Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.
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for "James, A. Everette, Jr"
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Abstract:
Mr. Arliss has been whittling wood his entire life; he started by making children’s toys, but much of what he carved reflected his childhood and important figures and themes of the world around him.
Abstract:
Warren County native Claude Richardson, member of the Haliwa-Saponi tribe, has won recognition as a folk artist who carves local soapstone.
Abstract:
Rough-hewn and homely roothead decoys carved on the Outer Banks are highly prized by collectors who pay thousands of dollars for them. Most were carved before 1918, and carvers between Portsmouth Island and Hatteras Village are credited with their construction and use in the 19th-century. They are called roothead decoys because the carver used natural curves in roots and branches to form decoy heads.