I like to think about those who were here before us. It’s easy to forget there have been generations of others who moved through the same spaces and places through which we move today. Because I work at the Newseum,
It’s Time to Start Writing That Book You’ve Been Thinking About
I’ve spoken with many talented people in the last few months who have a book they want to write, but don’t exactly know where to start once the writing part is done. Most think they need a “publishing deal” to
Announcing my New Biography of Odd McIntyre, Coming April 1, 2017
Researching Odd McIntyre at The Esther Allen Greer Museum at the University of Rio Grande near McIntyre’s hometown of Gallipolis, Ohio. I haven’t blogged much this year because all my time has been spent working on a biography about Odd
Ancestry DNA Results
I finally got my Ancestry DNA results. I haven’t been doing much ancestry research or blogging this year because I’ve been using my spare time to write a book, but I thought a blog entry would be the best way
Search for Video of West Tennessee Reveals a Story of Racism and Murder, Part 2 of 2
Part 2 of 2 / Part one can be found here. Jesse Hill Ford While his successful novels, short stories and the critical and commercial success of “The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones” resulted in Jesse Hill Ford being heralded as
Search for Video of West Tennessee Reveals a Story of Racism and Murder, Part 1 of 2
After reading a few weeks ago that the Brownsville, Tennessee train depot was used as one of the locations for filming the movie “The Liberation of L.B. Jones,” I was anxious to see if it included other locations as well.
Civil War Knights of the Forked Deer
I recently visited the Appomattox County Courthouse where Confederate army commander Robert E. Lee surrendered to Union commander Ulysses S. Grant. Fresh in my mind during the visit was an old article posted a few weeks ago on Facebook by Judge
The Brownsville train depot, gone but not forgotten
Photo: David Duke The Brownsville Depot A photo of the L&N train depot in Brownsville, Tennessee posted by David Duke in the Facebook group “You grew up in Brownsville, Tennessee if…” generated many posts of memories of the old train
The life and death of Will Mathis
My brother-in-law, Alan, recently shared with me a document he found in some of his Mississippi grandmother’s belongings. In great shape other than a few torn and folded edges, this first person account of a man named Will Mathis appeared
Throwing in my two southern cents on the Confederate flag
My grandparent’s farm in Haywood County in the mid-1990s. I’m a Southerner and I love all things related to West Tennessee. If you ask me what symbols represent home, my mind immediately goes to family, cotton fields, cicadas on a