Rogue Scholar Posts

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Appalachian Folklore & Myths
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Folklore & Myths Late on a June night in 1964, a young newspaper reporter steered his car along Riverside Drive beside the Tygart Valley River at Grafton, West Virginia. On the river side of the road he saw what he later called a “huge white obstruction” that seemed alive, seven to nine feet tall, roughly four feet wide, with slick, seal like skin and no visible head.

Bloom'sche TaxonomieInformationskompetenzLiteraturverwaltungMALISSchulungGerman
Published in MALIS-Projekteblog

Egal welchen Studiengang ein Studierender belegt: er muss eine Strategie haben, Wissen verarbeiten und managen zu können. An diesem Punkt im Bereich Informationskompetenz setzen Literaturverwaltungsprogramme wie Zotero an. An der IHL gab es erste Vorarbeiten, um Zotero nutzen zu können.

BedarfsanalyseJugendlicheKinderMALISStadtbibliothek KölnGerman
Published in MALIS-Projekteblog

2018 öffnete die nach einem Konzept des niederländischen Architekten Aat Vos neu gestaltete Stadtteilbibliothek in Köln-Kalk ihre Türen. Seitdem zählt sie zu den fortschrittlichsten Stadtteilbibliotheken Deutschlands, bekannt für ihr innovatives Design und ihren Ansatz als „Dritter Ort“, vor allem für Kinder und Jugendliche. Aber entspricht sie sieben Jahre nach der Umgestaltung immer noch den Wünschen und Bedürfnissen ihrer Fokusgruppe?

Appalachian FiguresKnox County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures In the summer of 1930, Memphis fans crowded into Lewis Park to watch their Red Sox face the best Black ballclubs in the country. Somewhere on the infield dirt of that segregated ballpark stood a third baseman whose story began in the hills of eastern Kentucky.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures On an April morning in 2011, the cafeteria at Whitley County High School felt like any other school day in the mountains. Students clustered at tables, the smell of biscuits and gravy hung in the air, and teachers moved through the noise in that half vigilant, half routine way that comes with long years in a classroom.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures A country doctor on the Tennessee border If you drive Kentucky Route 92 east out of Williamsburg today, the road winds past timbered ridges and small clearings before a sign quietly announces Carpenter. There is no incorporated town government here, only houses along the highway, a church and cemetery, side hollows like Poplar Creek, and the echo of a name that belonged first to a nineteenth century doctor.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures In the fall of 1864 a Kentucky born farmer’s son found himself riding through brushy Missouri pastureland, hunting one of the most feared guerrillas on the border. Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Porter Cox, commanding a mixed detachment of Enrolled Missouri Militia, had spent weeks tracking William “Bloody Bill” Anderson, whose men had already left a trail of burned farms and massacred prisoners across central Missouri.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures In June 1917 readers of the Indianapolis News opened their paper to find a Black woman schoolteacher explaining why the new suffrage law mattered to her community. Frances Berry Coston urged that “colored people should be awakened to their own needs and should use their political influence” in ways that would not harm them, a careful, strategic appeal in a city where Black voters still faced harassment at the polls.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures Walk through Knoxville National Cemetery and near the front you will see a plain government headstone with the inscription for Joseph Alexander Cooper, Brigadier General, United States Volunteers. His story begins not in Tennessee but just over the line at Cumberland Falls in Whitley County, Kentucky, and runs through some of the hardest questions the Civil War and Reconstruction ever put to the Appalachian borderlands.