort to remember the Tennessee Campaign. Local citizens and veterans of the battles simply wanted to forget the horrific battles that haunted their memories. Furthermore, the United States government was not interested in saving the battlefields at Franklin and Nashville. Federal authorities, including the War Department and Congress, had grown tired of funding battlefields as national parks and could not be convinced that the two battlefields were worthy of preservation. Moreover, Southerners and Northerners remembered Franklin and Nashville in different ways, and historians mainly stressed Eastern Theater battles, failing to assign much significance to Franklin and Nashville. Throughout the 20th century, infrastructure development encroached on the battlefields and they continued to fade from public memory.
    [Show full text]
  • Champ Ferguson and the Civil War in Appalachia
    Brian Dallas McKnight. Confederate Outlaw: Champ Ferguson and the Civil War in Appalachia. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2011. 288 pp. $34.95, cloth, ISBN 978-0-8071-3769-7. Reviewed by Samuel B. McGuire Published on H-Appalachia (September, 2011) Commissioned by Steven Nash (Post-Doctoral Fellow, Department of History, East Tennessee State University) For three decades historians have contributed because a “frontier culture remained strong in the significantly to our understanding of the Civil War isolated children and grandchildren of the origi‐ by assessing the multiple roles of unconventional nal settlers.”[2] Employing an array of archival warfare. Scholars--such as Michael Fellman, Clay sources--including newspaper editorials, manu‐ Montcastle, and Daniel Sutherland--not only re‐ script collections, and postwar trial testimony-- vealed the pervasiveness of irregular warfare on McKnight maintains that Cumberland high‐ the Confederate home front, but also examined landers’ war-induced paranoia and pragmatic the ways in which guerrilla activities shaped offi‐ survivor mentality inflamed the merciless guerril‐ cial war policies and the course of the broader la warfare. He also argues that Ferguson’s conventional conflict.[1] Augmenting this bur‐ Manichean outlook, in which he viewed the con‐ geoning scholarship on Civil War irregulars, Brian flict in stark terms of good versus evil with no McKnight’s biography explores the life of one of middle ground, was founded upon a rudimentary the most notorious pro-Confederate guerrillas, understanding of Old Testament scripture. Champ Ferguson, and sheds light on the chaotic Organized chronologically, McKnight’s study irregular war that wracked many mountain South initially provides insight into Ferguson’s prewar communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Confederate Guerrillas and the Defense of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad
    A Unique Hell in Southwestern Virginia: Confederate Guerrillas and the Defense of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad Nicholas A. Nowland Thesis submitted to the faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts In History Paul D. Quigley, Chair A. Roger Ekirch Daniel B. Thorp 22 August, 2016 Blacksburg, Virginia Keywords: Civil War; Southwestern Virginia; Guerrillas; Partisan Rangers; Bushwhackers; Home Guards; Guerrilla Warfare Copyright 2016 by Nicholas A. Nowland ii A Unique Hell in Southwestern Virginia: Confederate Guerrillas and the Defense of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad Nicholas A. Nowland ABSTRACT During the United States Civil War, southwestern Virginia was mired in a bloody guerrilla conflict that involved Confederate irregular combatants defending the region from invading or raiding Union Army forces. Simmering for the entirety of the war, this conflict revolved around the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad (V&T), a critical railway that ran through southwestern Virginia and connected the southwestern Confederacy with Richmond and the rest of Virginia. As the war progressed, this railway moved increasingly large amounts of foodstuffs and minerals vital to the Confederate war effort, and by the later stages of the war it was the most important railway in the South. Union Army commanders in West Virginia recognized the incredible importance of the V&T to the Confederacy, and launched a multitude of major and minor invasions and raids into southwestern Virginia with the intent of crippling the railroad. Confederate partisan rangers, bushwhackers, and home guards played separate roles in weakening, distracting, and hampering Union Army operations in southwestern Virginia, thereby helping to defend the V&T from attacks.
