Author Archives: admin

Pellissippian – 1983

Pellissippian Table of Contents 1983 Issues

Combined Index for all 4 issues (pdf file)

Volume IV. Number I 1983-1

  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Court Minutes – Campbell County, 1813-1817
  • Court Minutes – Roane County, 1801-1805
  • Cemetery Listings:
  • McBath-Chiles – Knox County,
  • Andersonville – Anderson County,
  • Carden – Monroe County,
  • Roberts Family Graveyard – Roane County,
  • Patterson Family Graveyard – Roane County
  • David Baley Will (1829) – Roane County
  • Ancestor Charts
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Volume IV, Number 11 1983-2

  • Court Minutes – Campbell County, 1813-1817
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Hezekiah Balch Moore Letter – Roane County
  • Ancestor Charts
  • Donaldson & McCellan Deed to Bridges – Anderson County
  • Ancestor Charts
  • Court Minutes – Roane County, 1801-1805
  • Original Wroe Inventory – Roane County
  • Shelley Letter – Roane County
  • Vandergriff-Gentry Bible – Anderson County
  • Andersonville Cemetery – Anderson County
  • Info – Bits & Pieces
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Volume IV, Number III 1983-3

  • Luttrel Bible Record – Knox County
  • Cox Cemetery – Anderson County
  • Carroll Cemetery – Anderson County
  • Witt Bible Record
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Court Minutes – Roane County, 1801-1805
  • Info – Bits & Pieces
  • Ancestor Charts
  • Ancestor Charts Corrections
  • Geron/Old Bullard Cemetery – Roane County
  • Hickory Grove Cemetery – Monroe County
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Volume IV, Number IV 1983-4.

  • Message From the President
  • Notes From the Editor
  • Court Records – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Court Records – Campbell County, 1813-1817
  • Court Records – Roane County, 1801-1805
  • Condry Cemetery II – Grainger County
  • Condry Cemetery I – Grainger County
  • Cassady Bible Record – Union County
  • Ancestor Charts
  • Pellissippi Genealogical Society B -Laws
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Pellissippian – 1982

Pellissippian Table of Contents 1982 Issues

Combined Index for all 4 issues (pdf file)

Volume III, Number I 1982-1

  • Court Minutes – Campbell County, 1813
  • Court Minutes – Roane County, 1801-1805
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Cemetery Listings:
  • Patterson Family – Roane County,
  • Popular Creek Bapt. Ch. – Anderson County,
  • Coppenger (Community) – Monroe County,
  • Underwood – Anderson County,
  • Weaver – Anderson County,
  • Roberts Family – Roane County
  • George W Sharp Family Bible Record – Campbell County
  • Cemetery Listing: Delozier Family – Roane County
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Volume III, Number II 1882-2

  • Court Minutes – Campbell County
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Amos Marney Estate Petition – Roane County
  • Court Minutes – Roane County, 1801-1805
  • Peter Carter Childress Family Records – Campbell County
  • Cemeteries:
  • Longfield Baptist Ch. – Anderson County,
  • Cannon Family – Campbell County
  • Pension Applications – Roane County
  • John Stiener Spangler Family Ledger – Campbell/Union Counties
  • Queries

Volume III, Number III 1982-3

  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Court Minutes – Campbell County, 1813
  • Court Minutes – Roane County, 1802
  • Cemeteries:
  • Walker Long Bapt. – Anderson County,
  • Bowman – Campbell County,
  • Longfield Bapt. Ch, – Anderson County,
  • Unnamed – Anderson County,
  • Bunch Anderson County
  • Queries

Volume III, Number IV 1982-4

  • Court Minutes – Campbell County, 1813-1817
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Court Minutes – Roane County, 1801-1805
  • Jesse Stubbs Will (1825) – Roane County
  • Heirs of George Stubbs – Roane County
  • Book Reviews
  • Ancestor Charts
  • Queries

Pellissippian – 1981

Pellissippian Table of Contents 1981 Issues

Combined Index for all 4 issues (pdf file)

Volume II, Number I 1981-1

  • Rev. War Pension Applications – Roane County
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Index to Estate Book “A” 1802-1828 – Roane County
  • Cemetery Listings – Anderson County:
  • Patterson, Gibbs, Patterson
  • Queries

