KPT GoTri April15 - netdna
Transcription
KPT GoTri April15 - netdna
GOTri APRIL 2015 Good eats Community spotlights PRESENTED BY GOTri 4 COVER PET PHOTO 5 COOL PLACES A small sampling of historic, educational and fun spots to visit in the region. CONTEST We Love Your Pet Photos! WHAT A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE Weather, economic growth, the great outdoors and more make our region a wonderful area to call home. Look for the top vote-getter to be featured on the May 1st cover of our GoTri Magazine. Thanks again for sharing your wonderful pets with us. We love pets! Look for even more pet content soon in the Times-News and at www.timesnews.net. 6 COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHTS A look at some of the cities and towns that make up the Tri-Cities. 10 NOW OPEN IN BRISTOL Thanks for all the great pet photos you sent for our Cover Pet Photo Contest! But they are all adorable – and all winners in our book! You can view the complete photo gallery of submissions for the Cover Pet Photo Contest at www.timesnews.net. Just click on the “photo” category. We guarantee you’ll come away smiling! Cover photo of Church Circle in downtown Kingsport by Jerome Cloninger — www.JeromeCloninger.com 12 C U T E ST PE T S EVER! 16 GOOD EATS A showcase of just a small group of locally owned popular eateries you have to try. HIGHER EDUCATION If you are wanting to hit the books and earn a degree, you have several options. SCHOOL DISTRICTS A snapshot of city and county schools in the Tri-Cities region. TRAILS AND PARKS Area rec sites provide plenty of opportunities to play outside. 18 20 WRITTEN LIFETIME WARRANTY • IN BUSINESS 38 YEARS Publisher Keith Wilson Editor Kelly Story Advertising Billy Kirk kwilson@timesnews.net kstory@johnsoncitypress.com bkirk@timesnews.net Co llision B&E PREE FILE PHOTO GoTri Magazine is published monthly by the Kingsport Times-News and the Northeast Tennessee Media Group. For more information, visit timesnews.net. Au and s to Sale • SHARK MEASURING SYSTEM • COMPUTERIZED ALIGNMENTS • 2 DOWN DRAFT BAKING SPRAY BOOTHS • FOREIGN & DOMESTIC VEHICLES • ALUMINUM REPAIR • WORK WITH ALL INSURANCE COMPANIES • PAINTLESS DENT REPAIR • DRIVE-THRU ESTIMATING BOOTH 1630 Lynn Garden Drive • Kingsport, TN 423-246-2206 2 Mon.-Fri. 8am – 6pm www.bandecollision.com We appreciate your business! GOTRI MAGAZINE | TIMESNEWS.NET Rhododendrons on Roan Mountain Get screened. Save your life. When found early, lung cancer can be managed and treated. With early detection, the survival rate is 92 percent, however, when detected late that rate drops to 15 percent. Getting screened should be a priority if you are at risk. Indian Path Medical Center is the only hospital within a 200-mile radius that offers Veran Navigational Bronchoscopy technology for early detection. To assess your risk for lung cancer, visit RiskForCancer.com For more information, call 423-857-5119. The Lung Nodule Clinic 2205 Pavilion Drive, Suite 201B Kingsport, TN COURTESY OF BRIGHT’S ZOO FIVE cool places Our region is full of history and offers a plethora of unique entertainment opportunities. Here is a small sampling: 1 bright’s zoo Though Washington County offers an array of entertainment options, a Limestone animal menagerie may, as its name implies, offer the “bright”-est. Located at 3425 Highway 11E, Bright’s Zoo provides area residents with an opportunity to get a close-up look at some of the world’s more exotic and endangered animal species. Among the rare animals available for viewing at the zoo are scimitar-horned oryx, addax and bongos, while other exotic, yet more common, animals like giraffes and pandas, are also on hand. While almost every animal at the zoo can be seen, some exhibits allow patrons to get a little closer than others. The zoo allows patrons to feed select animals — giraffes, camels, bongos and lorikeets — at various times throughout the day, every day. Additionally, the zoo conducts two “keeper talks,” in which zookeepers make 30-minute presentations about one of Bright’s special exhibits. In addition to providing glimpses of rare animals, however, the family owned zoo also hopes to educate its patrons on the animals, their habitats and what they can do to assist in conservation efforts. In 2008, the zoo furthered that goal by opening itself to tour groups from area schools to help stress the importance of conservation and helping rare animals perpetuate themselves. Bright’s Zoo opened its 2015 season on March 15 and is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. until May 31, with school groups allowed an early entry of 9 a.m. Summer and fall hours can be found online. Admission is $19.95 for adults, $17.95 for seniors, $15.95 for college students, military veterans and children between 13 and 17 years old, and $12.95 for children between 3 and 12 years old and active military. For more information, visit brightszoo.com. 2 rocky mount COURTESY OF ROCKY MOUNT 4 GOtri Magazine | timesnews.net Above, a black and white ruffed lemur, and left, flamingos at Bright’s Zoo. Above, a young common squirrel monkey, and left, a Eurasian