    [Show full text]
  • Tennessee Civil War Trails Program 213 Newly Interpreted Marker
    Tennessee Civil War Trails Program 213 Newly Interpreted Markers Installed as of 6/9/11 Note: Some sites include multiple markers. BENTON COUNTY Fighting on the Tennessee River: located at Birdsong Marina, 225 Marina Rd., Hwy 191 N., Camden, TN 38327. During the Civil War, several engagements occurred along the strategically important Tennessee River within about five miles of here. In each case, cavalrymen engaged naval forces. On April 26, 1863, near the mouth of the Duck River east of here, Confederate Maj. Robert M. White’s 6th Texas Rangers and its four-gun battery attacked a Union flotilla from the riverbank. The gunboats Autocrat, Diana, and Adams and several transports came under heavy fire. When the vessels drove the Confederate cannons out of range with small-arms and artillery fire, Union Gen. Alfred W. Ellet ordered the gunboats to land their forces; signalmen on the exposed decks “wig-wagged” the orders with flags. BLOUNT COUNTY Maryville During the Civil War: located at 301 McGee Street, Maryville, TN 37801. During the antebellum period, Blount County supported abolitionism. In 1822, local Quakers and other residents formed an abolitionist society, and in the decades following, local clergymen preached against the evils of slavery. When the county considered secession in 1861, residents voted to remain with the Union, 1,766 to 414. Fighting directly touched Maryville, the county seat, in August 1864. Confederate Gen. Joseph Wheeler’s cavalrymen attacked a small detachment of the 2nd Tennessee Infantry (U.S.) under Lt. James M. Dorton at the courthouse. The Underground Railroad: located at 503 West Hill Ave., Friendsville, TN 37737.
    [Show full text]
  • Civil War Book Review Annotations
    Civil War Book Review Spring 2009 Article 21 Annotations CWBR_Editor Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr Recommended Citation CWBR_Editor (2009) "Annotations," Civil War Book Review: Vol. 11 : Iss. 2 . Available at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol11/iss2/21 CWBR_Editor: Annotations ANNOTATIONS Sandler, Roberta Spring 2009 Sandler, Roberta A Brief Guide to Florida’s Monuments and Memorials. University Press of Florida, $21.95 softcover ISBN 9780813032580 Polley, J.B. McCaslin, Richard B., ed. Spring 2009 Polley, J.B. and McCaslin, Richard B., ed.. A Soldier’s Letters to Charming Nellie. The University of Tennessee Press, $39.95 hardcover ISBN 9781572336131 Wafer, Francis M. Wells, Cheryl A., ed. Spring 2009 Wafer, Francis M. and Wells, Cheryl A., ed.. A Surgeon in the Army of the Potomac. McGill-Queen’s University Press, $29.95 hardcover ISBN 9780773533813 Szasz, Ferenc Morton Spring 2009 Szasz, Ferenc Morton Abraham Lincoln and Robert Burns: Connected Lives and Legends. Southern Illinois University Press, $27.95 hardcover ISBN 9780809328550 Lamb, Brian Swain, Susan, eds. Spring 2009 Published by LSU Digital Commons, 2009 1 Civil War Book Review, Vol. 11, Iss. 2 [2009], Art. 21 Lamb, Brian and Swain, Susan, eds.. Abraham Lincoln: Great American Historians on our Sixteenth President. Public Affairs, $27.95 hardcover ISBN 9781586486761 Crump, Thomas Spring 2009 Crump, Thomas Abraham Lincoln’s World: How Riverboats, Railroads, and Republicans Transformed America. Continuum, $24.95 hardcover ISBN 9781847250575 Patrakis, Joan Silva Spring 2009 Patrakis, Joan Silva Andover in the Civil War: The Spirit and Sacrifice of a New England Town. The History Press, $21.99 softcover ISBN 9781596294370 Griffin, Martin Spring 2009 Griffin, Martin Ashes of the Mind: War and Memory in Northern Literature, 1865-1900.
    [Show full text]
  • Information to Users
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand corner and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI University Microfilms International A Bell & Howell Information Com pany 300 North Zeeb Road. Ann Arbor. Ml 48106-1346 USA 313/761-4700 800/521-0600 Order Number 9325494 “War at every man’s door” : The struggle for East Tennessee, 1860—1869. (Volumes I and n) Fisher, Noel Charles, Ph.D.
