Showing posts with label Marble Springs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marble Springs. Show all posts

"Either War or Submission." John Sevier, the War Hawk of 1812

   On Saturday, October 24th, I had the honor of delivering a speech before an audience gathered at John Sevier's Marble Springs Plantation Home for "The Muster at Marble Springs." The day included living history demonstrations of life and soldiering during the War of 1812. My talk that afternoon focused on Sevier's role as a "War Hawk," advocating for a formal declaration of war against Great Britain leading up to the War of 1812.

   I'm grateful to Marble Springs for extending this invitation so that I could take part in this event. I'd also like to thank my State Library and Archives colleague, Myers Brown, for his role in organizing the day's activities. A good time was had by all, and I hope those gathered to hear my remarks enjoyed the presentation...

Marble Springs State Historic Site. Author photo.



John Sevier: The War Hawk of 1812



Remarks delivered by Gordon T. Belt, author of John Sevier: Tennessee’s First Hero, and Director of Public Services for the Tennessee State Library and Archives

October 24, 2015

   I’m honored to be here with you today at John Sevier’s Marble Springs plantation home one month to the day following the observance of the 200th anniversary of Sevier’s death.

   Sevier died on September 24th, 1815 while on a surveying mission in former Creek territory – a mission sanctioned by President James Madison following Andrew Jackson’s conquest of the Creek Nation at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend – a turning point in the War of 1812.

   Sevier was almost seventy years old at the time he left Marble Springs to venture forth on this journey, an advanced age for that time to risk one’s life to nature and to the elements. But Sevier did not let his advancing age deter him from this mission to survey the Creek territory. He viewed it as a moral obligation – to finish a war for which he had strongly advocated, and to claim the glory of victory that his political rival, Andrew Jackson, had earned on the field of battle.

   What led Sevier to that spot of land near Fort Decatur, Alabama, where he drew his last breath in service to his nation? To answer this question, I’d like to take you back to Sevier’s waning moments as Governor of Tennessee…

   After serving six successful two-year terms as Tennessee’s chief executive, Sevier’s final term as governor ended in 1809. As he bid farewell to the office of governor, his popularity among the citizenry of Tennessee remained extraordinarily high, and he had earned the respect and admiration of his constituents. Sevier campaigned for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives and claimed victory in that campaign just as he had in all his previous political campaigns and in his military campaigns against the Cherokees. Sevier served the remainder of his political career as a congressman from 1811 until his death in 1815.

   Though an effective administrator and a popular politician in Tennessee, Sevier never experienced the same level of success as a statesman in Washington, D.C. While he served on several committees early in his congressional career, Sevier at no time held a leadership role and rarely voiced his opinion on the House floor. One journalist covering Capitol Hill noted that Sevier arrived at Congress “stiff and grim as an Indian arrow, not speaking, but looking daggers.” Sevier’s biographer Carl Driver observed, “No speech is recorded, and no letters or documents are available which would indicate that [Sevier] took part in a single debate.”

   Sevier openly expressed his views, however, on one issue. In 1812, members of Congress debated the prospect of military intervention against Great Britain. This occurred in response to the British navy’s interference with trade and the impressment of sailors on American ships, as well as British military support of Indian tribes eager to halt American territorial expansion.

   For years prior to a formal declaration of war, Americans grew increasingly frustrated and outraged by the British impressment of United States citizens. As early as January 1806, as Governor of Tennessee, John Sevier wrote to Senator Daniel Smith complaining about impressment and stated:

“They seize with impunity the property and person of our citizens… If the alternative be ever so disagreeable and unprofitable, there is but one resort to be had… The dignity, interest, and character of our republic… is at stake.”

   The Governor promised Senator Smith that, if necessary, the Tennessee Militia would be “held in the most perfect and complete order” to respond to the British threat.

   As citizens petitioned Governor Sevier in 1808 to call a special session of the legislature to deal with the problem, Governor Sevier put the state militia on alert. On January 12, 1809, Governor Sevier ordered General Andrew Jackson to place 1,000 militiamen in readiness to serve the President of the United States. A year later, in 1810, the Revolutionary War veteran Sevier predicted another war with Great Britain, admitting that, “we shall have to cope again with the old Tory party.”