lynx. Rocky Mount, 200 Hyder Hill Road, Piney Flats, has offered up a slice of Appalachian history to the region for the last 53 years and opened its doors to welcome the public into its 2015 season with the old — and the new. This year, the museum will present some new-but-old exhibits on medical tools for this season, alongside the traditional exhibits, events and living historical interpretations that make Rocky Mount museum a unique experience. “What we try to do is incorporate this history into an ongoing dialogue,” said Gary Walrath, Rocky Mount executive director. “We try to answer questions in a conversational way and people find that very enjoyable. They don’t feel like they’re being taught.” One new item on display is a pie safe, which Walrath said was probably build in Limestone sometime in the 1830s. The pie safe was a place to store pies and other sweets as they cooled, and keep them away from the hands of sugar-hungry children. “It’s a beautiful piece, so we’re pretty excited about it,” Walrath said. April 11 will feature Wooly Days, one of the more popular family events that Walrath said Rocky Mount offers. Wooly Days offers a look into some customary springtime chores, including the processing of wool and some participation is welcomed. On display during Wooly Days will also be the newest, smallest and fluffiest additions to the family of sheep the museum raises. Rocky Mount’s 2015 season will run until Dec. 18. Regular hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., with special accommodations available for schools and large groups. Tickets for the museum are $8 for adults, $7 for seniors and $5 for children. A full listing of the year’s events can be found at www.rockymountmuseum.com. — Max Hrenda, Jessica Fuller, Marci Gore and Sue Legg 3 The Netherland Inn marks the early settlement and development history of the Holston River country of Sullivan County. Located on the Holston River in Kingsport, the Netherland Inn stood at a commercial port that served the developing economy of the frontier. It was a place where traders met, travelers rested and local residents gathered to hear news from a distance. Originally built by William King in 1802 and then expanded in 1808 for the sole purpose of developing a boatyard from which to ship his salt, the Netherland Inn was later sold at a sheriff’s sale in 1818 to Richard Netherland. Netherland procured a stage contract and established the three-story building as an inn and tavern on the Great Old Stage Road, the main route to Western Kentucky and Middle Tennessee. The Netherland Inn became established as a popular stagecoach inn hosting many famous persons, including Presidents Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson and James Polk. Netherland Inn remained in the Netherland family until 1906, when it became the home and boarding house of H.C. and Nettie Cloud. In 1968, it was purchased by the Netherland Inn Association to be preserved as a historic house museum. The inn today has been furnished to represent life as it was in an important American frontier settlement. Research was collected from the diary of Richard Netherland, as well as other primary and secondary history sources. The first-floor tavern, second-floor family quarters and third-floor guest rooms all have been furnished with period pieces. Although much of Netherland Inn’s furniture was destroyed or lost in the Civil War, some of it remains and can been seen throughout the house. COURTESY OF BCMM netherland inn birthplace of country music museum 5 The mountains of southern Appalachia have long been known for traditional music. The earliest settlers brought their instruments and musical traditions, which were fused to form country, blues, folk and other styles of popular American music. In 1927, Ralph Peer — a record executive from Victor Talking Machine Company in Camden, New Jersey — traveled to Bristol, Tennessee-Virginia to find the makers of “hillbilly” music. He set up a portable recording studio in the Taylor-Christian Hat Company building on State Street, advertised for auditions, and waited for the music makers to come to him. Over the course of two weeks, Peer recorded 76 songs by 19 different acts, including Ernest V. Stoneman with various friends and family, The Carter Family, known as “The First Family of Country Music,” and “The Father of Country Music,” Jimmie Rodgers. It was with these recordings that the foundation of country music was laid and its soundtrack begins. These recordings met commercial success and continue to influence musicians today, and in 2002, the Library of Congress ranked the 1927 Bristol Sessions among the 50 most significant sound recording events of all time. The Birthplace of Country Music was established to preserve and promote the rich music heritage of our region. This grassroots organization was first formed through the cooperation of civic, educational, tourist, governmental and musicrelated interests on April 7, 1994. It became a nonprofit in 1996 and, in 1998, the U.S. Congress passed a bill that officially recognized Bristol as the Birthplace of Country Music. The