    [Show full text]
  • CALENDAR COMPILED by COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK More Than 50 Vendors
    PLEASE NOTE: Because of the developing coronavirus situation, JULY/AUGUST many of these planned events may have been postponed or 2021 canceled. Please seek updated information before traveling. COMPILED BY COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK CALENDAR more than 50 vendors. Live music, food vendors. AUG. 3 – National Night Out, downtown Sidney. NORTHWEST For questions, call Riverside Art Center at 419- Find us on the square for fun activities and food, all to 738-2352 or visit www.facebook.com/The-Moon- promote police-community partnerships; crime, drug, Market-101791285311307. and violence prevention; safety; and neighborhood JUL. 19–25 – Ottawa County Fair, Ottawa Co. Fgds., unity. 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org. 7870 W. St. Rte. 163, Oak Harbor. 419-898-1971 or www. AUG. 5–8 – Northwest Ohio Antique Machinery ottawacountyfair.org. Association Show, Hancock Co. Fgds., 1017 E. JUL. 24–25 – Van Wert Railroad Heritage Weekend, Sandusky St., Findlay. Tractors, engines, scooters, Van Wert Co. Fgds., 1055 S. Washington St., Van Wert, garden tractors, arts and crafts, consignment Sat. 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $6; 2-day sales. This year we are hosting “The Gathering admission, $8; free for ages 12 and under. 200 vendor of the Orange,” the Allis Chalmers State tables with more than a dozen operating layouts and Show. 419-722-4698 or www.facebook.com/ THROUGH OCT. 9 – The Great Sidney Farmers displays. Food court and/or food trucks. Free stuff for NorthwestOhioAntiqueMachineryAssociation. Market, Courthouse Square, 109 S. Ohio Ave., every the kids! 260-760-1666 or [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • Patriots and Guerillas
    This page intentionally left blank TIlE PATRIOTS AND GUERILLAS OF "EAST TENNESSEE AND KENTUCKY. TnE SUFFERINGS OF TilE PATRIOTS. ALSO rIll!: EXPERIENCE OF TilE AUTIlOR AS AN OFFICER IN TilE t;NION AllllY. INOLUDING SKETCnES OF NOTED GUElULLAS AXD DISTIXmrlSIIED PATRIOTS. Uy l\IAJOlt J. A. BRENTS. NEW YORK: J. A. BREN'l'S. HENRY DEXTER, PUBLISIIEP,'S AGEX'l'. 113 ;,{ASSAU STREET. 1863. Entered, according to Act of l'OlJ~rCb', ill the yeur 186~, by ,JOI1~ F. TltllW, In tho Clerk's Office of the Ilhtril'( Court of the LllitCtl ~tutc. for the Southcrn District of X c IV York• •J()H~ F. Tncnf'. PRINTER, HTEREOT\,PUI. A:"IoIl F:LEC'TROTVPJ::R, 4.6. (8, & flO OrcllIIc Street, New York. PREFACE. TilE public mind is at this time directed to the progress of the civil war which is desolating om beautiful land. The peoplc arc anxious to know ,,-hat has been done, and who did it. Espccially IHwe they sought. with cagerness for information respecting the loyal East Tennesseeans. Public anxiety also lIas bcen. manifestcd, ever since the commencement ot the war) in regard to affairs in Kentncky; and people generally are desirons to know the history of men who are charged with hav­ ing committed black and bloody crimes . .The writer is a Kentuckian, residing upon the Tennessee line, and ""Served cleven months as an officer in the Union army. His position npon the border and in the army gave him an opportunity to obtain much valuable information in regard to the loyal East Tennesseeans, the state of affairs in Kentucky, the progress of the war in the 'Vest, what has been done in Kentucky and Tennessee 4 PREFACE.