   Sevier’s prediction proved prophetic. A few short years later, now serving as a member of Congress, Sevier joined a group of legislators known collectively as the War Hawks, an alliance of congressmen from the south and west who argued vigorously for war against Great Britain in response to these provocations.

A British frigate pursuing an American schooner.
Illustration courtesy of the Tennessee State Library and Archives, "Answering the Call: Tennesseans in the War of 1812"



   The War Hawks encouraged war as a means to retaliate against Britain for the economic distress caused by the blockade, and for encouraging Native American resistance to American expansion into the West. Sevier – still harboring a fierce disdain toward the British and their Indian allies – had finally found his cause. The vicious warfare Sevier had experienced earlier in life as an Indian fighter during Tennessee’s early settlement left a bitter impression on Sevier the Congressman. His constant stare, “looking daggers,” must have appeared particularly sharp at this time.

   As members of Congress convened to debate the merits of war, Sevier took an active role as a supportive advocate for the cause. He led the Military Affairs Committee of the United States House of Representatives, and he frequently met with heads of state, including the Minister of France, to discuss political and military strategy. Sevier also attended dinner parties hosted by the First Lady, Dolly Madison. Of course, the topic of conversation at these dinner parties usually revolved around the war with Great Britain. Sevier used these occasions to engage with government leaders and foreign diplomats, and to secure their support for the war effort. These connections kept Sevier actively engaged in the war, even though he never fought in the field of battle. Though he surely longed to draw his sword in defense of the nation, his pen and paper served as his sword and shield throughout the War of 1812.

   Sevier maintained constant communication with Tennesseans involved in the war effort through his letters and correspondence. He was particularly concerned with keeping his son, George Washington Sevier, informed about military affairs. George lived in the Mississippi Territory at the time, serving as a captain in the United States Army. George’s close proximity to the land occupied by the native tribes of the region deeply troubled Sevier, who expressed a fatherly concern over his son’s well being in a letter, dated January 13, 1812. He wrote:

“My Dear Son… I have lost one son among the savages, and I am unwilling to trust another whom you know I much regard.— I should be very unwilling to see you and your beautiful young growing family Settled in the midst of a Savage nation— Your prospects in the Army are good, and you are entitled to promotion, and war being almost sure to commence immediately, it would be improper for you to resign.”

   Sevier urged his son to continue his military career. By doing so, he would most assuredly guarantee himself a promotion to a high rank, and perhaps avoid the dangers of living among the “savages.”

   Sevier continued in his letter to describe how the war was playing out in the halls of Congress. He wrote to his son with conviction, believing that the coming war was a just cause worth the fight:

“We are taking decided measures in Congress,” Sevier wrote. “We have passed the first law to fill up and complete the present peace establishment, and the second to raise an additional army of twenty five thousand Regular troops, to serve five years, at the end of which they are to receive three months extra pay and 160 acres of land — we shall also pass a law authorizing the President to accept the services of fifty thousand volunteers — Canada will be the object — Our Government has tried negotiation until it is exhausted, and there is no doubt in my mind the Executive has observed the most perfect uprightness, and impartial neutrality.”

   The pages of Sevier’s letter seared with contempt and frustration towards the British with each stroke of the pen. He wrote:

“The British take every one of our vessels they come across that is bound into any other port besides one of their own — They lately condemned and sold at one time no less than 54 vessels and cargoes all richly laden, and so they have been going on for years. Two well informed gentlemen were with me several days at our lodgings… They were in France and England, the latter they left about the first of the last month & in which place they never heard America spoken of but with contempt; and themselves often treated with great contempt on account of their Country.”

   The following March, Sevier wrote again to his son, George, concerning the events of the day. He delivered the news that Congress and his fellow War Hawks continued to galvanize behind a formal declaration of war. “We are still going on with War Measures, and no doubt there will be one,” he wrote.

