65 Miles to Rock City
US Hwy. 127, Bledsoe County, TN
Olympus OM2n, 60-200 f4 Zuiko lens, Fujichrome 100
In late summer of 1993, Louise and I were going through an especially difficult time. The contractor who was building our home had just gone bankrupt, holding 83 percent of our money and leaving us with a house that was not 83 percent finished.
Our friends John and Ann Huckaba took note of our discouragement and invited us to come with them on a Sunday afternoon outing to Crossville, Tennessee to see a performance at the Cumberland County Playhouse.
Afterward, we ate at the excellent restaurant at Cumberland Mountain State Park, then walked down to the lake. Naturally, I had a camera with me, so I made a few photos of canoes pulled up on the dock.
Driving home on U.S. Highway 127 in rich evening light, we passed a barn with one of Rock City's ubiquitous signs. I asked John if he would stop so I could make a picture. He did, and I did, resulting in one of my favorite Rock City barn photographs.
This was more than a year before I actually began commissioned work on Rock City Barns: A Passing Era, but I was gathering photographs of the barns as I found them. Having a number of good barn photos to show Bill Chapin, the president of See Rock City, Inc., was what actually sealed the deal on the book project.
Canoes at Cumberland Mountain State Park
Cumberland County, TN
Olympus OM2n, 60-200 f4 Zuiko lens, Fujichrome 100
It was a refreshing and encouraging day for Louise and me We will always be grateful for the kindness of friends. And because I had a camera with me and my eyes were open to noticing things, I have two of my favorite pictures to help us remember the day.
Photographs and text copyright 2021, David B.Jenkins.
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday each week unless life gets in the way.
Soli Gloria Deo
For the glory of God alone
I love Cumberland Mountain SP! I like to rent a cabin down there and stay for a few days at a time.
ReplyDeleteI like Cumberland Mountain, but LOVE Fall Creek Falls SP. We camped there for two weeks in 1969.
ReplyDelete