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LECTURE
SERIES ARCHIVES
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| 2009
Lecture Series: |
Dr. Nicholas Honerkamp |
Dr.
Nicholas Honerkamp - Archaeologist, UC Foundation Professor
Dr. Nicholas
Honerkamp has been an archaeologist at the University of Tennessee
at Chattanooga since 1980. He is a full-time faculty member
in the department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Geography,
and was the recipient of the UT National Alumni Association
Outstanding Teacher Award and a UC Foundation Professorship.
He also serves as the Director of the Institute of Archaeology,
and has generated over a million dollars in contracts and
grant research at UTC.
He received
his BA, MA, and Ph.D. degrees in Anthropology at the University
of Florida under the direction of Dr. Charles H. Fairbanks,
and like his mentor he has pursued research at both prehistoric
and historic sites for his entire career.
His papers,
reports and publications include articles on British colonial
diets in the Southeast, urban archaeology in Chattanooga,
Savannah, and Charleston, industrial archaeology at the Bluff
Furnace site, the history of the Citico Mound, and his most
recent project was the excavation of a 5600-year-old Middle
Archaic campsite on the banks of the Tennessee River. He is
an avid long distance runner and biker (road and mountain),
and plays bass guitar in two rock bands in Chattanooga.
Dr. Honerkamp
will present a program entitled “Creek Or Cherokee at
Moccasin Bend: An Archaeological Perspective” in which
he will give an overview of the archaeological evidence—or
lack thereof—for linking prehistoric remains with historically
known Native American groups. |
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Charles W. Maynard |
Charles
W. Maynard - Author, Storyteller, National Park Friend
Charles
W. Maynard is an author, storyteller, and ordained United
Methodist minister who is currently serving as the Director
of Development for Camp and Retreat Ministries of the Holston
Conference of the United Methodist Church. He grew up locally
and is a graduate of Chattanooga High School. He has written
extensively about national parks, and is the author of 28
books, 21 of which are non-fiction books for children. Recently,
he has written articles for Tennessee Conservationist
and Smokies Life magazines.
Charles
received a B.A from Emory and Henry College in Virginia, and
a M. Div. from the Candler School of Theology at Emory University
in Atlanta, Georgia. He has served as a pastor in Georgia
and Tennessee and was the founding executive director of Friends
of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and in his eight years
in that position developed the Friends into an organization
with an annual budget of over $1.8 million.
Later,
he worked as Director of Advancement for the International
Storytelling Center in Jonesborough, TN. Currently, he works
with Camp Lookout, a United Methodist camp on Lookout Mountain.
Charles
is a member of the Board of Directors for the Appalachian
Trail Conservancy and chairs the National Parks Conservation
Association Southeast Regional Council. Charles is an avid
hiker, amateur astronomer, historian, and naturalist. He and
his wife, Janice Scott Maynard (also a native of Chattanooga)
have two daughters and two granddaughters. The Maynards live
in Jonesborough, TN, near the International Storytelling Center.
Charles’ parents, John and Lou, still reside on Signal
Mountain. |
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Honorable Dirk Kempthorne |
The
Honorable Dirk Kempthorne - Secretary of Interior 2006-2009
Dirk Kempthorne
began his commitment to public service as the highly successful
mayor of the City of Boise (1985-1992). As mayor, he helped
direct a renaissance in the state's capital city that resulted
in record growth, economic development, and numerous national
honors.
He was
elected to the U.S. Senate in November 1992. His first bill,
to end unfunded federal mandates on state and local governments,
became Senate Bill 1 in the 104th Congress. He also authored
the new Safe Drinking Water Act in 1996. Both bills were signed
into law. As a member of the Armed Services Committee, he
worked to improve the quality of life for American military
personnel, reservists, their families, and veterans.
Kempthorne
was elected governor of Idaho in 1998 and reelected in 2002.
As Governor he obtained the largest appropriation for state
parks since their creation. He championed mandatory sentences
for methamphetamine manufacturing. He worked with neighboring
states to develop a state-based solution for returning salmon
runs in the region.