   In his letter to his son, Sevier also claimed to have documented proof of a plot by British officials to divide the nation politically and militarily. He called it “an explosion of a British conspiracy” in which he alleged that the British employed the Governor General of Canada, and other officers, to “bring about a severance of the union, by separating the Northern from the Southern States.” Sevier described the plot as “a most abominable piece of corruption and villainy.”

   In April of 1812, Sevier again wrote to his son George, describing the events in Washington as they unfolded. He described the political mood shifting with the winds of war. “The federal party here are a very artfull designing set, and are frequently trying to create divisions in the other side of the House, but I believe that the stand is so firmly taken, that all their efforts will be in vain…” He further declared:

“…I don't conceive there can be a shadow of doubt remaining of War; we have had news from England as late as the 20th of March, and no appearance of any relaxation of their measures towards America; therefore one of two things, either War or Submission…

   Sevier then paused to reflect on what the country may face once Congress declared its war against Great Britain. “We may look for hot times, for the British are inevitably strong,” he wrote, “and I fear stronger than at the beginning of the Revolution.” Age and experience had, perhaps, tempered Sevier’s enthusiasm for bloodshed, but he remained unwavering in his commitment to the cause of war.

   On eleven separate war measures considered by the House of Representatives, Sevier voted in favor of all but one. His single “NO” vote – a resolution to levy a tax of 20 cents a bushel on imported salt to fund the war effort – resulted in a second vote on a similar resolution to reconsider the tax – a tax for which Sevier ultimately reversed course and voted in favor of the measure.

   Finally, on June 4, 1812, Sevier joined seventy-eight of his congressional colleagues and voted for a formal declaration of war. In a letter written to Tennessee Governor Willie Blount following the vote, Sevier conveyed his feelings on the matter. He declared, “We have at length passed the Rubicon. War is finally declared against Britain and her dependencies.” 

   Sevier’s letter burned with hatred toward the enemy, especially the Creek Indians, whom he believed the British supported:

“Fire and sword must be carried into that country before those wretches will be reduced to reason or become peaceable neighbors… There can be no reliance or trust placed in them. No doubt British emissaries are among them.”

   Sevier echoed these sentiments in another letter to his son, George, to whom he wrote, “There is not the least confidence to be placed in savages… I would not trust neither Chickasaws, nor Cherokees too far.” As for the Creeks, Sevier summed up his attitude by declaring them “as great a set of villains as ever lived.” By the end of this momentous day, Sevier retired to his diary and described June 4th, 1812 as a “Pleasant day” – clearly pleased with the outcome of the vote to declare war against Great Britain over sailor’s rights and British support of the western frontier tribes. Following the Senate's vote to pass the War Bill, President Madison quickly signed the measure into law, and the nation found itself, once again, at war with Great Britain.

Living history on display during the War of 1812 Muster at Marble Springs. Author photo.


   With the war engaged, Sevier’s thoughts turned again toward his son, George. After learning that George had come down with a case of rheumatism, Sevier pleaded with his son to return home. “I wish you could spend a summer at Marble Springs,” he wrote, “probably the Water would relieve you, as it has done me — I am very confident it was that water alone that gave me any relief.” Sevier also expressed a growing concern over George and his family’s safety, living on the far reaches of the American frontier. “The Indians are doing much damage on the frontiers everywhere,” he wrote. “I hope you will prepare for the worst. Your station is much exposed, you can’t be too cautious.”

   At the onset of the war, the theater of operations concentrated on the Canadian-American border. Tennesseans, eager to fight, offered their services to the government; but distance prevented the state’s citizens from making any direct contribution. However, when President James Madison called on Tennessee to help defend the "Lower Country," Tennesseans volunteered en masse, earning Tennessee the nickname "The Volunteer State." Sevier reported to his son, George: “The Militia are turning out everywhere with great alacrity, and also the recruiting service is going on very briskly.”

