HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020
A Triumphant Story DAVID JOHNSON WOOD CHARLIE BRAKEBILL
His Life and Legacy
Holiday Home Tour BY CODY GALBRAITH
63
YEARS IN BUSINESS
BRADEN’S
Lifestyles at Turkey Creek COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL • HOSPITALITY INTERIOR DESIGN • STAGING • ACCESSORIES
BUY ONE GET ONE! Buy One Item at Retail Price and Get the Second Item for
1 dollar
$
This is an amazing deal. Buy one item at manufacturer’s suggested retail, and buy the second item of equal or lesser value for only $1. Buy the finest mattress, and get a Stickley bed for a dollar! Buy a dining table, and get a buffet for a dollar!
THANK YOU, AND ENJOY THE SALE! 11105 Turkey Creek Drive • 865-777-4059 www.bradens.com Stressless is excluded from this event.
lighting of the christmas tree Town of Farragut November 25,2019 8pm - 11pm The Town of Farragut Mayor Ron Williams throws the switch to 68,000 lights in Founders Park at Campbell Station. Jingles, the chief elf, officially opens Santa’s mailbox, and even the Big Guy in Red makes an appearance. It is an evening of fun, refreshments and entertainment to kick off “Light the Park,” which is open to the public throughout the holiday season.
Turkey Creek November 26,2019 8pm - 11pm The lighting of the 60-foot Christmas Tree at the Pinnacle at Turkey Creek is the kickoff to the holiday season of shopping, food trucks, live performances, children’s crafts and, of course, Santa Claus!
For every climb you need to conquer, a bank that has your back. When you need to scale big challenges before you, it’s nice to know you have a bank that stands behind you. At First Horizon Bank, that’s exactly where we’re excited to be. Strengthening your resolve to rise above with personal and business banking services that demonstrate a deeper understanding of you, your path and your potential.
Make the climb with us today at firsthorizon.com/leap.
Understanding Runs Deep
©2019 First Horizon Bank. Member FDIC.
Volume 2, 2015
A magazine for the people of Farragut, West Knoxville & surrounding communities.
Seasonal Culinary Inspirations Truffle Ricotta Cheese Recipe With Chef Deron Little
KIPPY BROWN Behind The Scenes With
Seattle Seahawks Coach Kippy Brown And His Amazing Life Story
THE MUSCADINE FESTIVAL &
AIR BALLOONS 20 HOT
Tsali Notch Vineyard The Largest Muscadine Vineyard In The State Is Also The Prettiest!
DR. HAROLD BLACK
One Of The First African-Americans To Attend The University Of Georgia
Farragut_Summer_2015.indd 1
8/25/15 10:27 AM
T E N N E S S E E
HUNTING & TRAPPING GUIDE
EFFECTIVE AUGUST 1, 2015 - JULY 31, 2016
» New White-Tailed Deer Buck Bag Limit: see page 25 » Hunter/Landowner Permission Card: see page 67 » New Hunter Education Field Day Exemption: see page 12
www.tnwildlife.org Follow us on:
Includes 2016 Spring Turkey Season
MARKETING • MEDIA • WEB DESIGN • TELEVISION
Community Health Services
30
YEARS OF BRANDING EXPERIENCE
23
YEARS OF IN-HOUSE TELEVISION PRODUCTION
15
CUSTOM MAGAZINES A YEAR
250
LOCAL AND NATIONAL ADDY AWARDS
13
NATIONAL BROADCAST TELLY AWARDS
W W W . B I N G H A M G R O U P . C O M • TEL: 865.523.5999 • 11921 KINGSTON PIKE • KNOXVILLE, TENNESSEE 37934
DAY TRIP SHOPPING Sweetwater General Store Natural Elements Dogwood Lane
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DALE BIEHL Where There’s God’s Will, He Makes A Way
Contents
58
features Under Canvas
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lighting of the christmas tree Town of Farragut November 25,2019 8pm - 11pm The Town of Farragut Mayor Ron Williams throws the switch to 68,000 lights in Founders Park at Campbell Station. Jingles, the chief elf officially opens Santa’s mailbox and even the Big Guy in Red makes an appearance. It is an evening of fun, refreshments, and entertainment to kick off “Light the Park,” which is open to the public throughout the holiday season.
Beauty from Ashes:
DAVID WOOD’S TESTIMONY
Turkey Creek November 26,2019 8pm - 11pm The lighting of the 60 foot Christmas Tree at the Pinnacle at Turkey Creek is the kick off to the holiday season of shopping, food trucks, live performances, children’s crafts and, of course, Santa Claus!
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FAMILY HISTORY DAY HOSTED BY TENNESSEE STATE LIBRARY & ARCHIVES
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FARRAGUT TREE LIGHTINGS
2
CHARLIE BRAKEBILL Limitless Life
50
Holiday Home Tour
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WE WISH YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS, WE WISH YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR!
LEGACY BOX
This Chattanooga company is the world’s largest digitizer of home movies and photos.
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American Holly CEDAR WAXWING
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departments 8 From The Publisher 10 Farragut Chamber 31 Correct Craft 42 East Tennessee Foundation Legacy Awards Small Business Focus 44 Rather & Kittrell 56 Premier Eyecare
72 We Love It Your life is a series of tr Getting through them is easier Rather & Kittrell started when two guys shared a commitment to what seemed to them like some pretty obvious ideas about money - how client relationships, trust and guidance were more important than “selling” for short-term gain. Put simply, “If we take care of people, our business will take care of itself.” It struck a nerve.
1 MILLION PENNIES
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27 2019
Hal - Age 56 TRANSITION STORY: Hal has spent his entire career building a business. He’s lived and breathed it since he was 24. Now it’s paid off. The money from the sale of his business allows him to retire. So, now what? He’s been so focused on building the business that he’s not sure how to plan for the next phase of his life.
Nearly 20 years later, based on the steadfast belief that people’s stories matter, a two desk business has grown into an awardwinning SEC-registered investment advisory firm serving successful individuals, families and businesses. We lead clients through the transitions that inherently come with money.
HOLIDAY/ WINTER LIFE Call or email us today to2020 write yourFARRAGUT story.
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s cause to pause and reflect, counting blessings and gifts received. The greatest being the birth r Savior, our Father God loved us so much that he sent his only begotten Son so that we t have life everlasting. He also sent three precious gifts to our family, each season is sweeter my beautiful girls, Kathryn, Kelsey and Alyssa. Celebrating the blessings with family and friends, ing traditions from my childhood with my children is a mirror which always reflects love.
ksgiving is upon us, I am grateful for so many beautiful blessings in my life. Thank you for ing us to bring stories of the amazing people and places that make East Tennessee great. In sue, we share about the friendlist place in America and it is located right in downtown Knoxville. k out the amazing Charlie Rhodarmer of the Sequoyah Birthplace Museum in Vonore, he een bringing history to life for years are we are thrilled to share his story.
Publisher
will also have the opportunity to tour the home of Gary & Karen Braden, owners of Braden’s yle Furniture in Turkey Creek. The timeless home is decorated for the holidays inspiring us create a cozy, full of love, Tennessee Christmas. Thanks to Chelsa and Tina Harris for sharing olidayand theme weddingdecor of Chelsea and Drew. This holiday issue is full of love, beauty and revail the christmas abounds... ng with others. gifts received. The greatest being the birth
From the Publisher
he sent his only begotten Son so that we gifts to ourCheck family, out eachthe season is sweeter gift ideas? holiday market in this issue, shop local and let them know you saw rating theLife. blessings family and friends, Farragut Howwith about a vacation or day trip? In this issue, the Holiday Getaway ideas are n is a mirror whichany always reflects love.we hope that our ideas inspire you to explore close to flowing. Choose length of time,
Lisa Atkins-Bingham
e or far away this holiday.
autiful blessings in my life. Thank you for places that make East Tennessee great. In s issue, you will learn about the amazing technology allowing the color blind to see the nd it is located right in downtown Knoxville. saying: towards the light, ging colors of our mountains.It’s Wean haveold a new Governor“Aim and First Lady, it has been a greatand the shadows will fall behind you.” Watching uoyah Birthplace Museum in Vonore, he rilled to get to know Bill and Maria Lee over this year. As the year comes to a close may we all take to share his story. the blazing sun rise over the crashing waves and blackness of night was a reminder that
ment to express appreciation to Governor Bill Haslam for being a great leader. There are so wonderful in owners this issue of Farragut Life. Be sure to enjoy all of the wonderful holiday Gary & Karenstories Braden, of Braden’s our All Powerful the Creator of All, and that no matter the chaos, the pain, the area hasfortothe offer. Most inspiring of all, remember the reasonGod for thisisseason. esisour decorated holidays us
hanks to Chelsa and Tina Harris uncertainty for sharing we may feel at times, the sun will always rise, a new day will always begin, and you warm Merrybeauty Christmas isngholiday issueblessings, is full of love, and and Happy New Year.
God will always destroy the darkness and the pestilence that stalks at night with His Light. Christmas Eve at my
ue, shop local and let them know you saw
- Facebook post from David Johnson Wood. Grandparents with all the McKees.
this issue, the Holiday Getaway ideas are Bingham our of ideas you to explore close toof Monroe, McMinn & Farragut Life Magazines dent Theinspire Bingham Group, Publisher
I
t year we are starting a profile series as we enter the 10th anniversary of the recession, we have a There is so much to do in East Tennessee consider the triumphant story of those dark ology colorleaders blind to who see thetruly at lineallowing up ofthe local will talk about thriving, not just surviving days.
vernor and First Lady, it has been a great David Johnson Wood a gift for the holiday s the year comes to a close may we all take season slam for being a great leader. There are so to anyone who has been in pain and sure to enjoy all of the wonderful holiday is starting life anew. There is always a new reason for this season.
py New Year.
day, and The Bingham Group is privileged to be able to share David’s story of how his fall from grace led to a rebirth in Christ and a Christmas Eve at my spectacularly successful career. Grandparents with all the McKees.
over the holidays. Discover Christmas festivals, get inspired with decorating ideas and find opportunities to be generous with your donations. Christmas truly is a season of giving, and it is always good to share a bit of the Christmas spirit with those who are less fortunate.
, McMinn & Farragut Life Magazines
We areofalso towe feature veteran we enter the 10th anniversary the proud recession, have another a about thriving, not just surviving those dark days.Brakebill. Locals might in this issue: Charlie know him as die-hard Volunteer and former head of fundraising for the University of Tennessee, but he was also a war veteran with many stories to tell. Within these pages, you will learn more about his life and legacy.
