Showing posts with label Foxfire Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foxfire Museum. Show all posts

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Georgia Magazine Features Foxfire Museum and Heritage Center

Legends of Appalachia

The Foxfire Museum and Heritage Center

The road winding up Black Rock Mountain to the Foxfire Museum and Heritage Center in Mountain City evokes the ones that Appalachian pioneers once traveled by foot or, if they had a little wealth, by horse-drawn cart. It’s a hardscrabble lane with challenging ruts wide enough in some places to allow one car (or wagon) to pull over and let a passerby around. It twists past mountain laurel, wild rhododendron and the homes of people whose staunchly independent ancestors pioneered here hundreds of years ago. Read more. . . . http://georgiamagazine.com/currentissue.asp?menu=22&ID=2220&mon=August

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

FOXFIRE 10

Foxfire 10: Inc. Foxfire Fund, George P. Reynolds: Books


Editorial Reviews




From Publishers Weekly

Although about a quarter of this collection of oral histories is devoted to folk arts and crafts, such as chair-making and gourd art, the focus in this Foxfire volume is on Appalachian history. The Talluhah Falls Railway's impact on the economy and daily life of Rabun County, Ga., gives the setting for interviews on railroad construction work and operation. Other sections consider the boardinghouses that flourished during Tallulah Falls's late-19th-century era of popularity as a vacation spot, and the building of the Fontana Dam. Interviews also explore Depression life--one man tells how his family got by through snitching apples and hunting possum--and the impact of federal programs such as the Civilian Conservation Corps, with its army-style camp, and dollar-a-day jobs in the Works Progress Administration. Although interviewees occasionally enliven the work with their anecdotes and irrepressible personalities, much of the writing and handling of the interviews is pedestrian, though admirable for high-school students. This volume is likely to interest primarily those who are seeking out material on Appalachia, the CCC or the WPA. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Southern Living: "Lessons From The Earth" - Foxfire

Southern Living Magazine gave a nod to the Firefox Museum and Heritage center in their recent article about Patricia Howell and her many talents.
"Plants drew her to Georgia during a spring visit with friends . . . For her, coming to Georgia to set up her first practice was a return to her first love."

"A Master Gardener and a member of the American Herbalists Guild, she teaches classes at the Foxfire Museum and Heritage Center in Mountain City . . . 'This region of the Appalachians is one of the most botanically diverse places on the planet,' says Patricia."