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Knoxville Chronicles

Podcast by Knoxville History Project

English

History & religion

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About Knoxville Chronicles

Knoxville Chronicles is a podcast series produced by the Knoxville History Project highlighting some of the most interesting of the city’s old stories that still have relevance today.The Knoxville History Project is an educational nonprofit with a mission to research, preserve and promote the history and culture of Knoxville, Tennessee.Learn more at KnoxvilleHistoryProject.org

All episodes

25 episodes

episode Mountain Dew’s Evolution as a Concept to Tickle Our Innards artwork

Mountain Dew’s Evolution as a Concept to Tickle Our Innards

Even if you’ve never dared to try it, almost everyone knows what Mountain Dew is. Its sci-fi nuclear-green color and barely legal caffeine content gave it a reputation as one of the more extreme soft drinks, at least before the energy-drink era. Its name was meant as a jokey reference to an old nickname for moonshine. There’s now an official state historical marker on Magnolia Avenue that tells the story of how in 1948 the Hartman Bottling Company introduced a lemon-lime soda in the adjacent brick building, called it Mountain Dew, and promoted it with a hillbilly motif. Who knew that something that is drunk all over the country, started right here in Knoxville. But so, it did. The next time you crack the lid off one, let us know if it “Tickles yore Innards!”   Written by Jack Neely and read by benny Smith.   Special thanks to producer Pete Carty.  Knoxville Chronicles is brought to you by the nonprofit Knoxville History Project. Funding for this episode has been kindly provided by the City of Knoxville and Friends of the Knoxville History Project, plus Gary Balltrip and Christopher Manning, who made donations on National Giving Day 2025 to support Season IV all year long. Thanks to all. Please consider making a donation to the Knoxville History Project to help support this ongoing podcast. Learn more at KnoxvilleHistoryProject.org

Yesterday - 24 min
episode Ghost Walking the Streets of Knoxville: The Dr. John Mason Boyd Memorial Arch on Gay Street artwork

Ghost Walking the Streets of Knoxville: The Dr. John Mason Boyd Memorial Arch on Gay Street

The steps of the Dr. John Mason Boyd memorial arch, located on the southwest corner of Gay Street at Main, offer a fine perch to ponder bygone times in this old section of downtown. Dr. Boyd enjoyed a long and respectable career here, known in his early days as a “horse and buggy” doctor, and before the Civil War, he began to specialize in the field of obstetrics.   Today, the memorial arch stands as a permanent memorial to Dr. Boyd, but it also serves as portal to heart of the old town during the early decades of the 1800s. It’s a place that has so much history to it, and yet, despite the many decades that have passed since young John played here in an open field, for us, here in the 21st century, it’s hardly changed at all.  Written and read by Paul James.   Special thanks to producer Pete Carty.  Knoxville Chronicles is brought to you by the nonprofit Knoxville History Project. Funding for this episode has been kindly provided by the City of Knoxville and Friends of the Knoxville History Project as well as donors from National Giving Day 2025, including: Gary Balltrip, Theresa Lee and Jacob Love, John and Lillian Mashburn, Susan Davenport, Katharine Capito Torbett & Howard Capito, Anne Young, and Christopher Manning. Learn more at KnoxvilleHistoryProject.org

28 May 2026 - 12 min
episode Murder in South Knoxville: The Strange Case of Lottie Cummings. artwork

Murder in South Knoxville: The Strange Case of Lottie Cummings.

Just past Mead’s Quarry on Island Home Pike, less than half a mile south of the Tennessee river, the stretch of road between the quarry and Sevierville Pike, a distance of about two miles, is as peaceful as any in South Knoxville. It’s one of those neighborhoods that doesn’t appear to have a ready name of its own; few landmarks exist there today, only a few scattered houses and a couple of churches. But in the summer of 1893, this section of South Knoxville proved to be the scene of the ghastly murder of 9-year-old Louis Kinzie Cummings. The murder and its aftermath were extensively covered in the Knoxville newspapers. What quickly became apparent was that Mrs. Lottie Cummings, an uneducated 35-year-old woman, was suspected of bludgeoning her nine-year-old stepson. And as Mrs. Cummings sat in her cell in the Knox County jail, the murder case took several unexpected twists, revealing interesting local color, that during everyday course of events might not have ever been known about this section of South Knoxville. Please note: This story contains graphic descriptions of violence taken from contemporary newspaper accounts from the 1890s. Written by Paul James and read by Bonnie Kourvelas.  Special thanks to producer Pete Carty.  Knoxville Chronicles is brought to you by the nonprofit Knoxville History Project. Funding for this episode has been kindly provided by the City of Knoxville and Friends of the Knoxville History Project as well as donors from National Giving Day 2025, including: Gary Balltrip, Theresa Lee and Jacob Love, John and Lillian Mashburn, Susan Davenport, Katharine Capito Torbett & Howard Capito, Anne Young, and Christopher Manning. Learn more at KnoxvilleHistoryProject.org