Birthplace of Country Music Museum, an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution, explores the history of the 1927 Bristol Sessions and their lasting impact on our music heritage. The 24,000-square-foot museum is located at 520 Birthplace of Country Music Way in downtown Bristol. For more information about the Birthplace of Country Music, visit www.birthplaceofcountrymusic.org. 4 Hands on! museum A place where learning and fun go hand in hand, Hands On! Regional Museum’s kidfriendly exhibits are all about the interactive discovery and understanding of science and the arts. Located at 315 E. Main St. in downtown Johnson City, the nonprofit museum opened in a renovated Woolworth’s building in 1987 and has since expanded to include some 22,000 square feet of permanent exhibit space, to host multiple world class exhibits and to delight an estimated 70,000 young visitors annually. Its popular permanent exhibits include a Kindermart sponsored by Food City stores, an Eastman Discovery Lab, a TVA water play area with a running river, a kids’ bank and credit union, a coal mine, a Piper airplane with simulated flying features, a walk-through arc filled with a taxidermy collection of exotic animals from all over the world, a harbor with a climb under fish tank and bubble observatory and a tiny town interactive play area specially designed for children ages 5 and under. In November, Hands On! was distinguished by the Guinness Book of World Records as the home of the world’s most powerful Tesla Coil, an exhibit donated to the museum by General Electric and Richard Mathias, the founder of the Tesla Coil Museum Exhibit Program, in tribute to the famed alternating current inventor Nikola Tesla. While Tesla used his coil to generate wireless electricity, the world’s only “bi-polar” Telsa Coil, on display at Hands On!, features dual sphere towers from which electromagnetic frequencies are used to play 18 different musical arrangements. New to the museum this year is the separately ticketed exhibition, “Our Body, The Universe Within,” an artful and internationally touring display of human bodies and organs. Open to adults and children at their parents’ discretion, Our Body will remain on display at Hands On! through August. More information about the museum is available at handsonmuseum.org or by calling the museum at 423-434-4263. April 2015 | GOtri Magazine 5 Community spotlights DAVID GRACE DAVID GRACE K ingsport l Population: 48,205 DAVID GRACE From left, shoppers in downtown Kingsport, tulips frame First Baptist Church on Church Circle, wolves at Bays Mountain Park and park visitors stop for photos on the dam at Bays Mountain. Ned Jilton II l Kingsport’s nickname is “The Model City.” Depending on whom you ask, you likely will hear that moniker with one of the following: l It originated after the city’s municipal charter (1917) was the first in the state — and among the first in the nation — to institute a city manager form of city government. l It is due to the city’s being professionally planned from the get-go. The city’s website quotes the book, “Kingsport, Tennessee: A Planned American City” (Margaret Ripley Wolfe, 1994) — “Kingsport, Tennessee, is the first thoroughly diversified, professionally planned, and privately financed city in twentieth-century America.” l The city was planned, outlined and designed by city planner and landscape architect John Nolen, to set aside areas for commerce and industry, strategically outlined among the residential areas. The school system was set up based on a model developed at Columbia University. l Officially charterd in 1917, Kingsport received its name from an early boat yard known as William King’s port. J ohnson C ity l Population: 63,152 l The Council for Community and Economic Research rated the area as one of the top 10 most affordable cities in the United States. In 2012, Johnson City ranked 23rd most affordable place to live, according to CNN Money. l Founded in 1856 by Henry Johnson as a railroad station called “Johnson’s Depot,” Johnson City became a major rail hub for the southeast, as three railway lines crossed in the downtown area — the narrow gauge East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad (nicknamed “Tweetsie”), the standard gauge Clinchfield Railroad and the Southern Railway (now Norfolk Southern). l During the 1920s and the Prohibition era, Johnson City’s ties to the bootlegging activity of the Appalachian Mountains earned the city the nickname of “Little Chicago.” Stories persist that the town was one of several distribution centers for Chicago gang boss Al Capone during Prohibition. l Mountain Dew soda originated here. l Noteworthy events include the Blue Plum Festival held downtown in early June (www.blueplum. org) and the Umoja/Unity Festival in early August (www.umojajc.org). 