As always, I am incredibly grateful for our advertisers – without you, we would not be able to share these incredible stories. And as the holidays approach, I am also grateful for time spent with my precious daughters. Merry Christmas from all of us at The Bingham Group.
THE CHRISTMAS AMARYLLIS ON THE COVER IS IN HONOR OF
Betty Smallin-Roberts 1936-2019 My Aunt Betty spent her life creating beautiful floral arrangements and bouquets. She warmed our hearts in many ways.
PUBLISHER
The Bingham Group President Lisa Atkins Bingham Art Director Brett Hawkins Graphic Designer Brett Hawkins Lisa Atkins Bingham Contributing Writers CeCe Owens Chris Kittrell Dr. Brent Fry Gayle Fisher Jennifer Porterfield Sydnee Brashears Contributing Photographers Brett Hawkins Cody Galbraith Lisa Bingham Robert Burleson Wes Wheeler Advertising Sales Mignonne Alman Tel: 865.523.5999 mignonne@binghamgroup.com Chris McLaren Tel: 865.523.5999 chris@binghamgroup.com Subscription or Editorial Inquiries
Tel: 865.523.5999 www.monroelife.com
The Bingham Group, Inc. 11921 Kingston Pike, Suite 201 Knoxville, Tennessee 37934 www.binghamgroup.com www.Farragutlife.com
Celebrating
Christmas Past and Present” The Christmas Season is a special time for family and friends. Our unique shops and restaurants will offer a slower pace shopping atmosphere filled with nostalgic Christmas memories. Take a short drive to Loudon and enjoy the holiday sights and sounds of a small town during Christmas.
Past Tymes Antiques
Annabell’s Emporium and Café
Simply Distressed
The General Store
Loudon West End Florist
Greer’s Home Furnishings
Personal Space Creations
Historically Speaking
Antiques Primitives Gifts 865-368-2570
Antiques Primitives Vintage 865-776-3524
Tommy’s Grill on Grove 865-657-6544
Historic Loudon Theatre & Event Center 865-458-9020
Cook n Craft Academy
Café, Jewelry, Furniture, Gifts 865-657-9845 865-408-8500
Essential oils, Aromatherapy Jewelry 865-454-4321
Little Mama’s Boutique Children’s Boutique & Custom Embroidery 865-657-3988
For kids of all ages 865-394-8796
The Grove Wine and Spirits
The Shoppes on the Square
The Massage Studio
865-244-0207
865-408-1311 865-722-5769
Designs Décor Gifts 865-657-6645 865-458-2047
Antiques & Collectibles 865-816-2819
Changing Faces Anti-Aging Spa 865-458-4697
Serendipity Boutique Women’s Fashions 865-657-9991
Nurtured By Nature Wellness Studio 865-210-6869
25 miles south of West Knoxville | Exits 76 or 72 off I-75 Follow signs to Historic Downtown Loudon
The Knoxville area is fortunate to be rich in excellent opportunities for professionals from any industry or career stage to build their business and their network. The Farragut West Knox Chamber of Commerce offers multiple benefits and avenues for building, not the least of which are the popular weekly networkings held every Thursday at a different member business. These events take place from either 8-9:30am or from 5-6:30pm and regularly see an average 40-50 attendees. In fact, engagement at the chamber is so high that as of press-time only a small handful of spots remain open for the 2020 year; the remainder of the calendar is already booked! If you’re looking to better connect yourself and your business to others as well as the community, more ways to market your business at no added cost or at a discount, support and educational programs, and maximum chances to build the relationships that lead to business in a professional culture that is enterprising and welcoming, we warmly invite you to visit us. For more information or to pre-register for any of these events in 2019/2020, visit www. farragutchamber.com and click “Events.”
Looking to Connect With Other Businesses? DATE
TIME
MEMBER BUSINESS HOST
12/5/2019
8:00 AM HomeTrust Bank - Farragut
1/9/2020
8:00AM Revolution Real World Self Defense, LLC
1/16/2020
8:00AM Saddlebrook Properties
1/23/2020
8:00AM FWKCC F.U.E.L.: Young Professionals Networking Event
1/30/2020
8:00AM Zaxby’s of Farragut
2/6/2020
8:00AM Nama Sushi Bar - Cedar Bluff
2/13/2020
8:00AM Southeast Bank - Farragut
2/20/2020
8:00AM Turkey Creek Medical Center
2/27/2020
8:00AM Farragut Middle School
***Note: Some Thursdays have been omitted due to scheduled holidays or held for the Chamber’s young professionals program, F.U.E.L. (Focus. Unite. Engage. Lead.). Any questions about events can be directed to our office.
For questions about membership, call (865) 675-7057 or email info@farragutchamber.com. We cannot wait to meet you and support your success. 10
FARRAGUT LIFE HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020
WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/SHOPFARRAGUT/
Caring and Protecting Families is Our Farragut Life
Christmas Open House Friday, Dec 6th 10-6pm
Gretchen Wilkerson & Crissy Collins
Collins & Wilkerson AgenCy FArmers insurAnCe 161 W. End Avenue | Located Near Farragut High School 865-392-1398 | ccollins@farmersagent.com
Holiday Homes Tour
Local designer Rebecca Maples of Rebecca Maples Interiors, along with Dawn Pfundston, enjoy bringing a little holiday cheer to their clients by helping them decorate their homes for Christmas.Take a photographic tour through three stunning Farragut-area homes to get inspiration for your holiday decorations this Christmas season!
Brown House Photography by Cody Galbraith
At the house of Ann and Marty Brown, Rebecca and Dawn chose to go with an upscale farmhouse theme to match the look of the house, which has authentic knotty pine floors. The home’s design, as well as the Christmas decorations, feature owls -- the owners even have a real-life owl that comes to visit from time to time! From the pinecone-adorned Christmas tree to the sled and welcome sign (personalized touches added by Mrs. Brown herself), this farmhouse Christmas home exudes holiday elegance and cheer.
HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020 FARRAGUT LIFE
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Croley House Photography by Cody Galbraith
For Ross and Sara Croley, the theme was definitely not your standard, traditional red and green. On a trip to Venice, the couple found a beautiful chandelier, which now hangs over their dining room table. That chandelier was the inspiration for the design of the entire interior of the home...as well as the Christmas decorations! Rebecca and Dawn carried the beach glass colors in the Croleys’ home design into their Christmas decorations, wrapping the magnificent spiral staircase in a unique mixture of blue-green and orange. Sara also showed her own keen eye for design by decorating the large tree by the fireplace herself.
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HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020 FARRAGUT LIFE
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Stinnett House Photography by Cody Galbraith
The Stinnett family enjoys living the farm life, and Rebecca and Dawn incorporated that farmhouse style into the decorations in their home, as well. The pheasant feathers and plaid accents help drive home the theme, while snow-dusted pinecones bring the outdoors in. We left spaces on their tree for them to work in their children’s favorite keep sakes. This family-friendly, country home Christmas decor is perfect for celebrating the season with cherished loved ones. 18
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PHOTOGRAPHY
Real Estate, Commercial & Food Photography 865-924-6547 | www.CodyGWise.com | codysclouds@icloud.com
MAKE TONIGHT SPECIAL.... AND DON’T FORGET, WE DELIVER! One of our specialties here at Knoxville Room Service is our catering of Charcuterie. Charcuterie is a gourmet and extraordinary meat and cheese spread that is on beautiful boards along with many other ingredients such as fruit, chocolate, cookies, jams, nuts, olives, herbs and oils, hummus, pickled vegetables, artichoke hearts, cornichons, and more! Or less, however you want it! Charcuterie, wine, craft beers, and craft cocktails are best friends, their teamwork makes the dream work! Charcuterie is festive and often meant for intimate social gatherings with family and friends. Having a charcuterie tray out inspires cheer, and keeps everyone cheerful as they relax and snack, and enjoy classy and delicious libations. Charcuterie can serve a great purpose this holiday season. Think about it, when family
is all together visiting, and staying a few days to a week or so, you all have a big breakfast/ brunch together then later you have a big dinner. Well, if you’re like us anyway! We usually end up snacking throughout the day and just spending time with each other. Let us do this for you! It is more work than you think! You should be able to relax or do other things that you want/need to do, and we live for this! We currently have a couple of featured boards that you can check out on our website. We also cater made-entirelyfrom-scratch cannolis and chocolate covered strawberries. We can bartend your home or your work christmas party! Or, another cool thing we could do is host a liquor/ wine tasting at your home. Full-service of course! We provide all the alcohol, mixers, cups, cocktail napkins, trash cans, even in some cases, the actual brand rep from the distillery to tell about the liquors. Tell us exactly what liquors you want to feature in the tasting. Also, we can help pick them out for you, which we would love to do because we know what is good and have products
you have probably never seen before. We will stay the duration to pour samples and tell about them. Throughout we will throw away empty cups and wet, left behind, napkins. We will set up a water decanter and bring the ice. Then of course we will clean up afterwards. In the store we always have open bottles of only the good stuff for our clients to taste when they come in. You bet we will be having a champagne tasting event before new years! Stay tuned (check our website frequently) because now we have packages, and we are experimenting to come up with the best holiday cocktail ideas!
For Delivery call us at (865) 232-0802 or TEXT us. HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020 FARRAGUT LIFE
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2018 Winner of Taste of Farragut Voted Knoxville’s 2017, 2018 & 2019
Best Wine Menu
Wednesday acoustic Duo’s Saturday Local Jazz Artists
live music
Lunch & Dinner
Winter Menu Seasonal & Fresh Saturday Brunch
Fresh Local Produce
Original culinary creations Working women - Networking
5:30-7:30 Wednesday
Let Us Plan your
holiday gathering
Our Bourbons Celebrate here with us at w2w or we will come to your home or office
Hours
Monday 3pm - 10pm Tuesday - Thursday 11am - 11pm Friday & Saturday 11am - 12am Sunday closed
Happy Hour Daily 3pm - 6pm
Lunch & Dinner Catering & Private Events
865.392.1586 607 North Campbell station rd, knoxville Call for Reservations
Like us on Facebook for Upcoming events
CHEF • CATERER • PERSONAL CHEF
A French Chef in Your Kitchen Whether you need weekly meals for your busy family, a private chef on your vacation, a catered business event or birthday, or perhaps you want your group to experience a cooking, pastry, or wine class, Chef Eva is the remarkable choice.