   Governor Blount was asked to send 1,500 troops for the defense of the lower Mississippi region and an expedition under the command of Andrew Jackson was outfitted in December 1812. The theater of war quickly spread south, toward Florida, and into Creek Territory, where General Jackson ultimately carried “Fire and Sword” to that country at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend.

   Meanwhile, back in Washington, D.C., Sevier and his fellow members of Congress struggled with what to do in the aftermath of a devastating attack on our nation’s capital. In August of 1814, the British burned Washington to the ground. The government was in disarray.

   In the months that followed, Sevier noted in his diary that the House of Representatives “negotiated a bill for the removal of the seat of Government” following the burning of Washington. And as the 13th Congress returned to Washington, they convened in makeshift quarters at the Patent Office and at other locations throughout the district to conduct their legislative business, while workers toiled to resurrect the capital from the ashes.

   On Christmas Eve, 1814, after months of negotiations, British and American diplomats signed the Treaty of Ghent, restoring relations between the two nations to the status quo, before the war started – in essence, ending the War of 1812 in a stalemate. News of the treaty signing didn’t reach American shores until early the following year, and the Senate didn’t approve the treaty until February of 1815. It was during this intervening period that Andrew Jackson marched his troops to New Orleans to claim victory at the Battle of New Orleans, thus giving Americans a victory in the war against Great Britain, all during a time of negotiated peace.

   Following General Jackson’s decisive victories in the Creek War and the Battle of New Orleans, Americans expressed overwhelming jubilation over the outcome. Sevier’s nephew, Ensign John Sevier of the Seventh U.S. Infantry, flaunted his exaltation in a January 10, 1815, letter to his mother. “I feel young and active and handsome…” He wrote. “I believe we in the South have settled the dispute of Nations.” In Congress, members congratulated the Tennessee delegation. It was “as though we had been in the action,” Sevier wrote. On this occasion, Sevier penned another letter to his son, George, this time expressing his pride in what had been accomplished. He wrote: “Our army from Tennessee is more talked of here than half the world besides.”

   As the nation celebrated, President Madison appointed Sevier as a commissioner to run the boundary line of the conquered Creek Nation. Sevier dutifully accepted this mission and departed this very plantation on June 10th, 1815 to begin what would become his final campaign.

Marble Springs State Historic Site. Author photo.


   As Sevier surveyed the landscape, his mind and body grew weary of the journey that had taken him from his beloved Marble Springs home. In his diary, Sevier noted, “Some unwell with pain in my back” and he later observed that one of his traveling companions, a man named Dicky Brown, became “very sick.”

   In the days that followed, Sevier himself contracted a fever. Still, he found the strength to attend a feast of the Indians known as the “Green Corn Dance,” and although approaching his seventh decade of life, Sevier eagerly participated in the ceremony, feeling briefly rejuvenated by the festivities.

   The next day, however, while on his return to Fort Decatur, Sevier’s health suddenly took a turn for the worse. Realizing he may be nearing death, Sevier had asked his men to carry him across the river to a spring located about a mile away and let him get a drink of water. He had hoped that the cool spring water would restore his health. Unfortunately, Sevier never made it to that spring alive.

   Legend asserts that Sevier died as his men carried him across that river on September 24th, 1815. Honoring his final wish, the Sevier’s companions transported his body to a hill overlooking the spring and buried him there with full military honors. A simple two-foot-long oak stump charred at its end marked his grave until a proper grave marker could be installed on that remote spot of land.

   Unaware of Sevier’s illness, Tennesseans had just reelected him to Congress without opposition. News of his death, however, quickly spread to the state capitol where members of the Tennessee General Assembly mourned their fallen hero. On October 26th, 1815, legislators passed a resolution requiring each member of the General Assembly wear a crepe on the left arm for thirty days “in honor to the memory of that distinguished fellow citizen, statesman, and patriot.”

   Years after his death, the Daily Picayune newspaper of New Orleans observed that those cool spring waters “still sing a constant requiem near his grave.” Seven decades passed before Sevier’s descendants and loyal admirers saw fit to deliver his body back home to native soil, on the grounds of the Old Knox County Courthouse, where his remains now rest beneath “a cenotaph worthy” of the memory of his achievements.