Volume II, Number II 1981-2

  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Abstract of Little Cove Creek Baptist Church
  • Records- Campbell County
  • Ancestor Chart Instructions
  • Cemetery Listings:
  • Greer Graveyard – Claiborne County,
  • Ferguson Cemetery – Claiborne County,
  • Reeves-Daugherty Cemetery – Anderson County,
  • McKinney-Watson Cemetery – Roane County
  • Rev. War Pension Applications – Roane County
  • Map of Roane County, TN, 1819-1821
  • Rev. War Pension Information – Morgan County
  • Fourth of July Celebration (1888) – Anderson County
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Volume II, Number III 1981-3

  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Newspaper Article (1912)- Anderson County
  • William Odell Will (1848) – Knox County
  • Rev. War Pension Applications – Roane County
  • Cemetery Listings: Estes – Morgan County,
  • Durham – Roane County, Bethlehem – Morgan
  • County, Big Creek Bapt. Ch. – Monroe
  • County, Big Toque – Monroe County
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Volume II, Number IV 1981-4,

  • Rev. War Pension Applications – Roane County
  • Rose Cemetery Listing – Roane County
  • Laurel Bluff Cemetery Listing – Roane County
  • Webster Cemetery Listing – Roane County
  • Luallen Civil War Pension Application – Campbell County
  • Knoxville Newspaper Abstracts (1800) – Knox County
  • Chadwell Cemetery Listing – Campbell County
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Ancestor Charts
  • Book Reviews
  • Queries

Pellissippian – 1980

Pellissippian Table of Contents 1980 Issues

Combined Index for all 4 issues (pdf file)

Volume I. Number I 1980-1

  • Old Bethel Cemetery – Roane County
  • Sevier Graveyard – Roane County
  • Salling Family Bible – Union County
  • Civil War Letter – Sullivan County
  • Baptist Church Deed (1817) – Robertson County
  • Indian War Letter (1813) – Fentress County
  • Old Lowe Cemetery – Scott County
  • Hembree Cemetery – Scott County
  • Buxton Family Bible – Morgan-County
  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Crow Cemetery – Roane County
  • Pellissippi Gen. Society Charter Members
  • Census of 1840 – Anderson County
  • Confederate Pension Application – Monroe County
  • Queries

Volume I. Number II 1980-2

  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Lost Creek Baptist Church Minutes (1833-1880) Union and Campbell Counties
  • Chapman Letter to Jones Family (1838) Anderson County
  • New Bethel Cemetery – Roane County
  • Excerpts from Hancock Will (1865) – Anderson County
  • Queries

Volume I. Number III 1980-3

  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Bookout Cemetery – Knox County
  • McCloud Cemetery – Knox County
  • Weaver Cemetery – Knox County
  • Licinda Curnutt Haggard Bible Record – Campbell County
  • Will of Robert Gragg (1793)
  • Will of William Brummett (1840)
  • Pension Statement, Rev. War: Veteran Porterfield & Veteran William Gallaher
  • Revolutionary War Plague – Scott County
  • Brashears Cemetery – Roane County
  • DeArmond Cemetery – Roane County
  • Riggs Cemetery – Roane County
  • Mays Cemetery – Roane County
  • Osborne Cemetery – Roane County
  • Suddath Cemetery – Roane County
  • Watson Cemetery – Roane County
  • Central Peninsula Wildlife Management Area – Union County:
  • Area Map, Cemetery Locations Keys,
  • Bridges Cemetery, Lost Creek Cemetery, McCarthy Cemetery
  • Pension Statement, Veteran Rutherford
  • Lost Creek Baptist Church Minutes – Union/Campbell County, 1845-1864
  • Queries

Volume I. Number IV 1980-4

  • Court Minutes – Anderson County, 1801-1809
  • Swan Pond United Methodist Church Cemetery – Roane County
  • Central Peninsula Wildlife Management Area – Union/Campbell Counties:
  • Old Mossy Springs Cemetery, New Mossy Springs Cemetery,
  • Mount Olive Cemetery, Oaks Chapel Cemetery (Better Chance),
  • Oaks Cemetery (Levi Evens Place), Sampson Bridges Cemetery,
  • Lays Cemetery, Prater Cemetery, Sharp Cemetery, Hill Cemetery,
  • Shelby Cemetery, Stiner Cemetery, Stout Cemetery. Old Hill Cemetery,
  • Bridges-Miller Cemetery, Cave Springs Cemetery, Weaver Cemetery,
  • White Cemetery, Albright Cemetery, Bolinger Cemetery,
  • Bowman Cemetery, Wilson Cemetery, Henegar Cemetery
  • Odell-Acuff Bible Record – Knox County
  • Abstracts of Lost Creek Baptist Church Minutes – Union/Campbell Counties, 1864-1880
  • Queries

Pellissippian Tables of Contents and Indexes

NOTE:  THIS PAGE IS UNDER CONSTRUCTION.

