Visit McClung Museum in Knoxville Tennessee
We hope you enjoy our video and visit McClung Museum the next time you are in Knoxville!
Credits
Interview with:
Cat Shteynberg
Assistant Curator
Images by:
Lance Pettiford
Visual Media Intern/Anthropological Videographer
Music:
Night at the Museum
From Disney's Night at the Museum
By: Alan Silvestri
Mystery Oasis
By: The Mystic Sound Orchestra
Wasicu Lakota Native Indian Music
By: Morpheus
Tyrannosaurus Rex Sound
and
Dragon Roar
Recorded By: Mike Koenig
Filmed, Edited, and Produced by:
Kellie Keeton
Lauren Mitchell
Colleen Morris
Rebecca Pinnow
Visiting McClung Museum in Knoxville, Tennessee
The McClung Museum in Knoxville, Tennessee has no admission and more to offer than I thought. Free admission always fits in my budget travel plans! You can bet that I'll be back - after I get over this cold!
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Music attribution
Sweeter Vermouth Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
Lecture: Knoxville's Civil War Homes, Dr. Joan Markel
This lecture, Knoxville's Civil War Homes: Stories of the Dwellings and Their Inhabitants, was given on March 18, 2012 by Dr. Joan Markel, Civil War Curator at the McClung Museum. This lecture was part of the Frank H. McClung Museum Civil War Lecture Series, given in support of the Knox Area Civil War Sesquicentennial Commission's on-going efforts to bring the story of Knoxville's complicated history to our community.
Lecture: Knoxville's Civilian War: Portrait of the People who Endured, Dr. Joan Markel
This lecture, Knoxville's Civilian War: Portrait of the People who Endured, was given by Dr. Joan Markel as part of the McClung Museum's Civil War Lecture Series in 2012 to mark the the Sesquicentennial of the Civil War. Dr. Joan Markel, Civil War Curator at the McClung Museum, presented a series of lectures in 2012 about East Tennessee's experiences 1861-1865.
Lecture: How Knoxville Commemorates the Civil War Past, Dr. Joan Markel
The lecture, Cemeteries, Markers and Memorials: How Knoxville Commemorates the Civil War Past, given by Dr. Joan Markel as part of the McClung Museum's Civil War Lecture Series given in 2011 to mark the the Sesquicentennial of the Civil War. Dr. Joan Markel, Civil War Curator at the McClung Museum, presented a series of lectures in 2011 about East Tennessee's experiences 1861-1865.
Exhibition Video: Discovering American Indian Art
Presented to the public by the Frank H. McClung Museum of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.
A special thanks to:
The Exhibition Curators (Dr. Michael H. Logan and Dr. Gerald F. Schroedl)
The University of Tennessee in Knoxville's (Department of Anthropology)
McClung Museum Director (Dr. Jefferson Chapman)
Our Exhibition Sponsors (Home Federal Bank, UT Knoxville's Ready for the World-International and Intercultural Awareness Initiative, and UT Knoxville's Office of Research)
The Research Assistants (Christy Bohon-Perez and Cora Macmillan)
Acknowledgements:
The Anonymous Lenders who shared a portion of their collection
Frank H. McClung Museum
Special Collections, UTK Library
The Native American artists who produced these exceptional items.
Mr and Mrs. E. H. Rayson
Produced by:
The University of Tennessee Video and Photography Center
Web and Media Coordinator:
Catherine R. Shteynberg
Motion Graphics:
Lance T. Pettiford
The History of Archaeology in Tennessee
Produced in partnership with the McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture and WBIR, this video examines the history of archaeology in Tennessee, including the participation of TVA and the WPA in the salvage of hundreds of archaeological sites across the state. Much of this material is now at the McClung Museum at the University of Tennessee.
Lecture: Civil War Military Action in East Tennesse, 1863, Dr. Joan Markel
The lecture, Civil War Military Action in East Tennessee, 1863, given by Dr. Joan Markel as part of the McClung Museum's Civil War Lecture Series in 2011 to mark the the Sesquicentennial of the Civil War. Dr. Joan Markel, Civil War Curator at the McClung Museum, presented a series of lectures in 2011 about East Tennessee's experiences 1861-1865.
do lunch online: Frank H. McClung Museum, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville Tennessee
Photographed in 2009:
Do Lunch Online on YouTube, has photographic animations of the exhibits and full revolution 360° photographic animations of museum artifacts at the Frank H. McClung Museum, located on The University of Tennessee campus in Knoxville Tennessee. It contains images and information about the following exhibits: Ancient Egypt: The Eternal Voice; Archaeology and the Native Peoples of Tennessee; Geology and Fossil History of Tennessee; Human Origins: Search for Our Fossil Ancestors; The Battle of Fort Sanders; and Tennessee Freshwater Mussels.
Greig Massey
greigmassey@gmail.com
.
Lecture: Knoxville's Civil War Legacy, Dr. Earl Hess
The lecture, Knoxville's Civil War Legacy: Losing, Preserving, Recovering and Recreating Battle Landscapes, given by Dr. Earl Hess as part of the McClung Museum's Civil War Lecture Series in 2012 to mark the Knox Area Civil War Sesquicentennial Commission's on-going efforts to bring the story of Knoxville's complicated history to our community.