(678)-308-1852 | chef.eva.andres@gmail.com | www.chef-eva.com
American Holly Cedar Waxwing by Gayle Fisher
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ow is the time to recognize our native holly, Aquifoliaceae. The female sets berries in the fall, and birds will enjoy this feast through the coming winter months. The height of American holly, or Christmas holly, ranges from 25 ft. to as tall as 60 ft. The stout, stiff branches of this pyramidal evergreen bear dark green, non-glossy, spine-tipped leaves. Be careful: these hollies can scratch. New growth finally pushes off the old leaves in spring. Bright red berries occur on the female plant only. A shorter, multi-trunked form may grow in lower-light situations. The bark is a light gray color. The evergreen fruiting branches from wild and planted trees are popular for Christmas decorations. Many improved varieties are grown for ornament, shade and hedges. You must have both a male and female plant to have berries, or at least have the opposite sex growing wild somewhere nearby. The male must be the same holly species as the female and bloom at the same time. This is a very slow-growing tree. The whitish, fine-textured wood is especially suited for inlays in cabinetwork, handles, carvings and rulers, and can be dyed various shades...even black! It has been used for piano keys. Many kinds of songbirds, gamebirds and mammals eat the bitter berries of this and other hollies, but the fruits are poisonous to humans. The American holly’s growth habit is densely pyramidal with branches to the ground when young. With age, the plant is more open and irregular. I have one that is over 45 years old, and it is around 25 feet tall. It was already on the farm when we moved here. I cannot believe how slow it has grown, and it is in full sun. No wonder the wood is so dense!
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The female flowers are a dull white, and the berries are a dull red. Fruit matures in October and persists into winter. Even though this plant is not as showy as our new holly cultivars, it is a native plant and has evolved with the wildlife in the area. Birds recognize the berries immediately. Cedar Waxwings are a favorite of many birders and backyard naturalists. With their fuzzy-looking crests and sharp color accents, they’re such dapper-looking birds. I had a photographer tell me that waxwings are the prettiest of all birds. I totally agree. A large flock of them picking through berries is always a joy to watch. But what’s in a name? Why is it called a waxwing? That’s pretty simple: Cedar Waxwings really have wax wings. The bright red, visible on the wing feathers, is actually a waxy red secretion. Interestingly, the red appendages of Cedar Waxwings increase in number and size with a bird’s age: individuals with zero to five waxy tips are presumable immature birds, while those with greater than nine are thought to be older. Individuals within these two categories tend to associate as mates. Pairs of older birds (those with greater than nine waxy tips) nest earlier and raise more chicks
than do immature birds, suggesting that this plumage characteristic is an important signal in mate choice and social organization. Cedar Waxwings specialize in eating fruit, an interesting adaptation among North American birds. While we think of many birds as dining on berries, in reality, berries are only a small portion of their diets. Cedar Waxwings can exist solely on berries for months. There are more than 1,000 cultivars of American holly. If you are planting hollies, you need one male for every three females. Early Americans had a great deal of superstition about hollies. It was believed that planting hollies near buildings would provide protection from witchcraft and lightning. In Tennessee, these hollies also go by the common names of Christmas Holly, Yule Holly, Prickly Holly and Evergreen Holly. I have several native hollies on the farm. The American Holly outside my dining room window had gone unnoticed until last year. I just happened to be walking by when I saw movement out of the corner of my eye. The tree was alive with birds. At least 35 birds were voraciously eating the berries. Within 10 minutes, all the berries were gone, and so were the waxwings; it was magical.
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H
ow many times have you heard the question, What will be your legacy? Or heard it said that someone left a great legacy? In its basic meaning, a legacy is a gift of money that’s granted by the terms of a will—often a substantial gift that needs to be properly managed. But the word is used much more broadly, as well. Legacy is more about sharing what you have learned or experienced, not just what you have earned or have purchased. Nick Macco and Adam Boeselager have made sharing your legacy easy and amazing. The two began converting old movies and slides into digital files for storage and replay on today’s electronic devices while attending Lee University. They founded Southtree, a direct-to-consumer e-commerce company, in
the garage of a home shared in Chattanooga. The company laid the foundation for what is now the world’s largest digitizer of home movies and photos. Legacybox and their parent company, Southtree, have digitized 3-million videos, and serve customers across the United States. The company has nearly 200 employees, two Tennessee-based offices, and a 52,000-square-foot production facility. It’s very easy! Just visit legacybox.com to order your LEGACYBOX kit. Upon receipt, pack it with your media memories. They include safety barcodes for every item, and a pre-paid UPS® shipping label. Drop your filled Legacybox off at a UPS location and await the magical transformation. They will digitize every item by hand, with personalized updates provided at each step.
LegacyBox.com 800-797-8210 26
FARRAGUT LIFE HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020
You will receive all your original media back, along with perfectly preserved copies on thumb drive, the cloud or DVD. There’s never been a better time to dust off those priceless photos and clean out your closet full of camcorder tapes and aging film reels. Digitize your old family memories and share them today; it’s a priceless gift to yourself and loved ones. Legacybox ensures your family history is preserved forever.
400 Harriet Tubman Street Knoxville, Tennessee 37915 Office: 865.215.6800 Fax: 865.215.6888 24/7 Help Line - 865-521-6336 The Knoxville Family Justice Center is on a mission to collect 1,000,000 pennies to help the children and families affected by domestic violence. Flip the couch cushions, check the car console, search the bottom of your old purse, or donate online right here and make a difference in the life of a survivor. Last year, 1,586 children lived in the violent homes of the clients who came to the Family Justice Center. Help us on our Quest for a Million Pennies so children can feel safe at home and families can rebuild.
Drop Off Locations: • Starbucks - Kingston Pike and N. Campbell Station • The Homewood Suites by Hilton Turkey Creek • Hampton Inn and Suites Turkey Creek • Residence Inn by Marriott at Cedar Bluff • The Courtyard Marriot at Cedar Bluff • Vanessa Brown State Farm Agency • Turner Homes and Woody Creek Realty • Unlimited Training Systems • Turbospin Cycling Studio • Hometown Lenders • Downtown Painting with a Twist • Cryostretch USA • Regions Bank, Farragut Branch • The Plaid Apron • Orangetheory Farragut • Turner Concierge • Orangetheory Bearden • Burn Bootcamp • Staybridge Knoxville West • Bingham Group • Sylvan Learning Center • Guild Mortgage • BW James Jewelers • Pour Taproom • Heritage Family Dentistry • Maple Hall • Knuckle Busters Auto • Inova Payroll • City-County Building • KCDC
www.fjcknoxville.org/quest
DOGWOOD LANE Dogwood Lane, owned by Kelly Manisealco, showcases a curated collection of trendy and timeless fashion, with a hint of downtown edge. They strive to provide chic, up-to-date style at an affordable price. Let them help you put together a look for day or night, update your home with a beautiful accessory or pick out the perfect gift! If you need a break after enjoying the eclectic items curated by Kelli at Dogwood Lane, check out the latest book by her sister, Kerri! Capturing the Devil is the thrilling conclusion to Kerri’s Stalking Jack the Ripper series. We are incredibly proud that both Kelli and Kerri call Sweetwater home! 107 E Morris Street, Sweetwater www.dogwoodlaneboutique.com
SWEETWATER GENERAL STORE A recent addition to downtown Sweetwater, Sweetwater General is located right next door to Hunter’s Café and carries an assortment of gifts. You will be greeted with welcoming scents as soon as you walk through the door, as well as gorgeous handmade pottery (made by the husband of the store’s owner!) The store carries brands that are tough to find in Sweetwater, like Two Left Feet Sock Company and vegan, handmade soaps from the Buck Naked Soap Company. Displays throughout the store include children’s clothing, unique gifts and seasonal displays. Don’t miss out on this new addition for your holiday shopping needs! 103 E Morris Street, Sweetwater
NATURAL ELEMENT INTERIORS
If your house just doesn’t quite feel like home, then Natural Element Interiors is here to help! Located in downtown Sweetwater, Fairy Lambert’s store is part inspiration, part consultation. The physical store has an array of furniture and decor pieces to help inspire
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you on your quest to create a welcoming and appealing space in your home. And Fairy and her skilled design staff are also available if you’d like a consultation or full-service interior design assistance. Taking into account scale, proportion, balance and harmony, they will use their knowledge and experience to help make your home
comfortable, beautiful and functional. Visit Natural Element Interiors at 211 North Main Street, or find them on the web at www. naturalelementinteriors.com.
Correct Craft
T
R EC O GN I Z ED A S M O S T I NNO VA T I VE M A RI NE C O M PAN Y
his October, Soundings Trade Only magazine recognized Correct Craft (in a tie with Brunswick) as the most innovative company in the marine industry at the IBEX Industry Breakfast. The company was recognized for its innovative technology, culture, learning environment and M&A strategy. Soundings Trade Only acknowledges companies using innovation in different ways to advance their businesses in choosing the marine industry’s Most Innovative Company. The magazine considered all types and sizes of marine companies around the world. The judging panel consisted of Soundings Trade Only editors, staff members and outside industry experts. They reviewed company initiatives that include innovative materials, new manufacturing processes, fresh marketing approaches, workforce solutions, supply chain, export programs and more. Correct Craft President and CEO Bill Yeargin stated, “Correct Craft is honored to receive such a phenomenal award. All our Correct Craft brands have been working hard at developing cultures of innovation. Correct Craft’s Watershed Innovation, our disruptive innovation company, is making a better tomorrow today by identifying, researching and applying disruptive innovation throughout our company.” Yeargin added, “We believe increasing computational power over the next ten years will drive technological development beyond what we can currently comprehend. We want to prepare our company today for this
inevitable and disruptive future. We believe our focus on innovation is positioning our company to thrive in the years ahead and help us carry out our mission of ‘Making Life Better.’” Correct Craft has a four-pronged approach to innovation: technology, culture, learning and mergers and acquisitions. INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY
Watershed Innovation was formed by Correct Craft for disruptive innovations. Ingenity, Correct Craft’s electric drive company, has developed the most advanced electric recreational boat ever made. Osmosis, our company focused on IoT, has created the marine industry’s most advanced telematics system. Watershed Innovation also acquired Merritt Precision to bring new technologies to the industry by implementing cutting edge milling, tooling equipment, additive manufacturing, artificial intelligence and robotics. INNOVATIVE CULTURE
Correct Craft believes innovation is deeper than technology and sees culture not only as a key to innovation but one of its innovations. Correct Craft articulates its culture with the following: communicating purpose over profit, having an open environment for crazy ideas that creates innovation, supporting marine industry advocacy, going on global and local service trips and many other avenues. Correct Craft also recently announced a marine industry culture summit for marine industry executives and HR personnel to share our learnings and learn from others. The summit
is being underwritten completely by Correct Craft as a service to our industry. INNOVATIVE LEARNING
Correct Craft University (CCU) was designed for employee development and learning through personal, professional and leadership growth. CCU creates courses specifically for each brand through on-site classes, microlearning videos, webinars and readings. The Correct Craft team aspires to be learners. INNOVATIVE MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS
Correct Craft has a unique and innovative M&A focus that ensures sellers we will look after their employees, brand and legacy. While most acquisitions are made with an eye toward a future sale, Correct Craft has no exit strategy when acquiring companies. We want to build on the legacy of the seller and invest in the company for long-term future growth, not just short-term profits. Correct Craft has closed three acquisitions within the past year and expects more acquisitions in the future. Sellers can trust Correct Craft to take good care of their company.