21 Apr 2026 - 35 min
episode The Jazz Legend of Gordon’s Town House artwork

The Jazz Legend of Gordon’s Town House

For decades, jazz fans in Knoxville have heard rumors of Gordon’s Town House on the corner of Cumberland Avenue and 17th Street. In the 1950s, full swing orchestras played there in its big dining room with a dance floor that looked straight out of a posh Manhattan nightclub in an old black-and-white movie. Gordon’s also had a smaller, more intimate room called the Blue Note, where you could hear more current music, like bebop.  Before he passed away in 2023, Jack Neely interviewed Gordon Sams about his iconic jazz club and hear some of the true-to-life tales of the jazz legends who played there, including Duke Ellington and his orchestra, Count Basie, Tony Pastor, Woody Herman, and the irrepressible trumpeter Louis Prima.  Fittingly, join jazz aficionado Paul Parris, WUOT radio’s longstanding host on Improvisations on Wednesday evenings, for a reading of Neely’s story that offers a rare look into the world of Gordon Sams, a colorful jazz promoter in 1950s and ‘60s Knoxville. This episode also complements the Knoxville History Project’s developing project: the Knoxville Music Archive & Oral History Project.      Written by Jack Neely and read by Paul Parris. Special thanks to producer Pete Carty.  Knoxville Chronicles is brought to you by the nonprofit Knoxville History Project. Funding for this episode has been kindly provided by the City of Knoxville and Friends of the Knoxville History Project as well as donors from National Giving Day 2025, including: Gary Balltrip, Karen Callaway, Steve and Lisa Davis, David Headrick, Theresa Lee and Jacob Love, John and Katherine McCarty, John and Lillian Mashburn, Susan Davenport, Katharine Capito Torbett & Howard Capito, Anne Young, and Christopher Manning. Learn more at KnoxvilleHistoryProject.org

24 Mar 2026 - 20 min
episode Birth of a National Park in the Smokies: How Knoxville Turned a Great Idea into a Significant Grassroots Movement artwork

Birth of a National Park in the Smokies: How Knoxville Turned a Great Idea into a Significant Grassroots Movement

For many years, only intrepid explorers and hardy lumbermen were drawn to the forbidding mountains visible on the horizon from Knoxville. Despite early efforts on the North Carolina side of the Smoky Mountains in 1899, things only really got moving after Willis and Annie Davis returned to Knoxville from an inspirational trip to see some of the grand national parks out west. Fired up by the idea that a national park could be developed in the Smokies, Willis helped foster the creation of the durable Great Smoky Mountains Conservation Association. Annie herself even ran for public office to ensure that the state legislature played its part, working with the City of Knoxville, and officials in North Carolina to acquire key properties. The road to success over the next 17 years proved far rockier than anyone envisioned, involving many ups and downs, legal battles, political shenanigans, fist fights, and ultimately the acquisition of more than 6,600 separate property parcels. The movement also led to the emotional eviction of mountain folk from their ancestral homes that caused bitterness for years.  Ambitious fundraising campaigns attracted large corporate and individual gifts as well as nickels and dimes from hotel bell hops and school children, but it would take a $5 million matching gift from wealthy philanthropist David Rockefeller, Jr. to make the new national park a reality.  After all was said and done, Great Smoky Mountains National Park was officially established in 1934 and dedicated in 1940. This is the story of how it all came to be. Written by Paul James and read by Robin Wilhoit. Special thanks to producer Pete Carty.  Knoxville Chronicles is brought to you by the nonprofit Knoxville History Project. Funding for this episode has been kindly provided by the City of Knoxville and Friends of the Knoxville History Project as well as donors from National Giving Day 2025, including: Gary Balltrip, Karen Callaway, Steve and Lisa Davis, David Headrick, Theresa Lee and Jacob Love, John and Katherine McCarty, John and Lillian Mashburn, Susan Davenport, Katharine Capito Torbett & Howard Capito, Anne Young, and Christopher Manning. Learn more at KnoxvilleHistoryProject.org

24 Feb 2026 - 24 min
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