Kempthorne
was confirmed as the 49th Secretary of the U.S. Department
of the Interior on May 26, 2006. In preparation for the 100th
anniversary of the creation of the National Park Service he
led the Centennial Challenge, a groundbreaking public private
partnership to repair our parks and encourage visitation.
Secretary Kempthorne obtained the largest operating budget
for national parks in their history. A true outdoorsman, the
Secretary frequently highlighted our national parks as a great
American treasure and encouraged families and children to
get outdoors and explore our lands. |
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2008
Lecture Series: |
Robert G. Stanton |
Robert
G. Stanton – Former Director of the National Park Service
Recently appointed Undersecretary of Interior by President Barack
Obama, Robert G. Stanton, former Director of the National Park Service,
U.S. Department of the Interior, has served as a Senior Fellow at
Texas A&M University in the Department of Recreation, Park, and
Tourism Sciences. He has served as a Visiting Professor at Howard
and Yale Universities, consultant for the Natural Resources Council
of America, and as the IUCN (World Conservation Union) ambassador
for the Fifth World Parks Congress held in September, 2003, in Durban,
South Africa. A native of Fort Worth, Texas, Mr. Stanton grew up in
Mosier Valley, one of the oldest communities in Texas founded by African
Americans shortly after the Civil War. He is the Chairman of the National
Council of the National Parks Conservation Association and Chairman
Emeritus and co-founder of the Trustees of the African American Experience
Fund of the National Park Foundation. |
Russell S. Bonds |
Russell
S. Bonds – Author
Stealing the General: The Great Locomotive Chase and the First
Medal of Honor
Russell S. Bonds is an in-house lawyer at The Coca-Cola Company in
Atlanta and a lifelong resident of north Georgia. He was born in Atlanta
and grew up in Marietta, just a few blocks from the spot where James
Andrews and his men first boarded the General on the morning of April
12, 1862. Russ received a B.S. with honor from Georgia Tech and a
law degree magna cum laude from the University of Georgia, where he
was the Executive Articles Editor of the Georgia Law Review. He has
published several articles and reviews on Civil War topics in national
publications, including "Pawn Takes Bishop: The Death of Lieutenant
General Leonidas Polk," Civil War Times (May 2006) and "Lieutenant
Tecumseh: Sherman's First March Through Georgia, 1844," Civil
War Times (forthcoming, 2007). He lives in Marietta, Georgia with
his wife and three daughters.
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Alfred Berryhill |
Alfred
Berryhill – Second Chief, Muscogee (Creek) Nation
As Second Chief, Alfred Berryhill serves as Chairman of the Tribal
Trade and Commerce Board, and the Muscogee Nation Business Enterprise
Board. He also serves on the Claremore Indian Hospital Board, Okmulgee
Creek Council House Board, Five Civilized Tribes Museum Board, and
the Festival Committee Board. The Second Chief speaks, reads, writes,
and sings in Mvskoke and is a Decon/ Exhorter, at the Tallahassee
Indian Methodist Church, the church his father once pastored. He belongs
to the Alligator Clan and his tribal town is Arbeka. His father was
of the deer clan. Mr. Berryhill has served as the Administrative Inter
(Economic Development) Bureau of Indian Affairs, Washington D.C.;
He is a graduate of Sequoyah High School and Haskell Institute. He
also attended Oklahoma State University, majoring in business administration.
Mr. Berryhill resides in Okmulgee County, Okalahoma and has a son,
daughter-in-law and two grandsons.
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| 2007
Lecture Series: |
W. Richard West, Jr. |
W.
RICHARD WEST, JR., founding director of the Smithsonian's
National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI), oversaw the
successful opening of its three facilities: the George Gustav
Heye Center in New York City, the museum's Cultural Resources
Center in Suitland, MD and its signature National Mall museum
in Washington, DC. West has spent much of his life, both professionally
and personally, working with American Indians on cultural,
educational, legal and governmental issues. He says, "Native
peoples are profoundly connected to their origins, the places
they come from. These places are the source of community identity
and cultural continuity." The Chattanooga region is the
ancestral homeland for many American Indians, and the interpretive
center on Moccasin Bend will tell their stories. West is Southern
Cheyenne and a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of
Oklahoma. |
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Don Barger |

Emily Jones |
Don
Barger, director of the Southeast Regional Office of NPCA and
Emily Jones, program coordinator for the region presented an
evening of spectacular pictures and inspiration from our national
parks.
