Chickery's Travels

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July 24, 2018 by Julie Leave a Comment

Crossville I-40 KOA (Crossville, TN)

We really enjoyed our two-week stay at the Crossville KOA campground in Crossville, TN. While it has easy access on and off I-40, it is far enough away (about 5 miles) to make you feel as though you are in the country. It is so quiet and peaceful with all the amenities you expect from a KOA. Watch our video below to see the campground and some highlights from the local area.

RV, Tents, and Cabins

One thing we really like about KOAs is that they offer a range of accommodations, and this one is no exception. In addition to paved full-hook up sites, they have tent camping sites, as well as several different size cabins. Some of the cabins had RV hook-ups adjacent to them so you could have family come visit and have enough room to spread out. If you want to have a big gathering, they even have a 4-unit log lodge which could be a great place for family reunions. Each RV site has water, sewer, 50 amp power, a picnic table, and fire pit. Although we were there in July, we still made a fire in the evening.

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Once the sun started to set, it cooled down enough to have a campfire! #betteroutside #campfire #rvtravel #homeiswhereyouparkit #travelusa #rvcamping #rvcouple #rvlife #koacamping

A post shared by Chickery's travels (@chickerystravels) on Jul 5, 2018 at 6:33am PDT

Cumberland Plateau

This campground is situated in a beautiful part of Tennessee known as the Cumberland Plateau. There are some amazing historical sites, state parks, and beautiful waterfalls! One of our favorites is Burgess Falls. You can’t swim there, but you can see three waterfalls on one fairly short short hike (3/4 from the parking lot).

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The tallest of three waterfalls at Burgess Falls State Natural Area on the Cumberland Plateau in Sparta, TN. #lovetennessee #travelusa #rvlife #homeiswhereyouparkit #rvtravel #coupleswhotravel #rvcamping

A post shared by Chickery's travels (@chickerystravels) on May 30, 2018 at 2:47pm PDT

Click here to learn about some surprising WWII history in the local area.

Learn More

For more fabulous places to visit in the local area, follow us on Instagram @chickerystravels where we posted photos (like the ones below) almost everyday. https://www.instagram.com/p/BksHdtInznK/?taken-by=chickerystravels

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Last day in Tennessee, and it’s a beautiful one at that! #lovetn #koacamping #travelusa #homeiswhereyouparkit #rvlife @kampgroundsofamerica

A post shared by Chickery's travels (@chickerystravels) on Jul 13, 2018 at 6:11am PDT

Click here to make reservations for your next adventure! 

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Learn why your family will love the Crossville KOA campground. Set in an idyllic location near waterfalls, great hiking and a lake, this campground has RV & tent sites and well as cabins to rent. Amenities include a pool, game room, and more!

Learn why your family will love the Crossville KOA in Tennessee! Cabins, RV and tents sites mean there is a place for everyone and every budget. A swimming pool, game room and nearby waterfalls will ensure everyone is a happy camper. Visit the Crossville KOA in your RV, motorhome, fifth wheel, or camper.

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Filed Under: Campground Review, Campground Reviews, Tennessee Tagged With: campground, campground in crossville tn, campground on interstate 40, campground review, campgrounds, crab orchard (city/town/village), crossvile, Crossville, crossville (city/town/village), crossville i-40 koa, crossville military memorial museum, crossvilletn, cumberland homesteads, cumberland mountain state park, cumberland plateau, kampgrounds of america (business operation), KOA, koa campground, koa campground in crossvill, koa campground in east tn, koa campground in middle tn, koa camping, military museum, ozone falls, ozone falls (location), reviews, rv camping, RV Parks, Tennessee, tennessee (us state), tennessee campground, tennessee camping, tn, travel trailer camping

July 23, 2018 by Julie 2 Comments

WWII History in Tennessee

The more we travel around the country in our RV, the more I realize how little I know about our history. This trip was no different, and I was very surprised to learn our campground in Tennessee was close to a WWII German POW camp and a nuclear laboratory that was a key component of the Manhattan project. Thank goodness for TripAdvsior or we may have missed these historic sites.

Atomic City – The Manhattan Project In Tennessee

I was shocked to learn that the uranium for the Little Boy bomb dropped on Hiroshima was enriched in Tennessee. Prior to this visit I had only heard of the Los Alamos Laboratory, which is where the bombs were developed.

Did you know that the uranium for the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima was enriched in Tennessee? We learned about it on a recent trip to Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

In about 18 months the area transformed from farmland to a secret city that employed 82,000 people.

