A Publication of Humanities Tennessee

Lost Elkmont

Lost Elkmont

Lost Elkmont

Daniel L. Paulin

Arcadia Publishing
128 pages
$21.99

“Prior to the formation of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP) in 1934, the small community of Elkmont was established as a logging camp by Col. Wilson B. Townsends Little River Lumber Company around 1908. This was after he purchased 86,000 acres of mostly virgin forest. The area that was previously inhabited by various American Indian groups, and later by European-American settlers beginning around 1830, was to become for a time the second largest town in Sevier County, Tennessee. “

–From the publisher

The Outdoor Table

The Outdoor Table

The Outdoor Table

April McKinney

Thomas Nelson
288 pages
$26.99

“April McKinney celebrates the tradition of packing up your best food and enjoying a meal outdoors.”

–From the publisher

Images of America: Memphis Zoo

Images of America: Memphis Zoo

Images of America: Memphis Zoo

Robert W. Dye

Arcadia Publishing
128 pages
$21.99

” Established in 1906 by the Memphis Park Commission, the zoo has become a Memphis institution. It seems like everyone in Memphis has an Elvis story, but just as many Memphians have memories of the zoo and attractions like the Lion House, Monkey Island, or the free one-ring circus.”

–From the publisher

All-Girls Education from Ward Seminary to Harpeth Hall

All-Girls Education from Ward Seminary to Harpeth Hall

All-Girls Education from Ward Seminary to Harpeth Hall

Mary Ellen Pethel

Arcadia Publishing
240 pages
$29.99

“As Harpeth Hall celebrates 150 years, its story reflects a unique case study and provides a lens through which to understand the evolution of all-girls education in the United States. The Harpeth Hall School remains one of the oldest all-girls college preparatory schools in the South.”

–From the publisher

Letters from the Farm

Letters from the Farm

Letters from the Farm

Becca Stevens

Morehouse Publishing
160 pages
$11.68

“Following simple road signs like courage, humility, forgiveness, compassion, and faithfulness that others have put at the crossroads for me has made the work possible and left me grateful. I want to pass along through these letters a tradition of a priesthood that is grounded in the idea that love heals and healing is the central-most sacrament of the church”

–From the author

The Fabric of Our Economy

September 11, 2014 History is often told through the stories of wars, famines, and presidents, but as Harvard historian Sven Beckert shows in his new book, it can also be told through a simple, everyday crop: cotton. Beckert will discuss Empire of Cotton at Rhodes College in Memphis on September 17, 2015, at 6 p.m.

The Fabric of Our Economy

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