Dr. Earl Hess of Lincoln Memorial University is known and respected nationwide as a leading expert in Civil War history. The author of over twelve books, 23 articles and 100 book reviews, his latest work is entitled The Knoxville Campaign: Burnside and Longstreet in East Tennessee. Published by University of Tennessee Press, this extremely well organized and precisely illustrated book is a great asset to our understanding of local history. Top-notch research and writing applied to the complicated subject of East Tennessee's under appreciated contributions and sacrifices during the Civil War, have produced an academic success and a surprisingly good read in one volume.
Things to do in Knoxville TN (Tennessee) - 15 Best Fun Things to do
Things to do in Knoxville TN (Tennessee) - 15 Best Fun Things to do
Things to do in Knoxville TN | Being the administrator of the county Knox, Knoxville is an important city in the United States of America’s state of Tennessee. It is the state’s third largest city according to the population. Knoxville, the earlier capital of the state of Tennessee, was geographically isolated before the arrival of the railroad. The establishment of the railway in 1855 brought an economic boom in the region. The city faces a hard time during the Civil War. The war tore the city into two parts, being one captured by the Union army while other took by the Confederate army. Soon after the war, the city grew as major area making its name in the manufacturing and wholesaling fields. Today, the city has a key role in every aspect of the state’s affairs including tourism. The following list of things to do in Knoxville TN (Tennessee) will uncover the potential of the city as a tourist attraction.
List of 15 Best Things to do in Knoxville TN (Tennessee)
1. Market Square Knoxville
2. McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture
3. Knoxville Museum of Art
4. Tennessee Theatre
5. The Muse Knoxville
6. Knoxville Zoo
7. Downtown Knoxville Bars
8. Mabry-Hazen House
9. World’s Fair Park
10. East Tennessee History Centre
11. Blount Mansion
12. Ijams Nature Centre
13. Knoxville Food Tours
14. Old City
15. Thompson-Boling Arena
The city had remained in isolation for many years. With the establishment of railways lines, it opens its arm to the other regions. Currently, it is 3rd most populous city and perceived as a potential city for tourism. The articles elaborate some fifteen amazing things to do in Knoxville TN (Tennessee).
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Take a look inside the new Mountain Dew exhibit at the Museum of East Tennessee History
Mountain Dew - now the country's third most popular soft drink - began because two Knoxville brothers needed a tasty mixer for their bourbon.
That 1940s-styled Mountain Dew didn't taste like today's lemonade-citrus, caffeine- and sugar-charged drink. As clear as the moonshine whose moniker it borrowed, this Dew tasted like today's 7Up or Sprite.
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Top Tourist Attractions in Knoxville: Travel Guide State Tennessee
Top Tourist Attractions in Knoxville: Travel Guide State Tennessee
Tennessee Theatre, Market Square, East Tennessee History Center, Ijams Nature Center, Zoo Knoxville, World's Fair Park, Sunsphere Tower, Knoxville Museum of Art, McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture
Knowsy Knoxville: McClung Museum
Community's Merrie Long explores the McClung Museum.
Farewell from Retiring McClung Museum Director Jeff Chapman
After nearly 30 years as director of the McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture, Jeff Chapman is retiring. “It’s been a wonderful trip,” Chapman says. “Museums are exciting places. Every day something different is happening. It’s been extremely gratifying to see what we have achieved.”
Learn more about the McClung Museum at
Splendid Treasures of the Turkomen Tribes from Central Asia
The exhibit, Splendid Treasures of the Turkomen Tribes from Central Asia, runs from January 18--May 12, 2013. It features more than fifty objects hand-crafted by the semi-nomadic Turkomen peoples, jewelry made of precious metals and semi-precious stones, and woven rugs and colorful textiles created in the late-nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries.
UT's exhibition was organized by the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, the State Art Museum of Florida, Florida State University. The exhibit's jewelry was collected by Stephen Van C. Wilberding when he was a senior advisor to the Saudi Arabia Monetary Agency and donated to the Ringling Museum of Art.
The McClung Museum has complemented the jewelry selection with textiles and rugs from Knoxville collector Judy Stewart and the Persian Galleries.
Splendid Treasures is sponsored by UT's Ready for the World initiative, BarberMcMurry Architects, and the Aletha and Clayton Brodine Museum Fund.
McClung Museum opens two new exhibits about glass
McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture Assistant Curator Catherine Shteynberg talks about two new exhibits focusing on glass on Jan. 13, 2014 at the University of Tennessee museum. One exhibit shows glass from the ancient Mediterranean; the other shows Native American beadwork. Both are at the museum Jan. 18-June 1. (Video by Amy McRary/News Sentinel)
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If you are in the East Tennessee area or visit Knoxville, this is a great place for a history field trip! SEE MORE BELOW!
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Buddha comes to McClung Museum
McClung Museum Assistant Curator Catherine Shteynberg talks about a Buddha in the museum.
Lecture: Brownlow’s Whig and Rebel Ventilator: How Not to Heal the Wounds
This lecture on “Parson” William G. Brownlow was given on February 22, 2015 by Dr. Joan Markel, Civil War Curator at the McClung Museum. The lecture was part of the museum's annual Civil War Lecture Series, given in support of the Knox Area Civil War Sesquicentennial Commission's ongoing efforts to bring the story of Knoxville's complicated history to the community.
Brownlow was one of the most colorful and influential citizens of Knoxville for almost 30 years. Always controversial, his newspaper was the platform from which his opinions reached a national audience before, during, and after the Civil War. His arrest and expulsion from his home state in 1862 was followed by his heralded return a year and a half later. Through the revived Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator he wielded the extraordinary ability to exert public retribution against his defeated oppressors, making him even more famous and contentious.