6 GOtri Magazine | timesnews.net B ristol l Population: 26,702 in Bristol, Tenn. and 17,835 in Bristol, Va. l “The Twin Cities” of Bristol, Tenn. and Bristol, Va., share a historic downtown area that straddles the state line — right down the middle of aptly named State Street. Each side has its own city government. l Bristol is known as the “Birthplace of Country Music” because in the summer of 1927, the first recordings of many of the genre’s first artists happened there. l When those artists came to Bristol to take part in that “big bang” of country music, they were greeted by an electronically lighted sign arching over State Street with the slogan “Bristol VA TENN — A Good Place To Live,” which had been in place for several years — and that sign, listed on the National Registry of Historic Places, still greets visitors today. State Street in Bristol DAVID GRACE l Bristol is known worldwide as the home to one of NASCAR’s most legendary tracks: Bristol Motor Speedway. G RAY ● The Gray community stretches from the northern boundary of Washington County at Interstate 26, west to Sulphur Springs, east to Blountville and south to Boones Creek. ● Originally known as Gray Station for the rural railway depot located there at the turn of the last century, a large portion of the community is dominated by family farms, although the steady development of subdivisions and other residential properties has increased its population density significantly since the early 1990s. ● In addition to its I-26 corridor, Gray’s transportation arteries — Highway 36 and portions Highway 75 toward Tri-Cities Regional Airport — have been annexed into the corporate boundaries of Johnson City and feature a number of national chain and locally owned restaurants and retail businesses. ● Gray is best known for two cultural attractions, the annual Appalachian Fair and the Miocene-era fossil site officially known as East Tennessee State University & General Shale Natural History Museum Visitor Center and Gray Fossil Site. E RWIN ● Population: 6,097 ● As of the 2010 Census, around 22 percent of Erwin’s population was made up of residents 65 years of age and older. Swings during the Appalachian Fair in Gray. PRESS FILE PHOTO P INEY F LATS ● Portions of Piney Flats are incorporated into Johnson City and Bluff City. ● It was established as a community in the 1780s at “The Forks” between the Holston and Watauga Rivers. ● Growth came in the 19th century with the construction of a railroad depot and the Wolfe Brothers Furniture Factory. Piney Flats Village was established in 1854. ● According to 2010 U.S. CenPRESS FILE PHOTO sus data, Erwin is 4.04 square miles, and around 1,510 reside in each square mile. ● The village was officially designated as a Sullivan County Historic District in 2009. Placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011. Tennessee Historical Commission marker placed in October 2014. ● “Murderous Mary,” a circus elephant that is said to have killed one of its trainers in Kingsport, was hanged with a rail yard crane in Erwin in 1916. ● Mary Hughes School opened in 1897 as a four-room school. It was expanded in 1924, 1929 and again in 1930. A new building was added in 1942 with more expansion in 1949 and 1953. It is now a Sullivan County school serving grades K-8. ● Previously known as Vanderbilt, the town of Erwin, which was founded in the 1870s, got its name due to a typo. In March 1879, the Legislature changed the town’s name to Ervin in honor of David J.N. Ervin, who donated much for the land for the Unicoi County seat. But the local post office name was changed from Vanderbilt to Erwin. This error was not corrected. B LOUNTVILLE ● Rocky Mount Living History Museum, site of the Cobb-Massengill Home, was built in 1969 by William Cobb, one of Northeast Tennessee’s early colonial settlers. It was the first territorial capital of Southwest Territory, which became the State of Tennessee in 1796. ● Piney Flats Industrial Park is home to Bell Helicopter, Aeronautical Accessories Inc., Daramic LLC, Aurora Hardwoods, Polymer Industrial Products, Lyon Roofing and other manufacturers. ● Blountville, county seat of Sullivan County, is not an incorporated city or town. The 2010 U.S. Census noted a population of 3,074 within the Blountville CDP (census designated place). ● At its heart is the Blountville Historic District, which includes several historic structures along or near “The Great Stage Road,” as State Route 126 is referred to in the district. ● Considered the “centerpiece” of the district, the Old Deery Inn, 3397 Great Stage Road, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. In 2000, the Sullivan County Historical Preservation Association obtained the property and began a 10-year restoration. Now a museum, it claims home to many beautiful period pieces and décor and is once again open to the public as it has been for more than two centuries. ● The county courthouse and other portions of the town were burned during a Civil War battle between Union and Confederated troops on Sept. 22, 1863. Efforts are underway to create a state military park to commemorate the battle. ● As of the 2010 census, there were 1,070 occupied housing units in the Blountville CDP, 818 of which were owner occupied. Only 283 households included individuals under 18 years old. Old Deery Inn DAVID GRACE APRIL 2015 | GOTRI MAGAZINE 7 Elizabethton’s covered bridge J ONESBOROUGH ● Population: 