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Heritage AreasBack to Educational Resources
From Native Gardens to Cheese Farms:
The Tennessee Overhill Heritage Association released a new trail guide designed to lead visitors to places where they can purchase slow cured hams, the only cheddar cheese made in Tennessee, apples, daylilies, muscadine wines, and more. There is a dairy plant that offers free tours to learn how ice cream is made, two corn mazes, a Native Plant Garden at the Ocoee Whitewater Center, and a cheese factory run by a sixth generation farmer. Titled AgriCulture in the Tennessee Overhill, this free colorful brochure includes a map marked with suggested stops along the way and a brief overview of the farming history of the Tennessee Overhill, a region in southeast Tennessee that got its name from the earliest farmers who worked the land there – the Overhill Cherokee. The trail follows the backroads and highways of the Tennessee Overhill, sometimes winding alongside scenic rivers, sometimes traveling through pastoral farmlands, and sometimes exploring small towns. The brochure also includes a list of traditional agricultural events like the Annual Ramp Tramp in Greasy Creek, and several county fairs. Farming has always held a place of importance in the Tennessee Overhill for generations, and even though farming has changed, its importance has not diminished. Garden patches, hay bales and silos still dot the landscape and folks who live in the Tennessee Overhill still hold a locally grown melon and a slow cured ham in high regard.
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Furs to Factories Heritage Area:
The entire Tennessee Overhill region has often been called a "museum without walls, showcasing the rich history of the three-county area. The book, From Furs to Factories, tells the story of the industrialization of the region and also serves as in interpretive guidebook to the area. An abbreviated version is available in a free brochure. Today’s explorers will wind along Overhill highways through a landscape of places that do not necessarily fall within a chronological order. Instead, these places serve as a record of change over time, each place acting as an exhibit, a layer or one chapter that is woven into the larger story. Since many of the Overhill towns began as company towns, suggested stops throughout the area often highlight specific occupations and industries-fur trading, copper mining, textiles, logging, railroading, dam building, farming, cottage industries and tourism. Along the way, travelers will discover museums, historic sites, rivers, valleys and places that speak of a time of great change.
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Tennesseeans at War: A regional brochure celebrating East Tennessee's rich military history and heritage is being distributed. Tennesseans at War: From Battlefields to Bombs in East Tennessee gives visitors the opportunity to explore 250 years of fighting for freedom from the French and Indian War to World War II. This beautiful brochure tells "why and where" to visit East Tennessee history sites, and is an ideal information source for the heritage traveler. The free brochure includes a brief history of each war, regional map, and information on places to visit and annual events. Tennessee Overhill attractions featured in the brochure include the Englewood Textile Museum, the Sequoyah Birthplace Museum and Fort Loudoun State Park.
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