About Correct Craft: Celebrating 94 years of excellence in the marine industry, Correct Craft is a Florida-based company with global operations. Focused on “Making Life Better,” the Correct Craft family includes Nautique, Centurion, Supreme, Bass Cat, Yar-Craft, SeaArk, Parker and Bryant boat companies, Pleasurecraft Marine Engine Group, Watershed Innovation and Aktion Parks. www.correctcraft.com.
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L
By Sydnee Brashears
ike a sudden storm on the summer sky, tragedy can strike without warning. For David Wood, the structure of his adolescent faith could not stand up to the storm, and the boy sought relief in the abyss of substance abuse. It’s been a long road, and he’s needed a lot of help from both his family and God to climb out of the pit, but the rain has ceased, and his story has not only inspired those in the United States but across the world.
Beauty from Ashes:
DAVID WOOD’S TESTIMONY
It began with a trio of deaths that occurred within David’s teenage years. First, his girlfriend was killed in a car accident. After that, his friend’s younger sister lost her fight with leukemia. Finally, his friend fell into a coma and did not recover. These three deaths devastated young David, and instead of turning to those who could help him cope with his grief, he masked his pain and turned to a quick fix: alchohol. It was a slow fade from alcohol to drugs. Pain and fear overwhelmed David, and he lost his way with the Lord, questioning unanswered prayers and the unjustified deaths of those close to him. The cracked foundation of prayer that had begun in his youth had shattered, and all he wanted was to numb the grief. He found a community with his friends, but there was no hope there. As he dug himself deeper, he lost control just to feel normal. “For those of you who work out,” David states, “you hit a plateau, and you’ve gotta add more weight on. Photoshoot in Naxos Greece to launch new projects.
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What you’re used to doesn’t work.” He was a charmer. Good at lying to others, great at lying to himself. He was an outstanding marine but, according to David, “a horrible person.” He put on a mask to hide the brokenness of his life, and he lied the most common lie on earth: that he was okay. He came out of the marines married to a woman whom he’d gotten pregnant with a son he’d never met. “I felt the light go out of my eyes,” he said. It wasn’t until he went in for a routine blood test that he was forced to confront the thing that he’d created of his life. He was diagnosed with Hepatitis C. “It’s not just a little positive,” his doctor told him. “You’re in serious trouble. You’re dying.” And David was terrified. The treatments would be painful - lesions, cysts, a loss of muscle mass and his hair. Everything that made up who that mask was would be taken, forcing him to face the monster of his own making. This he did...but with his family’s help. It was his older sister, Rachel, who threw the rope to help him climb out of the pit. She busted into his life on Father’s Day of 2005.
“Why haven’t you killed yourself?” the book asked him. “Are you worthy to bear your own cross?” This was the question that brought him to his knees. He realized he didn’t have to. He was not alone, and his cross was already borne for him. In that moment, he begged God to take him back, for what he’d done was his fault. David didn’t experience just an inkling of hope - it was so much more. “I felt what I’d been searching for this the whole time... I was filled with the Holy Spirit.” It wasn’t smooth sailing from then on, however. He described his journey as climbing uphill, on sand. He had to become a Christian again every day, and he had several slips as he struggled closer to God and His grace. He continued to live in his sister’s basement as the treatment continued. “I’m not gonna say that it wasn’t painful,” he says in his testimony, “but is was so much better than a decade before: running and being in pain and shame.”
“I love you,” he remembers her saying, “and I’m not going to watch you die.” She went on further to say that she was going to teach him how to be a father, how to be a man of God. She took her little brother into her home, in a nice room in the basement, and it was the first love he’d allowed in for a long, long time.
He began rebuilding his foundation of faith about 4 months into the treatment, when three storm clouds brewed on the horizon: custody of his son, pending felony charges and a blood test. After three days of fervent prayer, God answered him. The felony charges were dropped, he won custody of his son and his doctor told him that there was no more Hepatitis C in his liver.
During the year-long treatment, he read books to pass the time. He was still scared and lost. Man’s Search for Meaning, he recalls, was the one that convinced him to get ahold of himself. The book was penned by a Jewish man named Viktor Frankl who’d survived the Holocaust and his creation of logotherapy.
After his ordeal, he decided to graduate from UT. He originally wanted to use his experience to reach out to troubled youth, but after meeting with a mentor named Tom Henry and another answered prayer, he decided instead to minister in China. Tom took
him on a mission trip to several cities in China, including Beijing and Shanghai. With his Marine Corps training, he was a great help in his six years of working with the underground church. During his work, he was led into ministry with gang members, triads and the addicted. This only opened more doors. He was able to meet with the Hong Kong elite and chose Hong Kong to live with his new wife and open his own business. In his testimony, David asks his father, John Wood, why he didn’t give up on him. The answer was simple: “Because I have been loved well, by my earthly father and my heavenly father.” He went on to say that David was no worse than he, just braver and more successful Vaiva Paulauskaite Wood, at sinning. “I heard members Model and Mother of the family...they said, ‘You know what? Just give up on him’... And my dad would say, ‘Don’t you ever give up on that young man, he’s my son, and I love him.” And John felt the same. Oftentimes society pressures us to hide the storms we’ve been going through, to pretend we are not drenched in self-hate and grief and brokenness. John has taken his and David’s testimony as an inspiration to his own church. He wants his church to be a place where the congregation can take off the masks and find hope in the salvation of Jesus Christ. Because if church is not a place you can take off the mask, then where will people find hope and fellowship? John Wood, retired Cedar Springs Presbyterian Pastor, with son David.
FAMILY
David is known for his film work in movies like “Ghost in the Shell,” “Vixen” and “The Man from Macau.” He also played a Marine in the last two Donnie Yen films, “Big Brother” and “Ipman 4,” in addition to his television work with Spartan Race’s global “Agoge” Endurance Evolutions. He has three new projects, including one for Netflix.
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David’s son, Jaden, was born in December 2001. At the time, he was fighting in Afghanistan as a Marine Sergeant, along with the first boots on the ground after 9/11. He didn’t meet his son until he was six months old. Through custody battles and many obstacles, he gained full custody of Jaden. He raised him as a single father until he met his wife in Hong Kong; she has since helped raise him from the time he was 11 years old. Jaden turns 18 this December; he’s already enlisted in the US Marines and will go Recon. He starts Bootcamp this March. Living and learning together in Hong Kong has been such a blessing. Having him so young and unplanned gave him an almost brother-like relationship, and now they truly are best friends. David’s two twin daughters, Abigail and Isabella, were born in Hong Kong In 2015. They were born four months premature, each weighing around 400 grams at birth. They spent their first four months in incubators, receiving multiple surgeries, fighting for their lives. It was the darkest time in his soul and marriage; his marriage felt like two drowning people trying to save each other. There were no certainties. Every day was another miracle and another day of patience. In April 2016, his daughters came home. They’re now healthy young ladies. They taught him the gift and virtues of patience and positivity in the darkest days. David’s oldest daughter, Michelle, is nineteen years old. He met and discovered her last year through Instagram. Her mother found David through his VOG (@ virtus.outdoors) İnstagram. She was born in Panama in March 2000, following his first deployment to LATAM in 1999. Back then, they had no social media, smartphones, etc., so her mother and David lost touch right after his deployment, neither of them knowing a child was conceived. After seeing her picture last October, David immediately knew she was his. She looks exactly like his mother and older sister. Michelle taught him that there is always time to love, grow and build relationships.
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WHAT IS VIRTUS?
“Virtus is Latin for warrior virtues, virtues of honor, courage, commitment. As a veteran, Virtus to me, is more than a clothing or athletic brand, it is a brand for warriors. I’ve been in the textile game long enough to have seen how clothing is really produced. It’s often a designer based in the States outsourcing to middlemen in Asia without ever getting on the ground and testing anything. They normally never see the factory or even conducting quality control inspections.
To us, the integrity of Virtus is our integrity as veterans, and as warriors. When we put our stamp on it, this brand becomes our honor.” “I have been experimenting with tactical gear since 1999, ever since I joined the Marines. In the military, there’s just a need for good gear. You get mass-produced military gear, but it’s really only the specialized units that get to use Oakley Tactical, FirstSpear, Patagonia, brands like this.
Being an extreme athlete and an outdoorsman, there was a longing to have gear that was made and designed like Patagonia, but was available to those of us in the military. At the end of the day, all we military guys, are extreme athletes. We do everything extreme athletes do, and we do it getting shot at, and often without the support of the great gear that other outdoorsmen have.”
We are launching a new clothing line in mid-November as well as leading global endurance events in Asia, Europe, LATAM, and the USA. You can follow these on our social media. www.virtusapparel.myshopify.com
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DIGITAL CAMOUFLAGE One of the many products created by David’s company, Virtus Outdoor Group, is digital camouflage. These products are designed to completely fool AI and drones to protect warriors in all conditions. Their products even feature winter concealment for snowy terrain.
EXTREME OUTDOORS Since its launch in 2016, VOG has become an innovator and leader in the realm of extreme outdoors gear. Though initially geared towards military, their products are popular with extreme sportsmen and athletes alike.