5,051 ● Tennessee’s oldest town was founded in 1779, 17 years before Tennessee became a state and while the area was under the jurisdiction of North Carolina. ● The annual National Storytelling Festival the first weekend in October draws thousands to Jonesborough each autumn as dozens of celebrated storytellers, musicians and guest speakers descend on the town to share their stories. PRESS FILE PHOTO E LIZABETHTON ● Population: 14,176 ● In 2000, the city’s population was 13,797, for a growth between 2000-2010 of 2.75 percent. ● For 50 years, beginning in 1926, Elizabethton was a world leader in the production of rayon. ● Employment in the two rayon plants reached a peak of 4,500 in 1939. ● Elizabethton is named for Elizabeth MacLin Carter, the wife of Landon Carter, for whom the county is named. They were among the leading citizens of the county during the late 18th century. ● Thanks to the efforts of the Heritage Alliance of Northeast Tennessee and Southwest Virginia, visitors can stroll through history by participating in historical walking tours. PRESS FILE PHOTO ● Boone Street Market, located at 123 Historic downtown Jonesborough Boone St., provides year-round access to the region’s locally grown foods, which had previously only been available at the outdoor Farmers Market and through the private farmers. ● The McKinney Cultural Arts Center at Booker T. Washington School offers students of all ages the opportunity to enhance their artistic sides through a variety of art-oriented classes. ● The arts also live on through the Jonesborough Repertory Theatre, located in the heart of downtown at 125 1/2 W. Main St. The theater offers year-round performances of all types of stage shows, whether dramas, comedies or tragedies. Compiled by Brad Hicks, Sue Legg, John Thompson, Sam Watson, J.H. Osborne, Max Hrenda and Gary Gray There’s never been a better time to rent your home! Signature Properties Full Service Property Management EVENTS COMING SOON Contact one of our agents today for more detailed information. Services provided include: • Management of Residential, condo, multi-family & commercial properties • Thorough Tenant Screening (Credit & Criminal background checks) • We charge 20% less than other companies • 24 Hour / 7 day a week on call management & emergency service • We offer Owner / Tenant Portals • We offer Direct Deposit / Automatic Withdrawal / Credit card payments • We serve the Tri-Cities area and Southwest Virginia EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT Allen Hicks Friday Night Jams APRIL 4 11 18 25 Crooked Road Ramblers @ Carter Family Fold Mountain Music Ambassadors @ Carter Family Fold Wildflower Hike & Photography W/ NTSP Devil’s Bathtub Hike W/ NTSP Folk Soul Revival @ Carter Family Fold Frontier Muster & Trade Fair Kentucky School Of Bluegrass @ Carter Family Fold Frontier Muster & Trade Fair Run The Tunnel Foot Race 19Th Annual Kid’s Fishing Day Earth Week MAY Every Weekend The Anderson Blockhouse 2 ETSU Old Time Band @ Carter Family Fold 9 Fourth Annual Plant Sale @ NTSP Ralph Stanley II @ Carter Fold For more events visit: www.explorescottcountyva.org We are a Proud member of NARPM 423-343-7777 (Kpt) 423-282-1035 (JC) 423-343-0226 (Rental) FOR DETAILS 115 West New Street Kingsport, TN 37660 (423)343-7787 (fax) 2809 E. Oakland Ave. Johnson City, TN 37601 (423) 282-1036 (fax) It is time to hear what you’re missing. Our Lowest Price Ever Was $2,99900 NOW $995 00 ea. Offer expires 30, 2015 Offer expiresApril March 5, 2014 The Premier Center for Hearing Excellence Nu Hearing Centers 45 DAY FREE - NO OBLIGATION TRIAL 423-764-5411 Bristol Office FREE COMPREHENSIVE HEARING TEST 423-239-5361 Kingsport Office No deposit or restocking fees of any kind. GET A SECOND OPINION If you are trying another hearing aid, and are currently in the trial period you owe it to yourself to try the MIND from WIDEX. Financing available - 12 months same as cash 423-282-4327 Johnson City Office What a great An aerial view of the mountains and Johnson City COURTESY OF WCEDC Weather, outdoors, amenities and size — all positive assets of region C ommunity leaders can reel off several statistics touting the positives of the Tri-Cities. Business Week called the area one of the top places to raise kids. CNN named it one of the country’s most affordable places to live and the National Association of Home Builders ranked it as the No. 7 housing market in the United States. There is the state’s largest sporting venue, Bristol Motor Speedway, the state’s largest employer, Eastman Chemical, in Kingsport and the region’s largest college, East Tennessee State University, in Johnson City. While all those are great, Gavin Andrews, director of sports development at the Johnson City Chamber of Commerce, has another simple reason he likes the Tri-Cities — the usually mild weather. There aren’t the feet of snow like he experienced while living in the Buffalo, New York, area, and there isn’t the severe heat of the Deep South. As one who enjoys the outdoors, Andrews appreciates that there are truly four seasons. “It’s a perfect medium,” he said. “I enjoy the outdoors