American Museum of Science and Energy

The museum in Oak Ridge has exhibits on the history of the Manhattan Project, as well as a bus tour of the nuclear laboratory sites.

Did you know that the uranium for the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima was enriched in Tennessee? We learned about it on a recent trip to Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

The Story of Oak Ridge Museum Exhibits

We started our tour of the museum with two short films that explained the history of Oak Ridge as well as the Manhattan Project.

Walking through the museum, I thought the exhibits of the building of this secret city were the most interesting. Sean found the history of the science behind the discoveries here to be more to his liking. Since that part gives me a headache, I’ll tell you about the secret city.

In order to build the facilities needed for this large effort, the Army Corps of Engineers was tasked with the unpopular project of evicting about 1,000 farmers and families from 56,000 acres of land under eminent domain. Some families were given just a few weeks’ notice to vacate farms that had been their homes for generations and others had recently resettled in the area due to other government projects. None were happy about having to move again.

They basically built a guarded city in which you had to have credentials to enter. It was a true city though, with schools, seven theaters, restaurants and cafeterias, and grocery stores. A library with 9,400 books, sporting facilities, and churches. Several different types of housing was built for the workforce and their families including prefabricated modular homes, dormitories, and even a trailer village.

Sadly there was segregation at Oak Ridge although FDR had signed an executive order barring discrimination in the defense industries. The army and companies involved justified it by saying it was a necessary practice due to racial attitudes in the area. Black workers had the less desirable jobs and were required to live in small wooden shacks called hutments, unlike housing in other parts of the Oak Ridge community. At 14 feet by 14 feet, hutments were roughly the size of a storage shed and were shared by 5-6 people. Amenities were sparse, with a coal-burning stove, dirt floor, one door and no bathroom. Married black couples were not allowed to live together either.

Oak Ridge National Laboratory Bus Tour

The museum also has a 3-hour bus tour that takes you through the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge facilities. This tour is in high demand, so be sure to sign up online or get there first thing in the morning.

There are several stops along the way including a visit to the X-10 Graphite Reactor, which “went critical” on November 4, 1943, and produced its first plutonium in early 1944. It supplied the Los Alamos Laboratory with its first significant amounts of plutonium. X-10 operated as a plutonium production plant until January 1945, when it was turned over to research activities, and the production of radioactive isotopes for scientific, medical, industrial and agricultural uses. It was shut down in 1963 and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965.

Did you know that the uranium for the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima was enriched in Tennessee? We learned about it on a recent trip to Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

There was also a presentation at the Y‑12 National Security Complex, previously known as the the Y‑12 Electromagnetic Separation Plant where the uranium was enriched for the first atomic bomb. This facility is still in use today, although its mission has changed. Y‑12 played a key part in the production of thermonuclear weapons during the height of the cold war, and it continues to function as the nation’s uranium storage and processing  facility.

German POW Camp in Crossville

We learned about the history of the German POW Camp at the Military Memorial Museum in downtown Crossville, TN (right off I-40 about halfway between Knoxville and Nashville).

Visit the Military Memorial Museum in Crossville TN to see artifiacts from the Civil War to present day. Of particular interest is the model of the German WWII POW camp in Crossville.

While the camp is no longer standing, the museum has a model of the camp showing the layout as well as a significant amount of artifacts from the camp itself.

Originally intended as an interment camp for Japanese Americans, POW camp was established on approximately 200 acres of a Civil Conservation Corps site. It opened in November 1942, with 68 Germans captured about 17 days earlier in Casablanca, South Africa. It was one of the first POW camps in the United States and housed more than 1,500 German and Italian prisoners.

Exhibits include German uniforms and flags, a menu and cutlery from the dining room, as well letters written by prisoners. One unique item is an oil painting by Jürgen Sperber, a German soldier, who painted it to reassure his wife that he was being treated well.

In addition to the POW display, visitors to the museum can take in the many other exhibits showcasing memorabilia from the Civil War through today.

Where to Stay

While in Tennessee, we stayed at the Crossville KOA. It’s a great campground with RV & tent sites as well as cabins to rent. Watch our video review below to see the campground, as well as other attractions in the local area.

