Author: design42

Using Local Recipes

Many of these local recipes are shared in the old time way, just as cooks traditionally shared recipes. They list the basic ingredients and tell what to do with them, but without some of the details one might find in today’s cookbooks. The recipes assume that the person 

MLK Unity Breakfast

Hendersonville’s annual Martin Luther King Unity Breakfast promotes understanding, collaboration and unity.   https://www.cfhcforever.org/impact-insights/funds-in-focus/mlk-unity

Carl Sandburg Home

Enslaved people built much of the original Carl Sandburg Home before the Civil War.   https://www.blueridgenow.com/story/news/2021/02/26/highlighting-forgotten-slaves-built-present-day-sandburg-home-staff-uncover-their-stories/6804747002/

Black Bottom – Hidden History of Henderson County, NC

The people of Black Bottom in southern Hendersonville had a community group to govern and police the neighborhood to avoid crime. Click Here to read excerpt about Black Bottom in Hidden History of Henderson County, NC by Terry Ruscin

Hendersonville’s First Black Fire Fighter

Terry Smith joined the fire department in 1985.   https://wlos.com/news/local/first-african-american-hendersonville-firefighter-continues-serving-the-community

Black Cemeteries

Some of the many African American cemeteries in Henderson county have disappeared over the years.  Others are being restored.   https://www.blueridgenow.com/article/NC/20050223/news/606079976/HT

An Early Volunteer Fire Fighter in Bat Cave

Although he never learned to read and write, Oscar Avery was proficient in the skills CPR, first aid, and other skills he needed as a volunteer fire fighter.   http://hendersonheritage.com/early-leaders-of-fire-department/

Vegetables for the Tailgate Market

Alma Logan Avery sold vegetables she grew on her farm in Lake Lure at the Tailgate market.   https://www.blueridgenow.com/article/NC/20040705/News/606053642/HT

Flat Rock’s Rosenwald School

Julius Rosenwald, President of Sears, donated funds to build 5,000 schools for African Americans in the 1920’s.  One of them was in East Flat Rock.   https://www.boldlife.com/learning-from-the-past/

The Kingdom of Happy Land

Freed slaves founded the Kingdom of Happy Land in the 1870’s near today’s Lake Summit. With money they earned as porters carrying packages up the mountain to Saluda, they bought land from the Davis family’s plantation, Oakland.  There is little documentation about the Kingdom and