and right here is a perfect spot to get out hiking and rafting. With the Tweetsie Trail, there is even more opportunities for outdoor recreation. There is definitely a lot of good stuff to do to get out and enjoy the outdoors.” Inside Johnson City alone, there is the Tweetsie Trail, a walking trail at Winged Deer Park and one around Kiwanis Park. For hikers, Bays Mountain in Kingsport is a popular hiking destination, as is Pinnacle Tower at the top of Buffalo Mountain in Unicoi. If you’re a water person, there are four major lakes within a 30-mile radius and for whitewater rafting, the Nolichucky River is noted for its great rapids. In addition, there are several public and private golf courses. From Warriors’ Path State Park in Kingsport to Clear Creek in Bristol to the two Johnson City-owned courses of Pine Oaks and Buffalo Valley and many others, there is a vast variety to challenge golfers of any skill level. There are even frisbee golf courses and designated dog parks. For those who enjoy the nightlife, downtown revitalizations have brought in all kinds of restaurants, clubs and other entertainment options. Andrews, who first came to the Tri-Cities while attending ETSU and later lived in Knoxville, finds living in the area much more appealing than larger cities. 10 GOTRI MAGAZINE | TIMESNEWS.NET “[The Tri-Cities region is] big enough where you have plenty of stuff to do like great restaurants, great farmers markets and some breweries coming in. But it’s small enough where you don’t have the unpleasantness of a big city.” — Gavin Andrews “It’s big enough where you have plenty of stuff to do like great restaurants, great farmers markets and some breweries coming in,” he said. “But it’s small enough where you don’t have the unpleasantness of a big city. I live right outside downtown and we walk most of the time when it’s warm out, but we’ve never had any issues as far as crime. We feel it’s a pretty safe city.” There has also been an emphasis on local history with Jonesborough, the oldest town in Tennessee, and Blountville fully embracing its role in the Civil War. At Sycamore Shoals in Elizabethton, there is the reenactment of the Overmountain Men who traveled from this area to help win the Battle of Kings Mountain in the Revolutionary War. On to modern times: one tourism brochure features the “Southern Dozen,” a group of motorcycle rides from Johnson City that includes jaunts into North Carolina and Virginia. Geographically, the Tri-Cities are three hours away from Charlotte, the nearest city of more than 200,000, and a little over six hours away from the nation’s capitol of Washington, D.C. Andrews also likes the traffic flow getting around town compared to larger cities. “If you’re someone who appreciates the middle-of-theroad, smaller-town living, it’s perfect,” Andrews said. “You don’t have to deal with the traffic. I go and visit my brother’s family in Atlanta a couple of times a year and I tell myself, ‘I love visiting there, but I could never live there.’ I would have heart disease from being stressed out all the time.” — Jeff Birchfield CSX trai PRESS FILE PHOTO E DAVID GRAC al n carrying co Bristol Mo tor Speed way place to live Whitewater rafting Tri-Cities economy and tourism boosted by competition, cooperation T hink of the Tri-Cities metro area as three economic siblings. They compete as well as cooperate with each other. Each of them has something unique. Kingsport is the home of Eastman Chemical Co., a global specialty chemical company that produces a broad range of products found in items people use every day. Eastman serves customers in approximately 100 countries and had 2014 revenues of $9.5 billion. The company employs approximately 15,000 people around the world, including about 8,000 in Kingsport. Johnson City has East Tennessee State University, which trains more than 15,000 undergraduate, graduate and professional students each semester in a number of fields, including medical, education, business and other academics. Bristol Motor Speedway, based in Bristol, Tenn., is a 0.533mile “world’s fastest” concrete oval hosting NASCAR and Nationwide series races, as well as other events, at a 160,000seat venue. College football will come to the track on Sept. 10, 2016, when the Tennessee Volunteers will play the Virginia Tech Hokies in front of an anticipated 160,000 fans — potentially the largest crowd in the history of college football — in what has been billed as the “Battle at Bristol.” BMS is owned by publicly traded Speedway Motorsports. What all three of the Tri-Cities have in common is they support small- and medium-sized manufacturers, two health care systems (Mountain States Health Alliance and Wellmont Health System), call centers and retailers, both large and small, with a labor force of more than 200,000 people. The region’s unemployment rate, as of last December, remained under 7 percent. Tri-Cities Regional Airport, located in the center of the region, offers non-stop service to four hubs. Delta Connection flies to Atlanta, American Airlines (formerly U.S. Airways Express) goes to Charlotte and Allegiant Air moves back and