WHAT’S NEXT? Giving back is an important part of VOG, and as such, the company is involved in multiple outreach efforts. Nomi Network is a nonprofit agency helping fight human trafficking in India and Cambodia. Another outreach effort is FORCE BLUE; this organization’s mission is to unite the community of Special Ops veterans with the world of marine science and conservation.
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B EA U T I F U L HO ME FO R S A LE : FA RRA GU T S C HOOL S All brick family home with three-car side entry garage. Walk into this wonderful family home, and you will find a bedroom/office and large master bedroom on the main level. The separate formal dining room has plantation shutters and crown molding. The kitchen has lots of natural lighting and a breakfast room. The family gathering room has built- in bookcases and a fireplace. Upstairs has three additional bedrooms with a large bonus room and attic space. Outside has a portion of the yard fenced in for children and animals to play. This community has a pool, clubhouse and tennis courts for family fun.
4 bedrooms 4 bath 3,737 square feet $509,000 Price cut: $10K (11/1) 11901 Abners Ridge Dr, Knoxville, TN 37934 Robin A Aggers. Coldwell Banker Wallace & Wallace, Realtors • Phone: 865-22-7653 HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020 FARRAGUT LIFE
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As your local independent agent, let us shop for you and find the right coverage and price for your family. We know your time is valuable.
GRAHAM & COOK INSURANCE
AUTO • HOME • LIFE • BUSINESS
11915 Kingston Pike Suite 100 Knoxville, TN 37934 (865) 671-0754 www.grahamandcook.com
EXPERIENCE AN UNFORGETTABLE ADVENTURE!
Wild Tours Sweet Shop Restaurant Underground Lake And so much more!
140 Lost Sea Road , Sweetwater, Tennessee 37874
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• Comprehensive Vision & Eye Health Exams • Contact Lenses Including Specialty Lenses • Myopia Management & Control
• Treatment of Eye Diseases & Disorders • Optical Showroom with over 1,000 frames
Brent B. Fry, O.D. Premier Eyecare, PLLC 11111 Kingston Pike Knoxville, TN 37934
865-966-0100 | appointments@premier-eyecare.net | www.Premier-Eyecare.net
Experience the difference!
Experience the difference!
K-12Open Open House K-12 House
Sunday, January Sunday, January 26 26 12:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. Grace Student Building Grace Student Building 865.342.3811 865.342.3811 www.gcarams.org/admissions www.gcarams.org/admissions Find usus onon social! Find social! @gcarams @gcarams
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T HA NK YO U T O
2019
The 7th Annual Monroe Life Balloon Fiesta Returned To East Tennessee At The Sequoyah Birthplace Museum And Was A Huge Success!
The Balloon Glow choreographed to music even had a surprise appearance by Elvis during “Blue Suede Shoes.” 40
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A L L OUR W O ND E RF U L SP ONSO R S ! It has always been the goal of the Balloon Fiesta to showcase Monroe County and assist the organizations, individuals and non-profits who directly impact the lives of disadvantaged babies, children or youth. Surrounded by the spectacular mountain views on the shores of the beautiful Tellico Lake, The Sequoyah Birthplace Museum is the perfect
Recipient of Money Raised
Monroe County
location for all ages to enjoy this fun, family event.
Monroe County Mayor’s Office and Monroe County Tourism HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020 FARRAGUT LIFE
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cOngratulatiOns to all 2019 honorees
outstanding philanthropist lynda neWton
outstanding foundation holston conference foundation
for
outstanding corporate philanthropist blount memorial hospital
Outstanding vOlunteer fundraiser joel W. connell
outstanding youth in philanthropy k appa delta sorority
ThoughTful giving
2019 legacy award for outstanding philanthropic leadership mike mcclamroch
fundraising professional of the year bill may
stronger communities
and
better lives
Your life is a series of transitions. Getting through them is easier with a plan.
Rather & Kittrell started when two guys shared a commitment to what seemed to them like some pretty obvious ideas about money - how client relationships, trust and guidance were more important than “selling” for short-term gain. Put simply, “If we take care of people, our business will take care of itself.” It struck a nerve.
Hal - Age 56 TRANSITION STORY: Hal has spent his entire career building a business. He’s lived and breathed it since he was 24. Now it’s paid off. The money from the sale of his business allows him to retire. So, now what? He’s been so focused on building the business that he’s not sure how to plan for the next phase of his life.
Nearly 20 years later, based on the steadfast belief that people’s stories matter, a two desk business has grown into an awardwinning SEC-registered investment advisory firm serving successful individuals, families and businesses. We lead clients through the transitions that inherently come with money.
Molly - Age 66 TRANSITION STORY: Molly and Carl were the perfect couple. Married 45 years, they had two kids and four grandkids. When Carl passed away last year, Molly was strong, but she needs help with the finances. Carl handled most of that. Now she needs an expert she trusts to make sure everything’s in place for her and her family.
Call or email us today to write your story.
11905 Kingston Pike Knoxville, TN 37934
865.218.8400
Harold - Age 62 TRANSITION STORY: It’s finally come. After a long career, Harold is retiring and ready to spend time with his wife, Rachel, and the grandkids. They’ve saved as best they could over the years, but they aren’t sure if it will be enough to see them through.
www.rkcapital.com
RK is privileged to be recognized by Financial Times as one of the top 300 Investment Advisers in the country
Reed - Age 34 TRANSITION STORY: Reed and his dad, Frank, were always close. When Frank passed away, Reed was left quite an inheritance, a wonderful gift he didn’t expect and one he had no idea how to handle. He needs help making sure it grows and lasts long enough to see his two kids through college, per Frank’s wishes.
Photo
What Is Your Why? by Chris Kittrell
What’s important to you about money? Stop reading this article, put your coffee down, turn off the TV and for just a minute, ask yourself this question. What is truly important to you about money? There are no wrong answers. It’s the money you have now and your ability to earn money in the future that we’re talking about. It doesn’t matter whether you have a lot or very little. It doesn’t matter if you are a saver or a spender. It doesn’t matter what other people might think. This is your opportunity to define what matters most to you as it relates to money. In my profession, I have the privilege to ask this question daily, and it never ceases to amaze me how many people struggle to articulate their answers. It’s not that they don’t know; it’s more a reluctance to say it out loud. I’ve grown to expect the hesitation and awkward silence when asking this question. People don’t really want to
talk about it. The question forces thought. It makes us examine our values, our motivations and our dreams. Most would prefer to talk about the current political crisis, the latest geopolitical catastrophe or what the stock market is going to do in the future. All of these are interesting topics of discussion but they don’t get you any closer to ultimately defining your “WHY” that rolls you out of bed in the morning and off to your profession of choice. I’ve found that it’s much easier to concentrate on the “HOW” instead of the “WHY”. Most of us would much rather think and talk about “HOW” we’re going make more money, “HOW” we’re going to spend our money or “HOW” we’re going to invest our money. We spend very little time examining “WHY” we are going to bust our tails to make more money, “WHY” we’re going to
spend our money on what’s being marketed to us at any given moment or “WHY” we are choosing to invest our money to begin with. There is great satisfaction available if you can get crystal clear about your “WHY” before deciding “HOW”. One of the most rewarding things I get to experience in my work life is helping someone get above all the noise of the “HOW” to the point of truly concentrating on their “WHY”. It’s where peace of mind around money begins. It allows you to say no when confronted with the next great deal that can’t miss or that shiny new toy that you don’t really need. It allows you the freedom to say yes to the things that matter most like memorable experiences with the people you love, giving more to the charities you care about, or helping a grandchild graduate college debt- free. The possibilities are endless. So, before the never-ending details of “HOW” fill your mind again take a moment and answer the question: What’s important to you about money? Chris Kittrell is co-founder and principal of Rather & Kittrell. He is available at ckittrell@rkcapital.com
Securities offered through Securities Service Network, LLC. Member FINRA /SIPC . Rather & Kittrell, Inc. is a Registered Investment Advisor with the SEC.
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& BRYANT LAND CATTLE
215 Total Acres For Sale 175 Acres in Grass
LOCATED IN THE SWEETWATER VALLEY AT 16365 BLUE SPRINGS ROAD, PHILADELPHIA TN 37846 IN ROANE COUNTY 8.1 MILES FROM I-75 AT EXIT 62
MAIN BARN 70” x 90”
HAY STORAGE BARN 350 - 400 Round Bales 40’ x 100’ Level rock floor Insulated roof
Concrete foundation 4’ Masonry walls East wing under-roof head gate
6” WATER MAIN ACROSS
West wing concrete with a 40-station feed way
FRONT OF PROPERTY.
When I retired from the boat manufacturing business in 2012 after 51 years, I wanted to build my dream farm. In the summer of 2012, I purchased 215 acres that had been in the Price family for years but, in the past thirty years, had not been worked. I love to operate heavy equipment, so I soon bought a 963 Cat loader and rented a nearly new D6 Cat dozer. I started at the front on Blue Springs Road, the process of reclaiming the property. As each area was cleared, I soil tested and brought the PH up to specs with lime. I planted a mixture of Fescue, Rye, Orchard grass and Red Clover on the cleared ground. Today, I have approximately 175 plus acres in pasture. There are two year-round creeks that transverse the farm. Most pastures have Ritche Waterers with underground l” sch. 40 PVC waterline. With my age and no one to continue, it is simply time to sell.
423.337.3639 WWW.BRYANTLANDANDCATTLE.COM
BUILDINGS • Buildings on the farm were built by Gunn Construction • Main barn is 70’ x 90’, concrete foundation with 4’ masonry walls. All wiring is in conduit and up to commercial code • The corral holding area is very convenient to work cattle • East wing houses the underroof head gate, scales and the rotating crowd work area • West wing side is concrete with a 40-station feed way • Last but not least is the cabinoffice with bunk beds, pot-belly woodstove, kitchen, bath & covered porch that overlooks much of the farm.
• Sheds (8) in the pastures for shade. They are 32’ x 24’ and built to high standards
FENCE • 15,000 feet of perimeter fence, 52” 12 gauge woven wire with top strand of barbed wire • Corner posts are 6 5/8 galvanieed steel post • Inline pull posts are 4” galvanized with 2 x 2” brace post • 2” L4 gauge tube with 2xZx3116 ends • Gates are powder coated
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Charlie Brakebill
“We bobbed like a floater on a fishing pole for a day; the sea was too rough to take us ship to shore. It’s not gonna look good to get one of these military boats stuck, you know.” It is the simple explanation of how Charlie Brakebill landed on Omaha Beach in World War II. A native of Madisonville, Brakebill entered the U.S. Army at 18 years of age, serving three years in Europe during WWII. Little over four months past the invasion at Normandy, Charlie found himself walking up the steep hill to the unforgettable sight of over 15,000 white crosses of American graves. “Wow, what an introduction to France,” he thought.
