VOL. 9 NO. 26
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Making a splash
BUZZ Edmonds to head Farragut Middle Weston Edmonds is the new principal at Farragut Middle School, replacing Danny Trent who is now the supervisor for secondary education for Knox County Schools. Edmonds has served as an assistant principal and athletic director at Farragut Middle School since 2013. He began his career with the Knox County Schools in 2004 as a social studies teacher at Farragut High School and has also served as an assistant principal at Central High School. He holds a bachelor’s degree in political science and a master’s degree in education, both from the University of Tennessee. He also holds an education specialist degree in instructional leadership from Tennessee Tech University.
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Farragut rower places in nationals By Carolyn Evans It was the “quiet splash of the oars” that got her. Farragut resident Sara Zetterberg is in love with rowing. Sara and her rowing partner, Kimberly Cady, competed in the USRowing Youth National Championships in Bradenton, Fla., in June, finishing first in the C Final. Zetterberg is a recent graduate of Farragut High School and Cady of Oak Ridge High School. The two are members of the Atomic team of the Oak Ridge Rowing Association, a team open to students from all area high schools. They earned their spot at nationals by placing third in the Junior Southeast Regional Championships in Gainesville, Ga., in May. “It’s a 2-kilometer race,” Zetterberg said of the national competition. “You have to have a race plan. You can hear the other boats around you, and you can see the
Sara Zetterberg of Farragut and Kimberly Cady of Oak Ridge compete in the USRowing Youth National Championships in Bradenton, Fla.
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Developer to cut density on Farragut apartments
Marching on Get ready to celebrate. The town of Farragut’s 28th Annual Independence Day Parade steps off at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, July 4. The parade will begin on Kingston Pike at Lendon Welch Way (Farragut High School entrance) and continue to Boring Road, just east of Farragut Towne Square Shopping Center (old Ingles store site). This year’s grand marshal is Helen Ashe, founder of the Love Kitchen. The parade includes walkers, floats, bands, animals and antique cars representing businesses, community and civic organizations, area schools and churches. Kingston Pike will be closed from Concord Road to Boring Road from 8:30 a.m. to approximately noon. On July 3, the Farragut Business Alliance will sponsor the Red, White & Blues Pre-Independence Day Picnic and Casey Abrams concert at Renaissance|Farragut. Cost is $10 for adults and $5 for children with a discount for tickets purchased in advance online at www.farragutbusiness.com. The festivities, beginning at 6:30 p.m., include food, music, the Game Truck, watermeloneating contest, face painting, Bricks 4 Kidz, RoHAWKtics, Bouncy Castle and a Hamster Ball. Premium rides at an additional charge include a zip line, Euro-bungy and a mechanical bull. – Sherri Gardner Howell
July 1, 2015
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By Sandra Clark The developer didn’t want any part of the crowd of noisy neighbors and the neighbors didn’t want any part of Wilwaukee-based Continental’s proposed 236-units apartments on Kingston Pike at Smith Road. So the rezoning request was withdrawn last Thursday just before consideration by the Board of Mayor and Aldermen. Continental representative Sara Johnson said the company had heard the residents’ concerns about density and would revamp its plans and return later. The rezoning had tied, 4-4, at the Farragut planning commission. The standing-room-only crowd didn’t want to leave without speaking, and most didn’t want the developer’s representative to speak at all. Arthur Seymour Jr. and Taylor Forrester of Frantz, McConnell & Seymour, accompanied Johnson but did not speak. Alderman Bob Markli said, “When someone wants to spend $37 million in our town we
A heritage worth remembering: By Betty Bean One Saturday evening in 1958, I settled down in front of the TV at my grandparents’ house to watch “The Gray Ghost,” which celebrated Col. John Mosby, a dashing Confederate whose raiders rode rings around dimwitted Yankees to the tune of “The Yellow Rose of Texas.” I loved that show. But Mosby didn’t have time to draw his sword when my granddad came barreling out of the kitchen and told me to find something else to watch. “Why?” I asked. “Because it’s treason,” he said.
Taylor Forrester (center) talks with Farragut Mayor Ralph McGill on behalf of his client, Sara Johnson (right) of Continental Properties. Photo by S. Clark should hear them.” Vice Mayor Dot LaMarche said while she doesn’t want the apartments, she did want to hear what Continental had to say. The crowd wanted none of it, but the FBMA let them speak, after town attorney Tom Hale said, “Don’t give people a reason to sue us.” The 19.6 acres was purchased from developer Doug Horne who has indicated he might sell additional acreage.
Finding John Bean “And I despise it.” I didn’t know what treason was, but I’ve remembered this small incident for more than 50 years, although it took decades for me to understand what it was really about: It was the voice of my greatgrandfather, challenging me to come find him. He stayed in my ear no matter how many times I saw “Gone With the Wind.” Here’s what I knew: John Alexander Bean was a Union Army veteran, but he was no Yankee. He was a straight-line descendant of the long hunters who’d
Learn more William Rule, Union Army veteran, newspaper reporter and Parson Brownlow protégé who later founded the Knoxville Journal, wrote the most succinct account of what it was like to make the long walk to Cumberland Gap and described it in great detail here: ht t p:// babel.hat h it r u st.org/cg i/pt?id=loc.a rk:/139 60/ t5r78r69k;view=1up;seq=21 Information about the Sixth Tennessee Infantry Regiment, including rosters, is here: tngenweb.org/civilwar/usainf/usa6inf.html
Happy Fourth of July! from
Resident Mul Wyman said, “This is the third delay” on the project. “No more delays.” Kristi Hulsey, president of the homeowners association of Village Green, also spoke against the development. Also at Thursday’s meeting, town engineer Darryl Smith secured the FMBA’s blessing for three TDOT grants: ■ A $258,000 project to re-time the town’s 24 traffic signals to enhance traffic flow. This is a 100 percent air quality grant. ■ A feasibility study for a north-south connector from Outlet Drive to Parkside Drive. ■ Greenway development between Old Stage Road and Kingston Pike. In other action, Jesse Boling, a former code enforcement officer and current owner of Cranberry Hollow gift shop in Lenoir City, was appointed to the town’s Board of Zoning Appeals. FBMA approved a 50/50 matching grant for a $60,000 project to replace the lights at town hall for an estimated annual savings of $6,000.
ADDICTED TO
migrated down from Virginia and settled near Jonesborough. Russell Bean was the first white child born in Tennessee. Russell’s father, Captain Billy Bean, and at least one of his uncles rode 150 miles with John Sevier to whip the British at King’s Mountain and later moved on down the valley to Bean Station and Knox County. A rowdy, restless bunch, some of the Beans continued westward (Judge Roy Bean was a distant relation), but others, like John A’s grandfather (also named John and a veteran of the War of 1812) stayed put. That distant John Bean’s grave is in the Living Waters Baptist Church graveyard. I’d heard that John A had declined an invitation to join the Confederate Army and walked all the way to Cumberland Gap to join the Union Army and that he’d been taken prisoner, escaped and gotten so hungry that he’d boiled an old boot in hopes of getting it tender enough for dinner, and that when his children expressed disgust at the notion of trying to eat
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John Alexander Bean, Private, Sixth Tennessee Infantry, USA a boot, he’d snap: “It used to be a cow, didn’t it?” I’d heard that his biggest regret was missing the chance to shake hands with Abraham Lincoln. I knew he was a stonecutter by trade and that he’d lost his arm much later in life after he knelt to pray at the funeral of another old soldier, reached down to steady himself on a grave marker and got bitten by a black widow spider. My To page A-3
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