   As we remember Sevier’s role in the War of 1812, I’d like to conclude my remarks with a quote from my book, John Sevier: Tennessee’s First Hero. On June 19th, 1889, the Reverend Dr. James Park delivered a closing prayer during Sevier’s reinterment ceremonies here in Knoxville. On that occasion, the Reverend observed:

“Here, with patriotic pride in his heroic days in time of war, and profound veneration for his high service in time of peace, we commit his mortal remains to the grave, ‘earth to earth, ashes to ashes, and dust to dust.’ And may the people of this great State who owe so much to John Sevier for his unselfish service in times that tried men’s souls, do him justice, and yourselves and the commonwealth honor by erecting such a monument as shall keep his name and fame an illustrious example in everlasting memory.”


 

Gordon Belt is an information professional, archives advocate, public historian, and author of The History Press book, John Sevier: Tennessee's First Hero, which examines the life of Tennessee's first governor, John Sevier, through the lens of history and memory. On The Posterity Project, Gordon offers reflections on archives, public history, and memory from his home state of Tennessee.

John Sevier and slavery on the frontier...

The institution of slavery was once something that scholars only acknowledged along the margins of history, but never fully examined as a pervasive fact of life in early America. Only within recent years have historians opened the wound of slavery for all to see -- a wound that needed to bleed for us to have a more complete picture of our nation's history.

Scholars have provided a rich written history about the slave system that existed on the vast plantations of the antebellum South, yet relatively little has been written about slavery on the frontier. A number of factors contributed to this lack of scholarship. The total slave population on the Tennessee frontier during the late-18th century was small, and slaveholders did not constitute more than ten percent of the population. In East Tennessee, the soil and terrain could not sustain a significant supply of cotton, tobacco, or other cash crops to justify the expense of owning slaves to tend the fields. Most overmountain men of the region did not have the financial means to own slaves. While a few small farmers on the frontier gradually acquired slaves as their economic conditions improved, most did not have any need for slaves to maintain their subsistence-level crops. They merely needed enough labor to survive.

John Sevier's Marble Springs Plantation Home as it exists today, near Knoxville, Tennessee. Author photo.

Among the few wealthy landowners who did own slaves on the Tennessee frontier was John Sevier. On his Marble Springs plantation home, located just outside the city of Knoxville, Tennessee, house servants kept the Sevier family living quarters clean, and provided most of the cooking for family and guests. John Sevier's second wife, "Bonny Kate" directed the house servants on their plantation while other slaves tended the fields and livestock, including Governor Sevier's prized stable of horses.

Slaves were barely present in the narrative of John Sevier's extraordinary life story. Those few mentions of slaves by antiquarians and biographers of the 19th century cast them in the background in ways that reflected the inferior social position they were assigned at the time. However, if you take the time to dig deeper into the past, by examining the original letters written in Sevier's own hand, you'll discover that John Sevier was quite concerned about slaves on the frontier.

In John Sevier's lifetime, slaves were considered property and were valued as a commodity rather than as human beings. You see this view of slavery quite clearly in John Sevier's governor's papers where you can find letters recording instances when slaves escaped their masters and fled into Indian territory.

The Fugitive Slave Clause of the U.S. Constitution (superseded by the Thirteenth Amendment) guaranteed the right of a slaveholder to recover an escaped slave. The Fugitive Slave Act, first passed by Congress and signed into law by President George Washington in 1793, created the legal mechanism by which that could be accomplished. The Fugitive Slave Act was explicit in its instruction that escaped slaves could be seized in any state, brought before a magistrate, and returned to their masters. Governor Sevier had a legal mandate from the federal government to aid in the return of any slave who escaped their master in search for freedom. In every recorded instance, Governor Sevier followed the letter of the law, regarded slaves as property, and demanded their return to servitude.

In one letter, Governor Sevier writes to Benjamin Hawkins, a lawyer and Superintendent of Indian Affairs, requesting action concerning the theft of two slaves and some horses...


