Voyage of the Adventure: Retracing the Donelson Party’s Journey to the Founding of Nashville

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Voyage of the Adventure: Retracing the Donelson Party’s Journey to the Founding of Nashville Author: Format: Paperback / softback First Published: Published By: Vanderbilt University Press
string(3) "184"
Pages: 184 Language: English ISBN: 9780826502520 Categories: ,

In the harsh winter of 1779, as the leader of a flotilla of settlers, John Donelson loaded his family and thirty slaves into a forty-foot flatboat at the present site of Kingsport, Tennessee. Their journey into the wilderness led to the founding of a settlement now known as Nashville-over one thousand river miles away. In the fall of 2016, photographer John Guider retraced the Donelson party’s journey in his hand-built fourteen-and-a-half-foot motorless rowing sailboat (named Adventure II after Donelson’s boat) while making a visual documentation of the river as it currently exists 240 years later. This photo book contains more than 120 striking images from the course of the journey, allowing the reader to see how much has changed and how much has remained untouched in the two and a half centuries since Donelson first took to the water. Equally significant, the essays include long-ignored contemporary histories of both the Cherokee whom Donelson encountered and the slaves he brought with him, some of whom did not survive the journey. From his platform just a few feet above the waterline, Guider, a professional photographer, created images of the thousand-mile trip along three of Tennessee’s most notable rivers.

Weight0.639 kg
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This is an angle on Tennessee's history that is rarely seen or taught. Although we are, thank goodness, currently in a phase when many-or at least some vocal thinkers-question just how great the 'great men' of local history really were and hold their actions under a critical microscope, we still rarely venture into truly considering the experiences of the lesser known or marginalized people of Tennessee's past. Discussion of the ripple effects of past actions on the present landscape rarely ventures beyond politics or the broadest strokes of race relations. This book lives fully in that space." - Nina Cardona, WPLN, Nashville Public Radio