Use the following links to view the Table of Contents and indexes for past issues of the Pellissippian. The journals are available in electronic format (pdf).  The pdf file includes the 4 issues for the selected year.   Journal files are available for $10 per year selected.  If delivery method of CD or thumbdrive is requested, shipping charges will be added to the order.

1980 1981 1982 1983 1984
1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019

Anderson County Historical Society
PO Box 148
Clinton. TN 37717
email address: andersoncountyhistoricalsoc@gmail.com

Robbie Underwood

Speaker for the June 23, 2022 monthly meeting

A Biography

Robbie Underwood is a playwright and composer, with many original works to his credit. Robbie is also a musician and singer, performing professionally throughout the East Tennessee area. In addition, he owns a project audio/video studio, where he composes and records songs and soundtrack material for himself as well as other artists. Robbie is a prolific lyricist and composer, having written over 230 songs to date. Robbie has recently written a song “Cry Out From the Ground”, chronicling a 70 year old murder mystery in the town of Oliver Springs, Tennessee, the tale of which has gained national prominence and the rumblings of a major motion picture. The song has been featured on Knoxville television, with Robbie telling the story of the murders and performing the song for the television audience.

In 2004 Robbie wrote, directed, filmed, and co-produced the docudrama “In the Shadow of the Steeple- The Pine Hill Murders”, a true story of a gun battle that erupted in downtown Oliver Springs, Tennessee, in 1890. The docudrama was very well received, taking first place in category in the Secret City Film Festival in 2004.

Robbie has for the last 18 years worked in a volunteer capacity with the Oliver Springs High School Drama club. Among his works Oliver Springs has performed is the western musical comedy “Shot Through the Heart”, with original musical score written by Robbie.

For 2012 the Oliver Springs High School Drama Group performed  “Redneck Royalty”, another original play written and scored by Robbie.   This play was written with seven original songs, complete with choreography.

Another one of Robbie’s plays is a “ghostly” tale set in Louisiana bayou country. This play is about the strange goings on at the McKenna Manor Country Inn, a family owned lodge in the throes of resisting a large corporate takeover, with all the strange happenings and “ghostings” any self-respecting haunted mansion would provide. This comedy with a twist was highly successful, and was featured on “The Heartland Series”, produced by Knoxville television station WBIR.

Another Robbie Underwood play performed by Oliver Springs High School actors  was “The Adventures of Teacup and Abby”, a funny, yet heartwarming tale of two loveable twins born to a poor street woman in 1869 Brighton, England. Separated from the mother and each other soon after birth, they find each other several years later by the most unusual turns and twists of circumstance. Featuring a motley crew of misfit pirates, this story takes one from 1869 Brighton to 1885 San Francisco to terror and novel adventure on the high seas.

Robbie is also an accomplished woodworker and master luthier, having crafted many guitars by hand. He plays in concert using guitars that he has built. He had until recent years performed as many as 300 guitar and instrument repairs yearly, until the demands of his writing forced him to cut back on this craft. It is this aesthetic ability, combined with his knowledge of materials and structure, that serves him well in his design and fabrication of staging and props for dramatic productions. This combination of craft and artistic ability are also put to work in design and construction of various parade floats for area youth groups, having taken nine first place awards in recent years.

Robbie is on the board of directors for The Oliver Springs Historical Society, and is head of the archive team charged with the daunting task of documenting and preserving the history of the Town of Oliver Springs, Tennessee. He is also involved in overseeing the Abston Building renovation, a project that is bringing a historic old building that is on the National Registry of Historic Places back from the brink of collapse and turning it into the home for the town archives and museum. In addition to the Abston Building renovation, Robbie is also the author of many short stories and articles chronicling the history of Oliver Springs. He creates and publishes a pictorial calendar each year for the Historical Society, with funds from the sale going toward the Historical Society.

