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Post by Deleted on Jul 15, 2015 13:42:35 GMT
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Post by jassytoo on Jul 15, 2015 14:05:44 GMT
Thanks for that, I really enjoyed the article. I'm going to see if I can find the book.
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Post by Melissa on Jul 15, 2015 15:30:36 GMT
I was reading this a few days ago and was going to post it in the Good Old Days forum, but never got around to it. Glad you posted it! Pretty interesting how they lived and thrived.
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Post by whisperwindkat on Jul 16, 2015 10:25:24 GMT
Oh my I love it.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 17, 2015 12:23:38 GMT
great read
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Post by Rustaholic on Jul 18, 2015 17:09:40 GMT
Thanks for that, I really enjoyed the article. I'm going to see if I can find the book. Is there a book? I believe it only was an article and I found a place to download it as a PDF.
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Post by willowgirl on Jul 18, 2015 20:54:44 GMT
I am wracking my brain trying to remember the name of the popular folk artist who lived as if it were the 1840s. I believe she was born about 1910 and lived into old age (died within the last 20 years, IIRC). She painted her garden and animals, and her work was often featured on notecards, coffee mugs and the like. Anyone know who I'm talking about?
Never mind! Tasha Tudor was her name.
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Post by my3boys on Jul 19, 2015 22:38:26 GMT
We used to hike to the Walker cabin when we lived in TN and took day trips to the mountains. It's pretty cool. Like going back in time.
There are actually quite a few places like that to visit in the Smokies. And they all have a tale to tell. Lots of interesting and relevant history there.
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Post by farmchix on Jul 21, 2015 14:03:30 GMT
Great article!
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