National Parks Conservation Association president Tom Kiernan
says, "America's national parks are the soul of our nation, protecting
and celebrating our country's core values and treasures." The
NPCA is the nation's leading park advocacy group and, since 1919,
its mission has been to protect and enhance America's National Parks
for present and future generations. The organization identifies and
analyzes threats to our national park system and then works at local,
state and federal levels to address those challenges. Recent issues
include examining how global warming, pollution and decreased funding
affect our parks.
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EDWIN
C. BEARSS, National Park Chief Historian Emeritus and Civil
War expert, served as National Park Service Chief Historian
1981-1995. Bearss is considered the pre-eminent Civil War battlefield
expert in the country and was featured in Ken Burns's Civil
War series. He travels and lectures over 200 days a year
and is sought after because he "brings history alive to
people of all knowledge levels . . . with rich and colorful
anecdotes." Bearss has been described as "simply a
genius of the battlefields of the Civil War, and has the ability
to recall the campaign like no other, showing a knowledge of
terrain and troop movements that is unparalleled. And, most
importantly, Ed knows how to personalize the action and participants
in a way that will thrill you." |
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| 2006
Lecture Series: |
Duane H. King |
DUANE
H. KING is Executive Director of the Gilcrease Museum
in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Prior to joining the the Gilcrease, he
directed the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles and was the Assistant
Director of the Smithsonian Institution's George Gustav Heye
Center, National Museum of the American Indian, in New York
City. Dr. King also previously served as Executive Director
of the Cherokee National Historical Society, Tahlequah, Oklahoma,
and Director of the Museum of the Cherokee Indian in Cherokee,
North Carolina. Dr. King has taught at the University of Tennessee
in Knoxville and Chattanooga, Cleveland State College, Northeastern
State University, and held the first endowed chair in Cherokee
Studies at Western Carolina University. Dr. King serves as
an Honorary Member of the Friends Board of Directors and consulted
with the Chattanooga Public Art Committee during the design
and construction of the Cherokee artwork on the 21st Century
Waterfront. |
Brian O'Neill |
BRIAN
O'NEILL is the National Park Service Superintendent of
Golden Gate National Parks which encompasses 76,000 acres
of land within Marin, San Francisco and San Mateo counties.
It is the most visited unit of the National Park System in
America, receiving over 20 million visitors annually, and
is one of the largest national park areas adjacent to any
major city in the world.
Mr.
O'Neill has been a leader in the National Park Service in
the area of partnerships and creative, entrprenurial park
management. He first met members of the Friends Board of Directors
at a National Park Service (NPS) Parks and Partners Workshop
in 2003. Since then, he has continued to advise and support
the Friends in its NPS partnership endeavors with his creative
and innovative approach. |
Douglas R. Cubbison |
DOUGLAS
R. CUBBISON is the Command Historian with the 10th Mountain
Division, Fort Drum, New York. Previously, he was the Cultural
Resources Manager for the U.S. Military Academy, West Point,
New York for five years.
He is
a 1980 Distinguished Military Graduate of Indiana University
of Pennsylvania and served ten years of active and active
reserve military duty. Mr. Cubbison has four years experience
serving as a test engineer with Department of Defense strategic
and tactical weapons systems and has over fifteen years experience
performing National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), National
Historic Preservation Act (NHPA), and Cultural Resources Management
regulatory compliance. Mr. Cubbison is widely published and
his areas of particular interest are 18th and 19th Century
American Military and Social History. He has worked with the
Friends since 1997 and has developed a comprehensive Preservation
and Interpretation Plan for Civil War Resources on Moccasin
Bend. |
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