Showing posts with label Cat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cat. Show all posts

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Oliver the Cat



Greenback, TN. So you want to know how the story of the cat ends? The question is - does anything ever really end or is it just the begining of a new chapter?

You will be happy to know (and if you are not, I do not want to hear it) that the cat I blogged about a week or so ago has found his missing family or rather, they have found him. Oliver, as he is officially known, is actually a neighbor cat and his family had gone on vacation. All is well, now. He is being pampered more than ever and I am paying more attention to the neighborhood cats. Oliver still comes to visit and I still commune with him, but at least we know who the other is and that is as it stands.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

DO YOU KNOW ME?


WANTED!!!
My Missing Family or a Home of My Own.


Greenback, TN. This beautiful cat turned up at the cabin a few days ago, though we think he has been around for months. He is completely sweet and affectionate and someone has obviously cared about him. The local veterinarian believes he may be between three and five years old and is neutered.

If you know him or his family, please let me know ASAP. Or, if you would be interested in adopting him, also please let me know. My cats do not get along with him otherwise I would be thrilled to keep him. Please note that it is not his fault they do not get along, the problem lies more with mine. All cats that I seem to come across want to be only cats.

If you would like to hang a flyer up as well, please click here to download the PDF file.

Please email me at lsking@lskingphotography.com or leave a comment. Only serious inquires, please.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

The Old Roane County Courthouse


Kingston, Tennessee. Suddenly as I drove into the town proper of Kingston everything began to take on familiar hues. Instinctively I knew exactly where I was and where I was going. For a late afternoon, the parking lot to the Old Roane County Courthouse seemed fairly deserted, and yet the doors were open and in-taking and expelling the hot air of the day.

Inadvertently, I had not put two and two together. In planning my small journey, I had not realized that I was returning to a previous site I had already photographed. Yes, the Kingston Courthouse and the Roane County Courthouse are one and the same. Finding humor in this, I figured there must have been a reason for my return trip and pulled out my camera to re-investigate this site.

It was much the same, but lurking in the shadows of the portico, something moved. My heartbeat faster and I squinted to see what it was. For a few moments, I wondered if I should worry about my security and had I told anyone I was coming out here today?

Then two little green eyes appeared out of the gloom and erased any sense of doom I had felt. I had been scrutinized, it seemed, and found acceptable for I was greeted by a very friendly host. This beautiful (and healthy, I must say) cat did his best to lure me into the confines of the building. Ever so tempting, I knew daylight would be fleeting, and another site beckoned me (one of which I still have not found, but that is another story for another time).

Only the picture of the cat was taken during this second photographic session. The other images were from my first attempt.



  • LOCATION:
    • Latitude: 35.870083
    • Longitude: -84.501479
    • 119 Court Street, Kingston, TN 37763
  • A LITTLE HISTORY:
    • The Old Roane County Courthouse has been a site of strained emotion. The land on which the structure stands was owned by the Cherokee, and became a sore spot in the history of American settlement. The Cherokee signed an early treaty to allow these lands to become the capitol of Tennessee. For one day, Monday, September 21, 1807, indeed the first meeting of the General Assembly was held here. When the meeting adjourned, it was stated that the next meeting, the following Wednesday, would be held in Knoxville. (2)
    • During the Civil War, the structure served as a hospital for both the confederate and the union sides. Graffiti can be found on the walls written by soldiers who were hospitalized there. (1)
    • Until 1974, this was the site of the active Roane County courthouse, which then moved across the street to a new facility. At that time the older structure was deeded to the Roane County Heritage Commission.(1)
  • THE STRUCTURE
    • This combined Greek Revivalist and Federal Style antebellum courthouse features no nails. It is comprised of bricks, native lumber and was made by slaves between 1854 and 1855. The architect was Augustus Fisher and was designed by Fredrick B. Guenther (1)
  • CURRENT USAGE: Museum, Library and home of the Roane County Heritage Commission