forth to two Florida markets. Private pilots are served at TCRA by Tri-City Aviation. Foreign goods come to TCRA at a U.S. Customs Port station, while the airport also runs the region’s foreign trade zones for manufacturers doing international business. In economic development, the Sullivan NETWORKS Partnership bills the region as “Where Tennessee Starts Its Business Day.” But there are also other county-based economic development groups throughout the region. From a tourism standpoint, the region is branded “Amer- ica’s First Frontier” by the Northeast Tennessee Tourism Association. The region has TVA lakes, state parks, camping areas and heritage tourism destinations. The Tri-Cities also has a growing — and affordable — housing market as home sales posted their fourth straight year-over-year gain in 2014 while the annual average price dipped 0.9 percent, according to the Northeast Tennessee Association of Realtors. NETAR’s Trends Report said there were 4,833 closings last year, 160 more than in 2013 and 462 better than 2008. Last year’s annual sales price was $152,505, down $1,356 from 2013. It was the first time since 2012 the annual yearover-year sales price did not improve. Sales volume for previously owned, single-family homes was $735.4 million compared to $717.3 million in 2013, NETAR noted. Besides ETSU, the region also hosts a number of mid-size and small higher education institutions, including King University in Bristol, Milligan College in Carter County and Tusculum College in Greene County. Northeast State Community College, based next to TCRA, produces workforce-ready students in two-year programs and runs Kingsport’s downtown Academic Village. Inside the village is a Kingsport Center for Higher Education consisting of six institutions: King University, Lincoln Memorial University, Milligan College, Northeast State Community College, Tusculum College and the University of Tennessee. This unique partnership allows the center to offer courses and programs ranging from associate to doctoral degrees. The Regional Center for Advanced Manufacturing in the village is a 26,000-square-foot training facility featuring the latest simulators, flexible classrooms and qualified instruction to help employees learn advanced manufacturing skills. RCAM courses may be used to fulfill requirements for an associate of applied science degrees and/or technical certificate programs offered in the following areas: general technology, chemical process operations, electromechanical technology, electrical technology and welding/metal fabrication. In addition to academic programs, RCAM also offers customized training for regional manufacturers. Also in the Academic Village, the Regional Center for Applied Technology houses student services including admissions, a business office, career development services and testing services. — Hank Hayes APRIL 2015 | GOTRI MAGAZINE 11 good EATS CONTRIBUTED Biggie’s Seafood fiesta Through four generations, the owners of Biggie’s Clam Bar have been guided by the values and principles honed and passed down since the company’s founding in 1946 — family tradition, quality, consistency and stability. Founded in 1946 in Hoboken, New Jersey, Biggie’s is best known for its freshly shucked oysters and clams, tuna tacos, shrimp and grits, award-winning ribs and burgers, and the absolute freshest cold water seafood. Founder Joseph Yaccarino came to America from Italy when just an infant in 1900 along with his 11 siblings and parents. By 1941, “Joe Biggie” decided to place his fate with clams and would go corner to corner Barbecue ribs selling raw clams from pails, then eventually a pushcart. Joseph recruited his son Michael into the business and in 1946, father and son opened Biggie’s Clam Bar. Today, the first restaurant is still located in the original red brick building. In 1996, Biggie’s was handed off to the third generation of family members and the restaurant underwent an expansion. Five years ago, the fourth generation of the family opened a second location in New Jersey and three years ago, a third location was opened in the Model City. The Kingsport location includes a full bar and the opportunity to pair your meal with any of the 40 draft beers and selection of wines. With 19 big-screen televisions, Biggie’s is an excellent place to catch all the big games and races. After 70 years in business, the Biggie’s family says it still has a firm commitment to its customers, its employees, its suppliers and the community. 