These essays, an ever-increasing collection of portraits of the hundred or so people interviewed in the hollows and around the edges of House Mountain, including scientists and archaeologists, newcomers and original 18th century European families, present a sense of how the mountain has evolved in its c. 4.5 billion year geologic journey, and, too, how life here has progressed from the advent of the earliest human presence to the area some 18,000 years ago through the concentrated influx of mostly Scots Irish and German immigrants in the early 18th century, many of whose descendants are still tucked up in the mountain’s folds and valleys, on what was, only 188 years ago, the very western frontier of the United States of America.   -Sarah Clayton

Click on the photographs to read the Essays.

Image

Digging Up Grandpaw
Harvey Franklin Chittum Jr.
Denmark
August 14, 1927 - February 19, 2019

Image

The Mountain’s Got His Back
Ad Hagan
Kerrs Creek

Image

Surviving Hurricane Camille
On A Hay Bale--1969

Myra Stuples
Kerrs Creek

Image

History of Big Spring Cemetery
Kerrs Creek

Image

Carl Albert “Junie” Sensabaugh
Kerrs Creek

Image

Ida Elizabeth Higgins Ferguson
Higgins Hollow, Little House Mountain

Image
First Funeral—Donnie Ayers
Image

Jane “Jenny” Logan McKee
Kerrs Creek