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Charlie grew up in Madisonville and, as a child, attending primary school on the grounds of Hiwassee College. He recounts fondly the student teachers that taught and cared for the students; one in particular gave a gift to Charlie that was so cherished it remained in his living room until leaving for college. By the look on his face as he shares, you know this was a special time. Moving on
to Madisonville High School, another teacher would have a lasting impact, professor R.W. Howard, whose influence set a passion in Charlie to attend college and become an educator of Vocational Agriculture. With a goal in sight, he set about with determination following his high school graduation in May 1942 and enrolled at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.
April 6,1943, he arrived at Ft. Oglethorpe, Georgia. Just before his arrival to base, a chance encounter would begin a lifelong friendship, one that would set the path of his unforgettable legacy. At the top of the Incline Railway in Chattanooga, Charlie Brakebill met Ed Boling, a fellow UT student also headed to military service. The impact of this friendship is still felt today.
WWII Graves in France
At the time of entering college, the draft age for the war was 20, which indicated his education would not be interrupted. However, that changed on October 7th, and Charlie welcomed the birthday that signified eligibility to be drafted. Under the advisement of his college roommate’s father, Charlie enter the Enlisted Reserve Corps and was sworn into the U.S. Army on December 12, 1942. It was the following spring before Charlie received orders to report, and on
Following weeks of training, Charlie and Ed headed to Fort McClellan in Anniston, Alabama, where new troops trained for the fighting in North Africa. The next stage was assignment to ASTP, the Army Specialized Training Program located in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. By March 1944, Charlie was receiving a battery of testing and enrolled in some engineering classes at the University of Alabama, and by April 1944, he was assigned to the 1675th Engineering Utilities Detachment at Camp Claiborne, Louisiana.
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Ed Boling had also been shipped to Camp Claiborne, reuniting the close friends briefly. Charlie was building Bailey Bridges in Louisiana on D-Day, June 6, 1944, remaining at the base into August, when following a quick trip home, he was in Boston boarding the USS Wakefield heading to Liverpool, England. “I was granted a short leave home, then took a troop train into Boston. Ed was there, as well. We said hello and goodbye, and I boarded the ship,” reflected Charlie, “only to turn around to see Ed again.”
Once in Liverpool, Charlie’s engineering unit was immediately ordered to board a small British ship crossing the English Channel to Normandy. “We left the Wakefield and boarded a train for a 12-hour ride through blacked-out countryside,” Charlie continued. “Ed was headed to London, only to my surprise, there he was walking up the gang plank of that boat crossing the channel.” They would arrive and then again say goodbye on Omaha Beach shores some three months after D-Day, and neither would ever forget the sights and sounds.
Charlie with his wife Joyce and his two children, Linda Brakebill Bilderbach Norris and Larry Brakebill.
Charlie with his Loudon High School F.F.A. class in 1949. Next photo: U.S.Army soldiers Ed Boling, left, and Charlie Brakebill are pictured near Rennes, France, in March 1945. Brakebill served in an engineering detachment first assigned to the 94th Infantry Division and later to the 66th ‘Black Panther’ Division. Boling was in the 1783rd Engineer Parts Supply Company. Right: Ed Boling, left, and Charlie Brakebill were proud University of Tennessee graduates in 1948. Boling earned a business degree. Brakebill, who grew up on a farm near Madisonville, was an agricultural education graduate. The photo was made at Boling’s house, 1819 Highland Avenue. (Charlie Brakebill/Special to the News Sentinel)
Coded message to his mother letting her know where he was stationed. Location revealed using 6 letters to her, changing the middle initial each time to spell out RENNES. HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020 FARRAGUT LIFE
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On May 8, 1945, the war in Europe ended and Charlie would be going home. It was July 4th when the ship bringing him back to the United States viewed the Statue of Liberty. Home on a 30-day leave, Charlie was in Madisonville when the Atomic Bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The war was not over. At Fort Belvoir in Virginia, he and fellow servicemen took a break from the intense training for the planned invasion of Japan and traveled to Washington, D.C. On August 14, 1945, while enjoying dinner at the famous Willard Hotel, their waitress announced that Japan had surrendered. Charlie was actually in Lafayette Park, across from the White House, when President Truman threw his arms upward announcing victory. “The President came out. So did Mrs. Truman and their daughter, Margaret. They were not 50 yards from us,” remembered Charlie. With the war over, he returned to UT and graduated with a degree in agricultural education in 1948. That same year, Charlie married, and Ed Boling was his best man. Following graduation, Charlie taught Vocational Agriculture at Loudon High School. After teaching for three years, Brakebill was commissioned by the U.S. Air Force to serve on active duty for which he continued serving in the Tennessee National Guard until his retirement as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1967. In 1962, Ed Boling, who was the University of Tennessee’s first vice president for development, convinced UT that his best friend from World War II should join him in the new development office. Charlie became UT’s Director of Gifts and Grants.
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Military service may have ended, but the friendship continued to grow and so did the dedicated service to community, state and alma-mater. Charlie and Ed returned home from WWII to serve their state and university side by side, resulting in an impact that is immeasurable. Brakebill was the principal architect of the university’s nationally recognized fundraising program, retiring in 1996. And that best friend, Boling would become the most beloved university president, guiding the institution into the statewide system of today, retiring in 1988 after serving the longest term in school history.
The legacy is vast for Charlie and the University of Tennessee, who had big smiles as he shared amazing details. “Did you know I was the model for the Torchbearer,” he asked. “If not for me, that statue would just be something on campus, not the landmark of today.” The details of that story are almost as famous as the statue. So it goes that in the late 1960s, the campus planner took Charlie with a true to size cutout of the Torchbearer to a location. He was then asked to hold it as the planner drove around it. As embarrassment was taking hold, the planner traded places, asking Charlie to drive around. After it was all over, Brakebill
Left to Right: Ed Boiling, Charlie Brakebill, Andy Holt, & Joe Johnson
was asked to convince his bestie, Dr. Ed Boling, to override the architect and move the statue to its very visible location, and that is exactly what happened. The iconic Torchbearer is in its proper place, burning bright as a campus beacon, a popular place for graduation pictures, and ground zero for the pregame activities on UT home football Saturdays when the Vol Walk passes it.
In preparation for the meeting, Charlie has some big concerns and went to Ed, saying, “I don’t know much about Hollywood, but every actor or actress I’ve seen has got a cigarette in one hand and an alcoholic drink in the other.” With both of them thinking no deal would even be considered without before dinner drinks, the two convinced the university to approve the purchase of bourbon, scotch and gin for the meeting.
Charlie will tell you it is about opportunities, making the most of any chance to build a relationship. Being willing to walk through every door that opened set in motion the relationships that built Brakebill and then allowed him to set the same in motion for others. Charlie was primarily responsible for the $12 million endowment from the noted Hollywood director that established the Clarence Brown Theater. Back in 1967, the university was seeking funds for the construction of a new theater and made arrangements for Ed Boling and Charlie to meet with Movie Director Clarence Brown in California.
When the drink was offered to Brown, he responded with, “Young man, I’ve been out here this long, and I haven’t taken a drink of alcohol during that time, so I don’t think I’m going to start tonight,” Brakebill recalled. What seemed to be an ending became the start of a relationship “opportunity” with Charlie and his wife often welcoming the Browns as family in Tennessee. The Clarence Brown Theatre for the Performing Arts was formally dedicated in November of 1970, with the Browns in appearance. Several times, Brown called the occasion one of the greatest moments of his life.
Photos Right: A rendering of the Clarence Brown Theatre and Clarence Brown. The Brown’s often visited with the Brakebills when in East Tennessee. The last photo is at Charlie’s retirement party from the University of Tennessee.
OM AHA B EACH
Just mention the name Charlie Brakebill, and instantly it is connected with service, a life spent serving family, friends, community, state and country. He continues to make an unforgettable impact, if you want to know about that, just ask him, because he hasn’t forgotten anything, anyone or any time of his remarkable life. It is an honor to know him, talk to him share a laugh, but most of all, it is a priceless treasure to salute this Veteran, who continues to serve!
Charlie cold at Omaha beach. He originally came in on a landing craft and spent 48 hours waiting to land due to 8-10 ft waves. With him is his grandaughter Erin Pate fulfilling a goal of walking on Omaha Beach with her Papaw. (Charlie first landed on Omaha Beach in September of 1944, three months after D-day.
The ground above the cliffs is still “mogul-like” due to the artillery and grenades from 1944.
The Brakebills with Tennessee Ernie Ford.
Brandenburg gate in Berlin
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While repairing a roof of a bombed-out building in Rennes, Charlie Brakebill (at upper left in hat) and a crew of engineers saw a family struggling to get a piano into a 2nd floor apartment. They climbed down and moved the piano for the Guillard family, and Charlie met the daughter, Anthelmette Gullard.
B OOKS ARE A VA IL A B L E ON AM AZO N
Charlie (Left) putting his engineering education to work repairing building damaged from war in France.
THE PIANO LOVE AFFAIR Prior to the Japan invasion, Charlie was stationed in France when he came to the aid of a young woman and her family. He helped them lift a piano into their home…and thus began a brief and seemingly improbably love affair. The young Frenchwoman, Anthelmette, and her family welcomed Southern farm boy Charlie into their home for dinners, and she and the GI from Tennessee would often go on strolls together on the weekends. The
two kept in touch after Charlie returned to the States but eventually married other people and moved on with their lives. In 2013, however, Charlie was reconnected with Anthelmette’s family. She had passed away in 2007, but he flew to France to meet her family and pay his respects at her gravesite. This sweet story was the subject of an autobiography and, more recently, a short film.
Charlie visits Anthelmette’s grave. Upon arriving in Rennes, they were met at the train station by Anthelmette’s children. Left to Right: Maryse and Bernard Letourneux, Charlie and Soazig Padovani. A wonderful welcome followed by tea and treats in the Bernard’s home.
