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33 results for "Chapman, Ashton"
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Record #:
8902
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There are many superstitious toothache remedies in North Carolina. Ranging from animal parts tied around the neck to chewing tree roots, these remedies are a part of North Carolina's culture. Article is reprinted from the January, 1975 edition.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 51 Issue 8, Jan 1984, p37, por
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Record #:
8955
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The Walk of Fame at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida, recently added a stone for North Carolina's best known author, Thomas Wolfe. The walk is bordered by over 800 stones such as Wolfe's, and all are from the birthplace or other spot associated with the person they honor. Begun fifty years ago as a personal hobby by Dr. Hamilton Holt, then president of Rollins, as many as thirty stones are added to the walk each year.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 47 Issue 3, Aug 1979, p21-22, 33, il
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Record #:
9385
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Folklore includes numerous tooth-related superstitions that seem ludicrous today. Two different species of trees in North Carolina, Aralia sinosa and Zanthoxylum americanum are both commonly known as “toothache tree” for their supposed medicinal value. In rural areas men known as “tooth jumpers” once practiced tooth removal with a punch and mallet.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 42 Issue 8, Jan 1975, p19-20, il
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Record #:
9816
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The Marryin' Tree, or Big Lynn, of Little Switzerland, was cut down in January 1965, because it had become a hazard to passing traffic. The tree was registered by the National Forest Association as the champion of the linden species in the country and was estimated to between 500 and 600 years old.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 43 Issue 3, Aug 1975, p22-24, il
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Record #:
12255
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Pigeon Roost resident, Harvey James Miller, was sole contributor to the Winter 1974 edition of FOXFIRE MAGAZINE, a publication dedicated to preserving the knowledge of folkways, folklore, and crafts of southern Appalachia. Miller's homespun writing style and grassroots reporting provide an authentic and thorough account of a vanishing lifestyle.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 42 Issue 10, Mar 1975, p18-19, 37, il
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Record #:
9990
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Judge Spencer A. Martin, having lived much of his life in Arkansas, settled his home in Spruce Pine, North Carolina. Judge Martin served in the Arkansas House of Representatives and was eventually appointed county judge. Martin was once Confederate prisoner of war after sustaining a wound to the collarbone.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 41 Issue 9, Feb 1974, p20-21, 24, por
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Record #:
12343
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Thomas Dixon, the well-known author of \"The Birth of a Nation,\" purchased 1,400 acres of mountain land called Wildacres in McDowell County with the vision of creating a campus for an artists' colony. The vision never was realized, and he lost the property in the crash of 1929. In 1936, I. D. Blumenthal purchased Wildacres for a mere $6,500. Under his direction, it has become the gathering place for groups seeking spiritual and intellectual refreshment, rest, and recreation.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 42 Issue 5, Oct 1974, p18-20, il
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Record #:
9946
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Francis Silvers, also known as Frankie, was convicted of killing her husband Charlie Silvers and executed on July 12, 1833 in Morganton, making her the only white woman ever hanged in North Carolina. Despite initial claims of innocence, Frankie Silvers eventually admitted to killing her husband with an axe, dismembering his body, and burning the pieces in the fireplace of their Burke (now Mitchell) County cabin. Always a prime subject for folklore writers, the latest offering on the Frankie Silvers saga is a 60-page booklet by Maxine McCall titled “They Won't Hang a White Woman”, prepared in conjunction with the Burke County Cultural Heritage Project, ESEA (Elementary Secondary Education Act) Title III.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 40 Issue 16, Feb 1973, p18-19, 43
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Record #:
9911
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Sonya Hagna, founder and owner of the highly successful Dilly Bean business, has started a new company, Tawashi, Inc., that manufactures and sells wash cloths made from the spongy fibers of the Hischima plant, a gourd very similar to the Luffa cylindrical. Hagna, a High Point native, has received extensive national coverage as a female entrepreneur in national magazines such as TIME and PAGEANT.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 40 Issue 4, July 1972, p15-16, il, por
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Record #:
24559
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Dr. M. W. Webb and Earnest L. Briggs acquired historic ‘Pleasant Valley’ in Burke County in 1969 and discovered a wealth of antique buttons in the attic. This article discusses the history and significance of the buttons.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 39 Issue 17, February 1972, p8-10, il
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Record #:
10648
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The retirement home of Prof. Charles Halleck Wing, a unique two-story, six room house with no inside stairway, has been moved to Gouge's Creek from its original location in the Ledger Community of Mitchell County. Prof. Wing, a native of Brighton, MA, served as a professor of chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is credited with establishing bookmobile services for libraries. Prof. Wing also established a free school and the Good Will Free Library containing some 12,000 volumes, a considerable amount of books for a small rural community like Ledger in the 1880s.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 38 Issue 18, Feb 1971, p11-12, il
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Record #:
10622
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F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, lived much of their famously troubled lives in the mountains of North Carolina. Fitzgerald, who was from Baltimore, visited western North Carolina in February 1935, when traveling to Tryon in Polk County. The Sayre family had summered in Polk County, in Saluda, ten miles from Tryon, since Zelda was ten years old. Both F. Scott and Zelda returned to western North Carolina many times for rest and rehabilitation, F. Scott for his tuberculosis and alcoholism and Zelda for treatment of schizophrenia. Zelda, who was an accomplished writer, painter, and dancer, remained at Highland Hospital in Asheville when F. Scott relocated to Hollywood, and was released after four years on the occasion of Scott's death. Zelda returned for treatment again and died in a fire at the hospital in 1948.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 38 Issue 9, Oct 1970, p13-14, por
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Record #:
10731
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The account that Thomas Wolfe's mother gave him of a Mitchell county triple murder served as his inspiration for his short story, \"The Web of Earth,\" which was published in a volume of his collected pieces titled FROM DEATH TO MORNING. The triple slaying that Wolfe used as the basis for this story occurred in 1885 at the Miller-Horton mica mine just off present State Highway 226, approximately four miles north of Spruce Pine. Wolfe's mother also related her involvement in the case to her son, specifically her having given shoes to the escaped convicts that had been convicted of the killings and jailed in Asheville.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 37 Issue 18, Feb 1970, p15-16, por
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Record #:
10808
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Various authorities including the latest edition of Encyclopedia Britannica, now agree that a considerable amount of sheet mica from the North Carolina mountains eventually ended up in ancient burial mounds in southern Ohio. The mound builders were once considered a separate race that pre-dated the Indians, whom the earliest white explorers found on the North American continent. Anthropologists now believe that these mound builders were actually ancestors of the tribes who were found occupying the land when Columbus arrived.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 36 Issue 18, Feb 1969, p13-14, il
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Record #:
10826
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Henry Bacon, the notable architect who designed the Lincoln Memorial, also had deep roots in North Carolina. Having spent eight years of his childhood in Wilmington, Bacon returned to the area often during his lifetime, designing a number of homes for residents of Wilmington as well as several buildings in Linville, which the late Hugh MacRae began developing as a summer resort in 1891. Bacon died on February 16, 1924 and was buried in Wilmington.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 36 Issue 24, May 1969, p13, 18-19, il
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