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The historic resource study and historic structures report has been
conducted under the rubric of a cooperative agreement between the
National Park Service and the Appalachian Consortium which was
executed July 9, 1986. Data contained in this report will be used
in interpretation, preservation/restoration, and management needs
at the site.
Born in the Wallingford Clinic in 1949, Barry Buxton called the
town of Blowing Rock home during his childhood. The youngest of
seven children, he grew up in the mountains attending Blowing Rock
elementary school and looked towards the nearby college,
Appalachian State University, for his undergraduate studies.
Graduate school took Dr. Buxton to the midwest, however he returned
to Blowing Rock in the 1980s to assume a position at the
Appalachian Consortium Press. It was during this time he was
approached by Judith Burns to write a complete history of Blowing
Rock. Published in 1989, A Village Tapestry is the result of a
three year intensive study completed by Dr. Buxton. This book is
the history of a small town in the mountains; however, for Dr.
Buxton it is also an extension of his story in the village in which
he was born.
The very ancient Eastern forest of North America is characterized
by an extraordinary variety of plants, animals, and human
communities. Barry M. Buxton refers to this diverse area as the
Great Forest in his book A Great Forest: An Appalachian Story,
published in 1985. Buxton examines the natural and cultural
landscape of the Appalachian region, and provides a detailed
history of the area. In order to study the ecology of the forest,
he includes a narrative of the people behind the forest and how
they have impacted and changed the landscape.
Published in 1985, the Blue Ridge Parkway: Agent of Transition is a
compilation of papers presented at the conference. Intended to be a
celebration of the Parkway, the conference was a way for people to
come together and examine the road's impact on the region and its
people. Promoting unity and the idea of regional cooperation, the
conference and its organizers invited a variety of speakers
including landscape architects and civil engineers to talk about
the parkway's natural impact on the environment, construction, and
employment for thousands of mountain people. The parkway's 469
miles provide unparalleled views of the Blue Ridge and a look into
the culture and traditions of the Southern mountaineer.
The proceedings from the 1983 Appalachian Studies Conference
includes contributions by Melinda B. Wagner, Allen Batteau and
Archie Green; William Philliber; Susan Emley Keefe; Loyal Jones;
Richard Drake; John H. Mongle; Michael Henson; Nancy Carol Joyner;
Sally Ward Maggard; Phillip A. Grant, Jr.; Phillip J. Obermiller
and Robert Oldendick; John L. Bell, Jr.; Russell D. Parker; George
B. Bay; Howard Dorgan; James M. Gifford; Jean Haskell Speer;
Stanley Taylor and Arthur J. Cox; Erin J. Olson; William H.
Tallmadge; Marcia F. Barron and John G. McNutt; Edgar Bingham;
Thomas R. Shannon; Rosemary Carucci Goss; Barbara Matz; Myra jones;
Judy Martin; George Ella Lyon; and Nellie McNeil and Joyce Squibb.
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