Who are you walking ON?

Who are you walking ON?

This presentation will take forensic science into the cemeteries, old and new, with amazing forensic discoveries.  We will use simple methods to read the inscriptions on old grave stones. New forensics will demonstrate ways to locate and gender the long dead. Our research data base covered 500 marked graves including buried cremations (human ashes) and graves dating back 1200 years.

Our team has located over 3,000 unmarked graves and determined the gender and age. The City of Sevierville asked our team to scan the Riverside/McMahan Cemetery between the new fire station and Sevier County High on Dolly Parton Parkway. This cemetery revealed 410 unmarked graves. Three graves revealed infant males buried with adult females. We did verify an adult female is in the Beloved Nancy Ward’s grave and located the grave of her grandson (Chief Jack Walker) who betrayed his people during the Trail of Tears. We also located the grave of Sarah Hawkins Sevier, wife of Captain John Sevier. A lost mass grave was located in Bean Station indicating 15 adult males killed during the Battle of Bean Station in December 1863. The possible location of The Battle of Boyd’s Creek was located with the imprint of 18 adult males in a semi circle in the Boyd’s Creek Community. Recently identified a lost Native American Mound near Sevierville with 12 adult males with back toward the center as though they were guarding something important. I just finished one where TVA moved 11 graves in 1942 for Douglas Lake, the owner wanted to know if they were moved or TVA just said they were moved to a new location near Dandridge. The list goes on and on of the lost graves we have located all over East Tennessee.

Our team was also requested in a missing person investigation and was able to pinpoint his location for recovery. Another was a missing child who disappeared 36 years ago. We located evidence and human remains in only ten minutes. This is an ongoing active criminal investigation. We have requests in two more missing person cases one dating back over twenty years.

Come visit, see, learn and ponder much! We are thankful and blessed as this was inspired by God.

Art Bohanan

April 2022

Art Bohanan

Arthur M. Bohanan

Printsofaman@gmail.com

Artbohanan.wordpress.com

 Arthur M. Bohanan is an internationally award winning patented inventor, researcher, lecturer and author, a Certified Latent Print Examiner (one of 960 in the world-19 in TN (ret) and a certified police instructor with 60 years in the study and practical application of forensics in thousands of violent crime scenes.   He earned a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from East Tennessee State University (Legacy Award 2017) with further studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Art created the first ICAC (Internet Crimes Against Children) task force in Tennessee in 1998 and worked in an online undercover capacity until he retired in May 2001, as a Police Specialist III, former AFIS Manager and Senior Forensic Examiner with the Knoxville Police Department (26 years).

Art received the Knoxville Police Officer of the year award (twice), over thirty letters of commendation, Mayor’s Merit Award (twice) and the Legacy Award (2018) for his dedicated leadership and inspiring the future. He was awarded Walters State Community College’s first “Distinguished Alumnus Award” in March 2000 for his contribution as a researcher, consultant and lecturer in the field of forensics.

Bohanan was inducted into the International Hall of Fame in Atlanta (sponsored by the Inventors Clubs of America) with two distinguished awards plus a doctorate in science and technology for pioneering research involving children’s fingerprints.  He was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012 by the East Tennessee CPIT Advocacy Counsel and the National Children’s Advocacy Center’s (Huntsville, AL) Outstanding Service for Law Enforcement in 2011.

Art received the Citation of Excellence Award from the Dept of Justice and the Amber Alert when he retired May 2012.  He has completed research at the University of Tennessee’s “Body Farm”, with the F.B.I., and Oak Ridge National Lab.  He was a senior forensic consultant and instructor for the Fox Valley/Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention/National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the national Amber Alert Program. Co-author of  “Child Fatality Investigations”, “Investigative Strategies for Missing and Abducted Children”  and “Forensic Response to Missing and Abducted Children” that he taught nationwide. Also retired as Communications /Environmental Officer with the U.S. Public Health’s DMORT WMD (disaster response) Team.

Bohanan was a deputy corner in Knox County for 5 years and a founding father of the National Forensic Academy at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, a founding board member and past President of Safe Harbor Child Advocacy Center and a founding father of the DMORT WMD team. Currently researching and inventing instruments for locating missing and lost graves and determine the gender of the long dead.