    [Show full text]
  • Unconventional Warfare in East Tennessee, 1861-1865
    University of Tennessee, Knoxville TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Masters Theses Graduate School 3-1963 Unconventional Warfare in East Tennessee, 1861-1865 Paul A. Whelan University of Tennessee - Knoxville Follow this and additional works at: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Whelan, Paul A., "Unconventional Warfare in East Tennessee, 1861-1865. " Master's Thesis, University of Tennessee, 1963. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/1479 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To the Graduate Council: I am submitting herewith a thesis written by Paul A. Whelan entitled "Unconventional Warfare in East Tennessee, 1861-1865." I have examined the final electronic copy of this thesis for form and content and recommend that it be accepted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree of Master of Arts, with a major in History. LeRoy P. Graf, Major Professor We have read this thesis and recommend its acceptance: S. J. Folmsbee, Ralph W. Haskins Accepted for the Council: Carolyn R. Hodges Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School (Original signatures are on file with official studentecor r ds.) March 6 � 1963 To the Graduate Council: I am submitting herewith a thesis written by Paul Ao Whe lan entitled "Unconventional Warfare in East Tennesseei l861=1865o00 I recom= mend that it be accepted for nine quarter hours of credit in partial fu lfillment of the requirements for the de gree of Master of Arts� with a maj or in Historyo We have read this thesis and recommend its acceptance: Accepted for the Council: \ De'/f{d.l�an of the Graduate School dc��7/ UNCONVENTIONAL WARFARE IN EA ST TENNESSEE.
    [Show full text]
  • Two Gallant Leaders at the Battle of Murfreesboro*
    TWO GALLANT LEADERS AT THE BATTLE OF MURFREESBORO* Harris D. Riley, Jr., M.D. *From the Children's Hospital of Oklahoma, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma "In the cedar-brakes that border the stream of 23 Stone River, in Tennessee, was fought on the last day of 1862 an action that must always be memorable in the history of war. When first its story was flashed over the land, men only saw that a battle, fierce and terrible beyond all previous example in the West, had been delivered. But when the true relations of this contest came to be apprehended, it was perceived to have a weight and meaning beyond that which attaches to any mere passage of arms--it was seen that it bore upon the whole life of the rebellion. .We readily discern that it is one of those few pivotal actions upon which, in very truth, turned the whole issue of the war (1)." This is how William Swinton in his The Twelve Decisive Battles of the War characterized the Civil War battle of Murfreesboro (or Stones River) in Middle Tennessee which took place on December 31, 1862- January 2, 1863. As battles go, the fierce and far-reaching encounter at Murfreesboro between Braxton Bragg 's Confederate Army of Tennessee and William Rosecrans ' s Federal Army of the Cumberland ranks as one of the bloodiest ever (2). Heroes were numerous on each side at Murfreesboro. Of the many, I have selected two — one from each side — to tell about because of the key role each played in the battle.
    [Show full text]
  • The Union Artillery and Breckinridge's Attack
    , UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE F ILE CODE: TH£ UNION ARTILLERY AND BRECKI NRIDGE'S A'l'fACK - (Research Proje ct #2) - Chapt er I "The Yankee' s Occupy a Dangerous Posit ion - The Rebels Prepare to Counter-at tack" Chapter II 11 Br eckinr idge 1 s Assault" Chapter III - "The Union Counter- Att ack" II . By: Edwi.n C. Bearss Research Hi storian FROM : Region Ore IMPORTANT July, 1959 !1'!• :~ file constitutes a part of Ute official records of ~ TO: \] Park Sen·ice and should not be separated or papers ~v.'11 ,,.. ithout ~-ore:ss authority of the official in charge. Oe\ ~il•• should 1x:· returned promptly to the File Room. bc~als and employees will be held respon$ible for failure Storres River Ni>tional Saffteflef3 t: ~:rv~ these rules, '"'hich a:r-e nccc-ssary to protect the Rt. :o. Box 495. ()!d ~..=as:1v: : !e Hwy. tn'tty of the official ~onls. · Mumeestoro, Ten;iessee 37130 :rHE UNION ARTILI.E.~Y _4ND 9RECKINRIIGE 1 S ATTACK Chapter I -nIB '!".~l;KSE'S OCCUPY A DANGEROUS POSITIO!l 'fd£ REBEIS PREPARE '.!O COUNTER- ATTACK Once t he terrible f i ghting of the ) 1st had drawn to a close Brigadier General Horatio P. Van Cleve found t hat the slight wound which he had received earlier i n Uie day had become unbearably painful, Therefore the general found it necessary to turn over the co=nd of his di vision to his ranking brigade commander - Brigadier General Samuel Beatty. 1 At) a .
    [Show full text]