Fallen Sky
Sponsored in loving memory
of Adelaide Brown by Sam and Anne McReynolds and their children Ken, Reeves
and Jackson
The Cherokee

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Fallen Sky is a Cherokee who was born in 1758. He speaks to us
in the year of 1836, at 78 years of age. Fallen Sky and his wife, Nakwisi, have a small
farm in Red Hill Valley in southeastern Bradley County. He is a wise old man, weathered
with age, having spent most of his life working outside. His clothing is typical for
Cherokee men of that time: broadfall trousers with buttons, a ribbon shirt with wide
sleeves and a small tab collar, a tunic/vest made out of leather. Wearing a turban, Fallen
Sky represents the Cherokee and early man, speaking eloquently about the
"trouble" that has befallen his people during those years.
Its ultimate tragedy was the Trail of Tears in 1838, when the U.S.
government relocated the Cherokee from their historic homeland. The head of that Trail was
in Bradley County, as is the site of the last Cherokee council ground. |

Walter Broomfield
Sponsored by The George R.
Johnson Charitable Trust
Religion

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Walter Broomfield is a circuit-riding Methodist minister. He
traveled on horseback around the Ocoee Region holding camp meetings and
"preachin services." He was born in 1800, and we meet him in 1840. Walter
wears a suit coat and vest and trousers of a dark woven fabric. He wears a shirt with a
"disposable" collar and no tie. He probably has a beard and longish hair, since
he traveled around so much. His face is rather stern, but his eyes are gentle. He is a
tall and lanky man.
Walter represents the influence religion has had upon our area, as well as the
determination ingrained in our early settlers. Even today, Cleveland hosts the
headquarters of the Church of God and its primary institution of higher education, Lee
University. |

Lucy Ratcliffe
Sponsored by Mr. and Mrs.
Summerfield K. Johnston, Jr.
Agriculture

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Lucy Ratcliffe is 11 years old in 1861. She has blondish-brown
hair and blue eyes. She is a farm girl, growing up on a farm down near McDonald, and is
used to fresh air and sunshine. She is the eldest of four children, two brothers and a
baby sister. The most important thing happening in Lucys life when we meet her is
that her poppa is leaving to be a soldier in the Civil War.
Lucy represents the element of agriculture that has always played an important part in
the development of our area, while she is witness to the deep divisions and conflicting
emotions that split East Tennessee into Union and Confederate camps in the Civil War. |

Otis Taylor
Sponsored by the City of
Cleveland
The Railroad

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Otis Taylor is the first freightmaster at the railroad
station. We meet him in 1910. Otis is a short man, with a fringe of gray hair around his
balding head. He has a friendly smile and twinkling eyes. He loves the railroad and his
job as freightmaster. Otis wears a short cutaway coat with a contrasting vest and striped
trousers. Naturally, his large pocket watch and chain are a part of his daily wear. He
probably wears a railroad cap.
Otis represents the railroad and its impact on our region. Charleston and Cleveland
were major depots on the main Southern Railroad line, and rail traffic and transportation
in general are still crucial here. |

Burl Owenby
Sponsored by Sherry Keller
Brown in honor and memory of all employees and families of the Hardwick
Stove Company from 1879-1979
Industry

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Burl Owenby works on the line at one of the early stove
foundries. Burl is medium tall with reddish hair and a ruddy complexion. Being born in
1910, Burl talks to us when he is 30 years old, 1940. Burl wears a factory apron over
dark trousers. Burl worked as a molder, an important job, vital to the success of a stove
foundry.
Our area spawned such industry leaders as Magic Chef and Hardwick Stove -- now part
of the giant Maytag consumer products company. He also represents all of industry
and how it has impacted Cleveland and Bradley County. |

Sarah Scott
Sponsored by the Charles W.
Conn Family in recognition of the Museum Center's educational emphasis
Education

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Sarah Scott is a schoolteacher at the College Hill School.
Sarah is African-American and 50 years old in 1963, having been born in 1913. Sarah is a
tall and solid woman with an attractive face and very conservative clothes. Sarah also has
a conservative, older hairstyle, and in many ways appears older than her 50 years. Sarah
teaches English to the high school students, and is extremely well respected in the
community.
Sarahs place in our living history cast represents our African-American
community, as well as the development of education. |

Dewey Hooper
Sponsored by the City of
Cleveland
The Ocoee River

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Dewey Hooper is 27 years old in 1986, when we speak to him. He
is young, attractive and physically strong. He worked as a carpenter on the
reconstruction of the flume line that runs above the Ocoee River, and now he works for TVA
doing maintenance on the flume. Dewey is dressed in jeans and work boots, with a T-shirt
or work shirt and hard had. Dewey probably has dark hair and suntanned skin, with honest,
earnest eyes.
Dewey represents the rivers that surround our area, and the impact they have had on
commerce and industry. His efforts also symbolize TVA's historic influence and the
continuing regional importance of the Ocoee, which was the site of the 1996 Olympic
Games whitewater kayak and canoe events. |
  
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