Anthelmette and Charlie in Thabor Gardens, May 1, 1945. Middle photo: Anthelmette Gullard Letourneux at the beach circa 1951. This photo was mailed to Charlie by Soazig in 2013. Last: Charlie and Anthelmette with repaired roof in back. The Piano Love Affair was turrned into a film directed by Gabe McCauley. Many WWII films and stories present the battles, but Charlie’s story shows another side of our G.I.s’ lives. In France, it was common for our soldiers to date, which served to alleviate the daily uncertainty, fear, loneliness, and ugliness of the war. Charlie and Anthelmette’s purity and humility, the end of their relationship, and what happened nearly 70 years later, makes their story unique and beautiful. The short film won several awards at this year’s Knoxville Film Festival.
Can Near-Sightedness Be Prevented? Written by Brent B. Fry, OD
If you or someone in your family is nearsighted, then you are aware of the challenges that come with not being able to see clearly far away without glasses or contact lenses. You are also aware that nearsightedness (myopia) is something that gets worse during the growing years. If a child develops myopia early in life, we typically see more severity of myopia into adulthood. You may ask, is there anything that can be done to prevent myopia? Unfortunately, myopia cannot be prevented. However, decades of research shows that myopia can be slowed down during the growing years. Why does this matter? A high degree of myopia makes a person more susceptible to cataracts, glaucoma, and retinal disorders. If you could slow down the progression of myopia in your child, would you not do everything you could to make that happen? Several methods can be used to slow down the progression of myopia. Although not yet FDA approved, many eyecare practitioners in the United States and across the globe are prescribing treatments to suppress myopia. Ortho-keratology, also known as CRT (Corneal Refractive Therapy), is a type of treatment that uses rigid gas permeable contact lenses to reshape the corneas overnight. This method has been around for decades and is still one of the most effective methods of slowing down myopia. With
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CRT, a child wears the lenses overnight while sleeping, then removes them upon waking. During the day, the child does not require glasses or contact lenses to see clearly. The best way to understand how this works is to think of CRT as a temporary LASIK. Whereas LASIK permanently reshapes the cornea to
correct the refractive error in individuals who have stopped growing (usually 20 years or older), CRT temporarily reshapes the cornea to correct the refractive error. CRT is temporary and reversible. CRT is very safe if prescribed and monitored by a licensed eye doctor who is experienced in fitting this type of contact lens.
Dr Fry is the owner of Premier Eyecare and has been fitting specialty contact lenses for over twenty years. He has been a speaker for Bausch & Lomb and Synergeyes and currently speaks for Cooper Vision.
Atropine drops can also be prescribed to slow down myopia progression, but unlike CRT, daytime glasses or contact lenses are required to see clearly at distance. When I council parents on the different methods of myopia control, I discuss all of the options available as well as recommended lifestyle changes which have shown to help reduce myopia during the growing years. Studies have shown that getting outside a few hours per day will play a large role in controlling myopia progression. Electronic devices are keeping our children indoors more. Also, these hand-held electronic devices require the eyes to focus up close which can lead to eyestrain and headaches. Due to how the eyes focus at near, this can overstimulate the eyes to grow in length, leading to higher myopia in adulthood. Another method of myopia control is wearing daytime bi-focal contact lenses with a special design. A center-distance bi-focal design focuses light on the retinas in such a way as to slow down the stimulation for growth of the length of the eyes. By suppressing the growth of
the length of the eyes, these lenses have shown to reduce myopia progression in children. As the eyes stop growing, those who have worn this type of lens will have less myopia than if they had worn traditional single vision glasses or contact lenses.
If you are a parent concerned about your child’s eyes and want to discuss all of the options available to provide excellent vision now, and in the future, then we encourage you to call Premier Eyecare to schedule an appointment. 865.966.0100
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Where There’s God’s Will, He Makes a Way HOW DALE BIEHL WENT FROM GEMTRON MANAGER TO RETIREE TO CHURCH PASTOR by Jennifer Porterfield
I
f it’s God’s timing, God’s will, nothing can stop it from happening. This is a truth Dale Biehl knows all too well.
and the people. Dale jokes that he loved it when the women would say, “Bless your heart.” But eventually, his job would become as such that he was able to move back to his hometown in Indiana so he and his wife could be closer to family.
get into trouble. “Are you doing right, or is it just your ego?”
Then he found a book that he was planning to use in his Sunday School class called The Though he was an Indiana native and Power of a Whisper. In this book, there returned to his roots many years ago, for a were five filters to go through to see if what time, Dale Biehl and his wife, Gaye, called you are wanting to do is truly from God, Dale retired from Gemtron 12 years ago East Tennessee home. The company Dale and Dale felt like this book was meant for and settled into a comfortable life back worked for in Indiana was bought out him. As this was happening, he saw an ad in Indiana where he participated in a by Gemtron, which was headquartered in the local newspaper for an auction for a golf league and would teach a Sunday in Sweetwater. Dale relocated nearby church in Vincennes and to Knoxville, where he and The LORD will guide you always; he will satisfy your needs in felt like God was telling his wife lived for over a a sun-scorched land and will strengthen your frame. You will be him to buy the building decade. During that time, like a well-watered garden, like a spring whose waters never fail. and start a church. Dale managed multiple Isaiah 58:11, NIV Almost jokingly, he manufacturing plants for mentioned in Sunday School, “I’m gonna School class at the local church he Gemtron, including the Sweetwater plant; attended. The class started at around 20 buy a church. I’m gonna preach.” He didn’t one back in Vincennes, Indiana; and even have any idea if he could even do it. people but within five years had grown one in Mexico! His wife, in the meantime, spent many years as a librarian at Farragut to a whopping 48! Dale began to think This was in May. On June 25th, they held perhaps he had something to offer, High School. but he wanted to make sure he wasn’t an open auction for the church. Now, this wasn’t your average church building. This misinterpreting his calling. It’s easy, he The two loved the beauty of East was a historic, 100-year-old building with Tennessee – the mountains, the food, said, when you’re a confident person to 58
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Wabash Community Church, Established 2018
stained glass windows and a sanctuary that could sit 200 people. What is a church like that even worth? Surely it would go for a pretty penny. The bidding began at $10,000, and Dale thought, okay. I can bid. He went back and forth with another interested party, and when the bidding hit $13,500, he felt like God was telling him to stop right there. So he stopped bidding…and so did the other party. Given the low price, the auctioneer told him he would have to talk with the current owners and would get back with him in a few days. As he waited, Dale told himself if God would let him get that church for such a ridiculously low price, he would never take a penny of salary from it. He’d give it ten
years as pastor (if his health allowed). Or if it became big enough to pay another pastor to take over, he’d hand over the keys for free. A week went by…nothing. Then a week later, he received a call that would change his life. “They’ve accepted your price,” they said. Dale was on the golf course at the time and asked if they’d give him a couple of hours. He went home, walked into the house, and without thinking, he said to his wife, “What do we do?” And Gaye, his wife of over 50 years who’d been a Christian pretty much her whole life, responded with, “We don’t have a choice.” It was that confidence from her that gave him the courage to take the next step, and
from there, it was like every door opened for them. Friends and locals stepped up to help get the church ready. Their piano, organ, and sound board were all donated. A local delivery person even went and picked them up and delivered them to the church free of charge. Volunteers painted the whole inside
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Commit to the LORD whatever you do, and he will establish your plans. -Proverbs 16:3, NIV
of the church with free advice on the colors from an interior decorator. A carpet cleaner came and cleaned the carpets completely free of charge. His brother’s church donated all their pew Bibles. He even was able to get incorporated as a 501(c)(3) in a matter of hours, for free, thanks to a helpful local lawyer. This was a process that should have taken weeks and upwards of $2,500! Wabash Community Church opened on Veterans Day, November 11, with about 116 people. Dale knew a lot of people would be there – friends to show support and other locals out of curiosity. Since then, they averaged about 46 people until the end of March, over 60 as of June, and now up to 85 or more! With the added attendance, Dale knew they would eventually need more parking, but God is making a way there, as well. Two houses across the street were donated to the church, and a friend came
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and tore down the houses and hauled away the materials for free. Soon, they will have a new parking lot with an additional 50 to 60 spaces – plenty of space for those coming to enjoy service every Sunday. Dale says the purpose of the church is not necessarily to draw others away from their churches. He even told his fellow church members at the old church he attended not to follow him, to stay where they were. What he truly is seeking to do is draw people who haven’t gone to church before, haven’t been to church in a long time or are dissatisfied with where they are. The size of the congregation is not important to him, either. It’s the people who are coming and knowing that they are getting spiritually fed and experiencing God. It can be a little intimidating at times for Dale. He’s committed himself to putting
together 52 sermons a year! But he knows that God will be with him every step of the way. Through his faith in God and God’s will for his life, Dale went from retired manager to church owner and pastor. God guided him and made a way, and his church will surely continue to be a blessing to those in his community for years to come.
American Red Cross Volunteers needed throughout Tennessee to Respond to Home Fires and Other Disasters Most of the 62,000 emergencies that the Red Cross responds to each year are local disasters like home fires. Trained and available, Disaster Action Team volunteers are ready to respond to these emergencies, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. While the Tennessee Region is lucky to have such highly skilled volunteers, the need for more disaster volunteers is great in many of the state’s more rural areas. This is especially true as the state has increasing numbers of local house fire clients for the fall and winter. American Red Cross volunteers arrive on scene after first responders to help those with critical needs after a fire has heavily damaged or destroyed a home or apartment. “We have several counties that may only have one or two Disaster Action Team volunteers that live in the area,” said Joel Sullivan, Regional Executive for the American Red Cross of the Tennessee Region. “The need is
great in the small communities for people who are willing to help. We need more volunteers who care about others and are willing to step up and make a difference for their neighbors.” Volunteers must be at least 18 years of age and complete a volunteer application, including a background check. Required training is provided free of charge. “There is a volunteer job for anyone who wants one,” Sullivan added. “These people help their neighbors on what is definitely their darkest of days. Volunteers are there to hold their hand, help them fill out important documents and connect them with services to get them back on their feet after a fire. It
is a very important job and one our disaster action team members do very well.” Red Cross assistance to families may include resources for emergency lodging, food, clothing, replacement of prescription medication, emotional support, and help connecting with other agencies that may provide ongoing assistance. To find out more information on how you can volunteer for the Red Cross in your community as a Disaster Action Team member, go to RedCross.org/Volunteer. You can search your location for available volunteer opportunities. The need for DAT volunteers is immediate in the following chapters: East Tennessee Chapter, Heart of Tennessee Chapter, MidSouth Chapter, Mid-West Chapter, Nashville Area Chapter, Northeast Tennessee Chapter, Southeast Tennessee Chapter, Tennessee River Chapter, and the American Red Cross – Fort Campbell.