 LAW ENFORCEMENT:

Began at the Sevier County Sheriff’s Department while still in high school (1962), then FBI, US Army Military Police(SGT), Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department and retired from the Knoxville Police Department. He is currently the Forensic Examiner  with  Jefferson County and sworn special deputy for Sevier County Sheriff’s department.

 FEDERAL DISASTER RESPONSES AND ACTIVATIONS:

  • 1997, Guam, Korean Airlines 801 disaster (human remains identification)
  • 1998, Houston TX, World Energy Conference (WMD advisor)
  • 1999, Princeville NC, floods, cemetery disaster (identified human remains in over 400 caskets that floated)
  • 2000, Philadelphia, PA, Republican National Convention, (WMD advisor)
  • 2001, New York City, World Trade Disaster 911 (human remains identification)
  • 2001, New York City, American Airlines 587 disaster (human remains identification)
  • 2002, Salt Lake City, US Olympics Games (WMD advisor)
  • 2003, Washington, D.C. State of the Union Address (WMD advisor)
  • 2003, Hemphill, TX, Discovery Shuttle disaster (recover human remains)
  • 2004, Florida for hurricane of Danielle and Charley (victim placements)
  • 2005, Louisiana for Katrina and Rita (over 1200 caskets floated from graves plus over 100 people drown)

BOOK CHARACTER: Bohanan was featured in Patricia Cornwell’s bestseller, “The Body Farm” as Dr. Thomas Katz. Featured as Art Bohanan in eight of the novels  written by Dr. Bill Bass and Jon Jefferson. Author of “Prints of A Man” (2017 biography) ,Watauga (2017), Pigeon Rivers (2018), Volunteer Patriots, Hornets and Crowes, Guerilla Fighters, Two Deadly Enemies(2020),Patriotic Duties (2021), Return to Watauga,(2021), Protecting Our Assets(2021) Left for Dead (2022) Who are you walking ON? and Abigail (2022).  He wrote “Care of the Dead and Their Families”, a chapter in “Advanced Disaster Medical Response” published by Harvard Medical International (printed worldwide in 9 languages).  He has also written over a dozen technical articles and numerous training manuals.

INVENTOR:  Holds patent # 5,395,445 issued 7 March 1995 for “Method and Apparatus for Detecting Fingerprints on Skin”. He also discovered that fingerprints of children prior to puberty are chemically different from adult prints.

Meeting – 2022 April

The Anderson County Historical Society will hold its April 2022 monthly meeting on Thursday, April 28th at 6:30p.m. in the community room of the Clinton Public Library at 118 South Hicks Street, Clinton. This month’s speaker will be DruAnna Overbay, Melungeon historian, author and former teacher, who will speak about Melungeon DNA studies as well as the history of the Vardy community in Hancock County.

OVERBAY TO DISCUSS LIFE IN VARDY,
A MELUNGEON COMMUNITY

Anderson County Historical Society will be hosting a special presentation about the Melungeons on April 28 at 6:30 in the Clinton Public Library.  Former Lake City High School and Clinton High School teacher DruAnna Overbay will be sharing stories about her life in Vardy, a Melungeon Community.

Overbay’s discussion will feature some of the large photos of the community taken in the 20s, 30s, and 40s.  These photographs were transferred from over 37 glass lantern slides that were made during that time.  She will also discuss contradictory DNA studies and the popularity of being a Melungeon in today’s culture.

A direct descendant of the patriarch Vardemon Collins, Overbay and her husband Fred were instrumental in the formation of the Vardy Community Historical Society in 1998.  Their efforts have led to the restoration of the 1899 Vardy Presbyterian Church which now serves as a museum and the relocation and restoration of the Mahala Collins Mullins Cabin which is now located across the street from the church.

In 2005 Mercer University Press published her book  “Windows on the Past” which focuses on excerpts from oral history tapes of  over 37 former Vardy School students who lived in the valley and were educated at the Vardy Home Mission School.  The start up book as well as other books by Melungeon authors will be available to purchase at the event.

Overbay’s teaching career spans a total of 46 years having been hired by both famous school superintendents in the area, Mildred Doyle in Knox County and John Rice Irwin in Anderson County, and she will share special anecdotes about them.  She sends a special invitation to all of her former students and friends in the Clinton area to come.  She would love seeing each of you.