Rambles through The Volunteer State as a way of introducing residents, visitors and all who love the great outdoors to Tennessee, this wonderful place we call home

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Start Sending Your The Invitations Out Now For Tennessee’s Big Summer Solar Event


        Friends and family been promising to visit you here in The Volunteer State?
This summer brings one of the best excuses to make that journey and discover all Tennessee offers.
Monday, August 21 a good swath of the state will be directly in the path of one of the most anticipated of all celestial events: a total eclipse of the sun! 
        For almost three minutes early that afternoon the sun will be transformed into a black sphere, surrounded by its dramatic, blazing corona. For young and old, observer and photographer, it’s an opportunity to experience what is truly a once-in-a-lifetime event, right here at home
The path of the total eclipse through Tennessee
Total solar eclipses are so rare in any part of the world that people plan and communities promote vacations and tours around them. Nashville, the largest American city in the path of full totality, has already taken that lead, billing itself as the Music City Total Eclipse  on its tourism website, complete with a countdown clock. Tennessee’s celebrated state parks are also talking it up, with a page devoted to the eclipse, including duration for observers in each park. 
Wherever you live, you can also find out when and how long the eclipse will be visible in your area on sites like The Great American Eclipse  and  Eclipse2017.or
        
        So here’s your opportunity: Get those invitations out now.
        And, start praying for blue skies next August 21.

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Stones River Remembered As A Turning Point In Tennessee's Rich Civil War History

Confederate re-enactors fire a volley
 at Stones River National Battlefield in Murfreesboro.
As the old year wound down, history buffs gathered at Stones River National Battlefield to commemorate the start of one of the Civil War’s bloodiest encounters, in Murfreesboro along the old Nashville Pike. December 31, 1862 through January 2 ,1863 an estimated 81,000 soldiers of the Union and Confederacy valiantly fought there for control of Middle Tennessee.The Battle of Stones River, one of the war’s bloodiest, was ultimately decided as a much-needed victory for the North just as the Emancipation Proclamation became the law of the land.
Each year the rangers at Stones River, and volunteer re-enactors, present days of events timed to the battle, as it unfolded. Ours focused on its bloody beginnings at locations appropriately memorialized as “The Slaughter Pen” and “Hell’s Half Acre.”
The programs provide insight into the terror, confusion, determination  and sacrifices of all engaged. Re-enactors in uniforms of both armies fire authentic rifles and artillery, as eyewitness accounts of the battles are read. 
Anyone interested in state and national history, and Tennessee’s vital importance to both armies, will gain much from a visit to Stones River, or any of the state’s five other nationally protected Civil War sites: Shiloh National Military ParkChickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, Cumberland Gap National Historic Park, Fort Donelson National Battlefield and the Andrew Johnson National Historic Site.

The “War Between The States” touched all corners of Tennessee in one way or another. To learn more, download or pick up a copy of Tennessee’s Civil War Trail map, compiled to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the end of the conflict (available on the Civil War Traveler website), or Tennessee Tourism's guide to the war, as lived throughout the state.