Knoxville 17th February 1797

Sir,


Sometime past two negro fellows belonging to Capt. James Richardson of this County ran away and went into the Cherokee Nation, from thence to the Creeks, where they were taken by a half-breed by some called Fise and by others Sastly. He pretends to hold them until he is made whole for some horses stolen from him by the Cherokees.


I beg of you to exert your influence to keep the Indians within bounds, and have both the negroes and horses returned as soon as possible, otherwise we need not expect to support peace and tranquility much longer. The negroes belong to a person in moderate circumstances, and the loss is very sensibly felt by him and his family.

I hope for the pleasure of seeing you in the spring at this place, in the meantime request that you will communicate with me everything that may be interesting to our frontiers or the state.

I have the honor to be, etc.,

(signed) John Sevier

Benjamin Hawkins, Esq.,
Superintendent of Indian Affairs


John Sevier's letter to Benjamin Hawkins, dated 17 February 1797, requesting action concerning the theft of two slaves and some horses. The John Sevier Governor's Papers. GP-2 Box 1 Folder 3. Tennessee State Library and Archives (Scan from Microfilm).

Slaves were also stolen in raids by Cherokees and other Native American tribes of the region. In a letter dated October 22, 1796, Governor Sevier writes to the Cherokee Nation to warn them that stolen property would be recovered, and that he expected the Cherokee Nation's aid in locating slaves that were seized in a raid on Zeigler's Station...

Knoxville 22nd October 1796.

Brothers and Warriors of the Cherokee Nation:

Mr. Henry Morris is going into your nation in search of a negro woman named Mary and two of her children. She was taken from Zeigler's Station at Cumberland. I shall expect you to assist him to get the negroes, that they may be brought back to their own people, and in so doing you will oblige your friend and brother,

(signed) John Sevier

John Sevier's letter to the Cherokee Nation, 22 October 1796. The John Sevier Governor's Papers. GP-2 Box 1 Folder 2. Tennessee State Library & Archives (Scan from Microfilm)



In yet another letter dated August 25, 1796, Governor Sevier writes to the Cherokee Chief, Little Turkey, in an effort to convince him to release slaves stolen from the Chickasaw Nation. In this letter, Sevier made a statement that today would certainly be considered despicable, but in Sevier's time was all to common a comparison [Emphasis mine]:


Knoxville 25th August 1796.

Brother:

The Chickasaw people have complained to me that there is a negro man , a negro woman and child, belonging to George Colbert in your nation. They say that they were to have been sent to this place some time ago, but as they have not yet come, I am requested to write you about them, and have sent Joseph Sevier on purpose to get the negroes and bring them to this place, and desire that you will deliver them up to him. If the Chickasaws owes your people anything, they say they will pay you. You know it is wrong to stop people for horses, for negroes is not horses though they are black. I shall expect and hope you will send the negroes accordingly. I wish you and the Chickasaws to live as brothers and good neighbors, but you can't expect this to be the case, if you keep their people from them.

Your friend and brother,

(signed) John Sevier.

The Little Turkey.

John Sevier's letter to Cherokee Chief Little Turkey, dated 25 August 1796. The John Sevier Governor's Papers. GP-2 Box 1 Folder 2. Tennessee State Library and Archives (Scan from Microfilm).

In stark contrast to the John Sevier that is remembered by many as a key figure in the Revolutionary War -- a war fought for freedom and liberty -- it is largely forgotten that John Sevier, like George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and many of his contemporaries, considered slaves as property with as little right to freedom and liberty as the horses on his Marble Springs plantation.

While it is important to remember the heroic triumphs of our shared history, we also have a duty to acknowledge the abhorrent realities of the past in order to have a more complete understanding of the world in which our ancestors lived, "warts and all."


Selected Sources:

  • Governor John Sevier Papers, 1796-1801 (GP 2), Tennessee State Library and Archives.
  • Edward Michael McCormack. Slavery on the Tennessee Frontier. Nashville: Tennessee American Revolution Bicentennial Commission, 1977.