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Filed Under: Tennessee Tagged With: American Museum of Science and Energy, american museum of science and energy (museum), camp crossville, cumberland plateau history, discovering german pow camps in america, German POW Camp in Crossville, german pow camps in america, manhattan project, museum of science and energy, oak ridge, oak ridge (city/town/village), oak ridge national laboratory, oak ridge tennessee, pow camps in america, pow camps in america visited, prisoner of war camp, prisoner of war camps in usa, prisoner of war camps in usa during ww2, Tennessee, tennessee valley authority, visiting pow camps in america, war, world war ii, world war ii in tennessee, WWII History, WWII History in Tennessee

January 6, 2018 by Julie 7 Comments

National Civil Rights Museum – Memphis, TN

I spent an emotional morning at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, TN a few months ago. This educational visit was deeply moving, and I’ve been struggling with finding my voice to share it with you ever since. It has taken me a while to publish this article because I wanted it to be more than one of my standard travelogues. If you follow my blog you know that I am business writer. I write about facts, stay on topic, and keep the details concise. But this museum deserves so much more, especially in light of recent events that highlight the work still to be done in our country.

Location

See the balcony where Dr Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated at Lorraine Hotel at the National Civil Rights Museum

The museum is located at the site of one of the Civil Rights movement’s defining events, the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968. On the outside, the Lorraine Motel looks much as it did that day. A funeral wreath of red and white carnations hangs on the railing to mark the spot where Dr. King fell. There are audiovisual stations where you can learn why he was in town on this occasion and how the events transpired. Directly across Mulberry Street is the boarding-house window from which James Earl Ray fired the fatal round. Both of these buildings are now part of the museum.

Presentation

Inside are comprehensive multi-media exhibits, providing a history through slavery and the civil rights movement in North America from 1619 to the present. I was heartbroken and ashamed of my forefathers from the very first exhibit, a graphic representation of the global impact of slavery. It was a painful reminder that much of our country was built on the back of slaves, torn from their families. I’m always shocked when I encounter people who downplay the depth of this evil enterprise. Sadly, most people don’t know that the first slave ship docked in Jamestown, Va., in August 1619, a year before the pilgrims dropped anchor at Plymouth Rock. And most aren’t aware that slavery in this country didn’t officially end until Dec. 6, 1865, the day the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified.

Slavery Exhibit at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis TN

Of course after slavery ended there was the rise of Jim Crow laws barring African Americans from sharing the same buses, schools and other public facilities as whites. The museum highlights the struggle for equality at many stages the Civil Rights movement. The interactive exhibits try to give you a first hand experience of what people went though. You can get on a bus with a statue of Rosa Parks who refused to give up her seat and hear the bus driver threaten her.

You can walk on the city bus and sit by a statue of Rosa Parks at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis TN.

You see a  recreated version of the Freedom Riders’ bombed bus. You learn how law enforcement looked the other way and sometimes even organized the brutal assaults against these young men and women who simply wanted to be able to travel anywhere in the country and use the same bathrooms and waiting rooms as anyone else.

Freedom Riders Exhibit at the National Civil Rights Museum

You learn about the 1968 Memphis strike by African American sanitation workers demanding a living wage and safe working conditions as they paraded through the streets holding placards that read “I am a man.” You realize that these events really didn’t occur all that long ago. My parents would have been in high school when the Little Rock 9 attempted to integrate into Arkansas public schools and were forcibly stopped by National Guardsmen under the orders of the Governor. The hate just boggles my mind.

Accoutability

Exhibition of Picketers and Signs during the Sanitation Workers Strike in Memphis at the National Civil Rights Museum

As I walked through the museum, I asked myself how these events could have transpired–why didn’t more white people stand up for what is right? Then I asked myself what would I have done? I tried to imagine how I’d have responded if I were in Little Rock after Brown V. Board of Education, or Greensboro during the lunch counter sit-ins. Would I have walked across the bridge in Selma? Would I have stood up for the rights of the oppressed even if it endangered my own rights? Or would I have hidden and ignored the whole thing? I would like to believe that I would have been a Freedom Rider, but I’m ashamed to say I probably would have been too afraid. So where’s the balance? What can we who are not oppressed do to help those who are?

This year marks the 50th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination. Consider joining the National Civil Rights Museum in committing to a year of peace and action. Click here to sign up for the MLK50 PLEDGE and over the course of 50 weeks beginning in April 2018, they will send you 50 achievable actions that help realize Dr. King’s legacy of peace.

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Filed Under: Memphis Tagged With: civil, civil rights, civil rights movement, human rights (quotation subject), king, lorraine motel, luther, martin, martin luther king, Memphis, mlk, museum, national center for civil and human rights (museum), National Civil Rights Museum, national civil rights museum (museum), rights, Tennessee

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