About the American Red Cross: The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies about 40 percent of the nation’s blood; teaches skills that save lives; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a not-for-profit organization that depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit redcross.org or visit us on Twitter at @RedCross. Get Involved The Red Cross depends on the generous support of the American public to fulfill its humanitarian mission. To support our lifesaving work, please consider volunteering or making a donation by visiting redcross.org, calling 1-800-RED CROSS or texting REDCROSS to 90999 to make a $10 gift.
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ASK THE EXPERTS
Solid vs Engineered Hardwood
Montgomery Wood by Shaw
SOLID
Solid wood is milled from a single 3/4”-thick piece of hardwood. Because of its thickness, a solid hardwood floor can be sanded and refinished over several generations of use. Solid wood flooring expands and contracts with changes in your home’s relative humidity. Normally, installers compensate for this movement by leaving an expansion gap between the floor and the wall, and then quarter round is installed. ENGINEERED
Engineered wood is produced with three to five layers of hardwood. Each layer is stacked in a cross-grain configuration and bonded together under heat and pressure. As a result, engineered wood flooring is less likely to be affected by changes in humidity and can be installed at all levels of the home.
Kingwood by Shaw
CONSIDER THESE FACTORS WHEN DECIDING BETWEEN SOLID OR ENGINEERED HARDWOOD FLOORING: WHERE’S IT GOING?
On grade—at ground level
Above grade—second level or higher Below grade—below ground level, including basements or sunken living rooms Traditional solid hardwood flooring is not well-suited for high-moisture areas, such as bathrooms or below-grade installations. The construction of engineered hardwood gives it enhanced structural stability and moisture resistance so that it may be installed at any grade level.
WHAT TYPE OF SUBFLOOR DO YOU HAVE?
If you plan to install over concrete, you must use an engineered product to ensure structural integrity. Solid wood flooring or engineered flooring may be used over plywood, wood, or OSB subfloors. WILL MOISTURE BE IN THE ROOM? If so, you’ll want to select an engineered hardwood. The moisture resistance of an engineered hardwood makes it suitable for rooms where the presence of moisture is possible, such as bathrooms. Provided by shawfloors.com
TWO LOCATIONS IN KNOXVILLE: 9918 KINGSTON PIKE, 930 NORTH BROADWAY HOURS: MONDAY - FRIDAY: 8:30 - 5:30 SATURDAY: 9:00 - 1:00 www.broadwaycarpets.com HOLIDAY/ WINTER 2020 FARRAGUT LIFE
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Farragut Location
865-675-3999 New Powell Location
865-512-7542
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(800) 843-1663 ext. 404 (865) 531-6275 13125 El Camino Lane, Knoxville, TN 37932 Hours: M-F 7:30-5:00, Sat 9:00-12:00, Sun Closed
Providing Solutions
A premier venue worthy of your business and milestone events. A la carte and inclusive package options available. Conveniently located just 3 miles west of Farragut at I-40/1-75. 7690 Creekwood Park Boulevard, Lenoir City, TN 37772 | 865-986-8340 | www.VenueLC.com | info@VenueLC.com
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Int er
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Serving the community since 1991
Connect with the world Private tutoring & small group classes For Adults and Children
Want to teach your native language? Email,
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Tennessee State Library and Archives Hosts “Family History Day” and Genealogy Workshop Sat, November 30, 2019 9:30 AM – 11:00 AM CST Nashville, Tenn. – Thanksgiving is a time to reconnect with family members and share stories. At the Tennessee State Library and Archives, families can also explore stories of their relatives during a free “Family History Day” workshop the Saturday after Thanksgiving. “The Tennessee State Library and Archives is a great resource for families to learn about their families, especially during the holiday season when we gather with loved ones,” Secretary of State Tre Hargett said. “This workshop is the perfect opportunity for families to come together and explore the vast resources of the state archives.” Archivist and professional genealogist, Melissa Barker, will lead the workshop called Family Gatherings: Dragging Genealogy Information Out of Your Family. Guests will learn tips and tricks to encourage family
members to share their family history this holiday season. Melissa Barker is the Certified Archives Manager, currently working as the Houston County, Tennessee Archivist. Barker writes a popular blog entitled A Genealogist in the Archives and is the Reviews Editor for the Federation of Genealogical Societies (FGS) magazine FORUM.
workshop, staff members and volunteers from the Friends of the Tennessee State Library and Archives will be on hand to help visitors with their research. While the workshop is free, reservations are required due to limited seating. To make a reservation, go to www.eventbrite. com/e/family-history-day-at-tslatickets-79156169233. Please note, the Library and Archives will be closed on Thursday, Nov. 28 and Friday, Nov. 29 for the Thanksgiving holiday, so it is important to make reservations beforehand.
The workshop will be held from 9:30 a.m. - 11 a.m. CDT Saturday, Nov. 30 in the Library and Archives auditorium. After the
The Library and Archives is located at 403 Seventh Avenue North, directly west of the State Capitol building in downtown Nashville. Parking is available around the Library and Archives building. 403 7th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37243
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Let Us Go to Bethlehem is a heartwarming paperback book with six chapters each reminding us of the greatest gift of Christmas! Use this study in your Sunday School class, Bible Study group, or personal devotions. May your heart and home be stirred as you think on the love and goodness of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ! A Christmas Gift for You! The ladies of the Temple Baptist Church compiled these dessert recipes from dishes they prepared for our annual Pastor’s College. Get your FREE* copy of this spiral-bound collection of dessert recipes with the purchase any one of our Christmas books before November 30th!
FREE WITH PURCHASE
ESTABLISHED 1977
Ski Scuba center has everything you need. • Classes, including an indoor pool, with over 75 years of combined experience • Retail sales with the latest gear • Equipment repair and air refills • Travelling for dives is available!
skiscuba.com 865-523-9177
Sutherland Ave. Knoxville, TN 37919
Get Ready for Spring Break Now!
Searching BEARDENBEARDEN For a New FARRAGUT At SouthEast Bank we see we the see good At SouthEast Bank the ingoodFARRAGUT in Adventure? Tennessee. Your choice a community bank Tennessee. Yourofchoice of a community bank supports supports local business, educationeducation and has and a has local business, a FOUNTAIN FOUNTAIN CITY vision forvision the future. It’sfuture. good It’s to know, your bankyour bankCITY for the good to know, believes believes in you and makes right hereright here in you anddecisions makes decisions in East Tennessee. When weWhen support localour local in East Tennessee. we our support HARDIN HARDIN VALLEY VALLEY economyeconomy and education, we growwetogether. and education, grow together. And that’s good to good know.to know. And that’s LENOIR LENOIR CITY CITY
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“Your home should tell the story of who you are, and be a collection of what you love.” Monday - Friday: 10AM - 5:30PM Saturday: 10AM - 4PM Sunday: Closed Website: www.NaturalElementInteriors.com Email: Info@NaturalElementInteriors.com
423.836.9189 211 N Main St, Sweetwater, TN 37874
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Lumber Company
L LC
We offer Custom Made Furniture from character woods and reclaimed lumber. This handcrafted wood furniture is built to reflect the customer’s desire for something uniquely different. Everhart’s woodcrafters create mantels, dressers, headboards, bars, dining tables, coffee tables, bookcases, vanities, kitchen islands or island tops only and many other specialty products.
Lumber Company
LLC
Located in the one of the most biodiverse areas of the United States, Everhart Lumber Company specializes in high quality specialty timber products. Everhart’s is a wood specialty and furniture store in Tellico Plains, Tennessee. Our company’s mill cuts superior strength native hardwood such as flaming box elder, ambrosia maple, walnut, eastern red cedar, and other wood species. Everhart’s offers Extra Wide Wood Slabs, using highly figured wood. We also offer furniture made from local reclaimed woods such as oak and pine. Everhart’s design and build magnificent furniture, along with counter-tops from these the slabs and reclaimed wood.
NEW STORE HOURS 877.857.8062 | 423.253.2323 Tuesday – Friday 9:00 – 5:00 911 HIGHWAY 165, TELLICO PLAINS, Saturday 9:00 – 2:00 TN 37385
www.everhart-lumber.com
Wine Caddies and Charcuterie Boards We also offer smaller items such as Wine Caddies and Charcuterie Boards that can be used for serving trays and cutting boards. The Charcuteries (cutting/serving boards) come with either metal handles or a wood handle. Most of the items are made from wood harvested in East Tennessee such as flaming box elder, figured maple, and other wood species and are sealed with food safe mineral oil. The Wine Caddy and the Charcuterie offers an easy way to feature fine wines and a medley of various cheeses, fruits, nuts & other foods for your family and guest. We provide gift cards to our customers for these items upon request that tell the story about the item and where it was made.
Root Wood Tables We also carry a line of items made from roots of teak wood trees including sofa tables, coffee tables, table bowls and table art. From time to time, you may even see an American Eagle carved from teak wood or a large root sofa table from a Rosewood tree root.
Please visit our Showroom in Tellico Plains TN to see how our wood products are being used by our customers. With busy schedules, we understand not everyone can regularly visit our showroom so we gladly work with customers through phone calls and email contacts to help them find what they need. And, in most cases we can ship anywhere within the United States.
We Love It! Tennessee Veterans Cemetary Photos by Cody Galbraith
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GOOD TIMES ALL THE TIME GOOD TIMES ALL THE TIME
There’s one way we can guarantee to have an all-time summer There’s one way we can guarantee to have an all-time summer and that’s on a MasterCraft. From the unbelievably heavy and that’s on a MasterCraft. From the unbelievably heavy h i t t i n g X S t a r t o t h e u l t r a a ff o r d a b l e N X T 2 0 , t h e r e ’ s a m o d e l f o r h i t t i n g X S t a r t o t h e u l t r a a ff o r d a b l e N X T 2 0 , t h e r e ’ s a m o d e l f o r every family and more than enough stoke to go around. The best every family and more than enough stoke to go around. The best o n otnh et hw t eart eur n ul on cl ok csk st hteh eb ebsets ts us m mm e er r e ev veer r, , eevveerryy ssuu m eaw um mm me e rr .. G e tG oe n wo a t bo on ab roda rndo n wt am t amsat setrecrrcarfat f. tc. oc m om