 
Gordon Belt is an information professional, archives advocate, public historian, and author of The History Press book, John Sevier: Tennessee's First Hero, which examines the life of Tennessee's first governor, John Sevier, through the lens of history and memory. On The Posterity Project, Gordon offers reflections on archives, public history, and memory from his home state of Tennessee.




A busy month, a visit to Knoxville, and some autumn inspiration...

Despite the lack of blog posts here on The Posterity Project, I have had a very busy month. Following a talk that I gave at the Lebanon Rotary Club in early October, my wife, Traci, delivered a presentation at the Southern Festival of Books, where we had a great turnout for our joint session with Dr. Brian McKnight, discussing the topic of "Rebel Soldiers and Citizens: Examining the Personal Motives of Confederates," and promoting our book, Onward Southern Soldiers. We are genuinely appreciative of this opportunity to share our story, and are grateful for the warm reception from our audience. It was also an honor for us to meet Dr. McKnight, whose own book, Confederate Outlaw: Champ Ferguson and the Civil War in Appalachia, is a must-read.

My wife, Traci, at the Southern Festival of Books in Nashville.

Immediately following the festival, I traveled to Knoxville for the Society of Tennessee Archivists annual meeting where I attended a very interesting and informative series of sessions focusing on the theme, "Red, White, Blue, and Recorded! Collecting and Preserving Politics in Tennessee." I also had the high honor of presenting the Society's "John H. Thweatt Award" to two very good friends and colleagues, J. Mark Lowe and Ken Fieth, both of whom have given so much to Tennessee's archival community through their advocacy and support. It was a moment that I will always treasure.

Proud to present the John H. Thweatt Award to two very deserving men, Ken Fieth and J. Mark Lowe.

Following the Society's conference, I attended a very productive business meeting, culminating in a strong statement of support for Georgia's Archives, fully endorsed and approved by a vote of our membership. Breaking news on this front since our vote may have changed the landscape of the issue, nonetheless, I am proud of our society for taking a stand on this important matter.

The meeting also marked my transition to the role of Past President of the Society of Tennessee Archivists. I have had the distinct honor of serving my profession through active participation in STA for many years, and I am grateful to our members for entrusting me to the position of Vice-President and President during the last two years. I am very pleased to hand over the reins of STA to our new President, Eric Head, and look forward to another great annual meeting in 2013, organized by our new Vice-President/President-Elect, Ralph Sowell. Congratulations and Godspeed, gentlemen!

Fortunately, amidst all this activity I found a short window of opportunity to explore a few historic sites of note, including John Sevier's grave and his home at Marble Springs, just to name a few. I also participated in a Civil War walking tour of Knoxville during my stay. Knoxville has a rich history that can be easily explored within walking distance or a short drive from many downtown hotels. The East Tennessee History Center is also a must-see for anyone with an interest in Knoxville's historic past. October is such a great time of year to visit East Tennessee with the autumn colors on full display. If you have not been to Knoxville in the fall, I would highly recommend a visit.

My visit to Gov. John Sevier's grave at the Old Knox County Courthouse in Knoxville, Tennessee

This trip really gave me some much-needed inspiration to pursue a goal that I have had in mind for some time. I plan to begin writing a manuscript based on the subject of John Sevier and Historical Memory, and I will spend more time writing on this subject in the coming weeks, so stay tuned.

In the meantime, I hope you'll take some time to re-visit my series on John Sevier and Historical Memory. For a regional historical figure largely obscured by time and the long shadow cast by the memory of Andrew Jackson, it is refreshing to know that this series is one of my most popular and widely viewed series of blog posts. Enjoy!



Traci and I visited John Sevier's home at Marble Springs near Knoxville, Tennessee.


 

Gordon Belt is an information professional, archives advocate, public historian, and author of The History Press book, John Sevier: Tennessee's First Hero, which examines the life of Tennessee's first governor, John Sevier, through the lens of history and memory. On The Posterity Project, Gordon offers reflections on archives, public history, and memory from his home state of Tennessee.