12 GOtri Magazine | timesnews.net Burger Bar A classic in Bristol, Va., since 1942, the Burger Bar claims to offer the “best burgers in town” with all its burgers being eight ounces and made from local Angus beef — never frozen. The Burger Bar has a long history. It first opened as the Snack King in 1942 and for nearly 20 years the restaurant was owned and operated by Sean Howlin and his mother, serving hamburgers, hotdogs and floats. After a few more owners and a couple of name changes, the historic little eatery is today owned by Joe and Kayla Deel. The main area of the restaurant is adorned with old photos and newspaper articles, the chrome-trimmed bar and nostalgic round stools can accommodate 10 people and a couple of tables can seat another dozen or so. The owners say the low chatter of conversation helps make the Burger Bar feel cozy and inviting, and though the joint may be small, it’s big on heart. Legend has it country music legend Hank Williams Sr. ate his last meal at the Burger Bar and a lot of mystery surrounds the singer’s final days. Regardless, the menu features such entrees as the “Hey Good Looking” cheeseburger (with sauteed mushrooms and grilled onions), the “Move It On Over” cheeseburger (barbeque sauce and onions) and the “Your Cheatin’ Heart” cheeseburger (green chiles, mushrooms and onions). The owners say the offerings are enough to keep anyone’s stomach satisfied and keep you coming back time and again. A restaurant has stood the test of time when historical markers are posted at its entrance. That is the case with Dino’s, 420 E. Elk Ave., in historic downtown Elizabethton. As customers enter the front door, they can see a historical marker that proudly proclaims this restaurant “served the first order of lasagna in East Tennessee on June 20, 1963.” The man who built the restaurant and named it was Dino Senesi, a New Jersey man who married his Carter County sweetheart. When he moved to her hometown, he suspected that an Italian restaurant might do well — at least there was no competition. There wasn’t even a pizza parlor in the region then. Current co-owner David Williams said Dino hedged his bet by making his new restaurant a combination. It was half an Italian restaurant. It was also half American, just in case his customers found they did not like Italian food. Senesi found the combination to be a success. The people loved his lasagna and they also enjoyed the American side of the menu. Senesi loved the community back and filled the walls of the restaurant with local sport memorabilia and photos of children who dined there. The restaurant provided Senesi with a good life and when he decided to sell it, he found an eager buyer in Kent Williams, a man who had grown up in Carter County but left home to manage steakhouse restaurants. Senesi sold his restaurant in 1995. When Williams decided to retire, he sold the restaurant to his sons, David and John. Although Williams did add a few new touches, such as his steakhouse-quality prime rib, he knew better than to change a successful operation. “Some people might say the sauce tastes different, but Dino gave us the recipe and we follow it. The authenticity was also assured because prep cook Carl Anderson continued to work there from 1965 to 2011, making sure everything stayed the same.” Co-owner David Williams points David and John plan to keep it that to the historical marker that way. For reservations and call-in orders, states Dino’s claim to lasagna call 423-542-5541. primacy in East Tennessee. Dino’s JOHN THOMPSON Whether your tastebuds have you searching for barbecue hotspots, burger joints, fine dining establishments or some good old home cooking, there are plenty of ways to answer the call in the Tri-Cities. Here, GoTri staffers offer a smattering of some of the must-visit restaurants in the area. But don’t stop here. Our list, space permitted, would be endless. And frankly, so are our appetites. Find your next dinner at one of these fine area restaurants: CONTRIBUTED Compiled by Matthew Lane, John Thompson, Max Hrenda, Sam Watson, Becky Campbell, Nathan Baker and Joe Avento CONTRIBUTED Scratch-made tiramisu Black Olive Calzone While Jonesborough may be the storytelling capital of the world, the town also offers several worldly dining options to go with that moniker. One of those options is the Black Olive, a locally owned Italian restaurant located at 125 E. Jackson Blvd., Suite 8, near the George Jaynes Justice Center. Co-owned by Kinsey Holliday and Moe Farrouki — a trained chef with a passion for Mediterranean food — the restaurant prides itself on offering its guests an affordable meal while immersed in a feeling of Italian opulence. While Farrouki said he was happy to own his own restaurant, he added he was also grateful that the town has received him with open arms. “We love these people here in Jonesborough,” Farrouki said. “These people love supporting local business Chicken penne gorgonzola here. We’re busy every day. We love it.” Those customers aren’t the only ones supporting local business, however. According to its website, the restaurant uses locally grown produce “as often as possible” in assembling its dishes. As for the dishes themselves, the Black Olive offers an array of traditional Italian meals, as well as a variety of American appetizers. Patrons can whet their appetites with an order of buffalo wings or mozzarella sticks, or try something more unique to the restaurant, like the Italian nachos — fried pasta chips with sausage and/or chicken, peppers, black olives, tomatoes, cheeses and Alfredo sauce. For dinner, traditional Italian dishes — such as chicken primavera or veal parmesan — or sampling one of the specialty pizzas, like the Black Olive’s Special, which features hamburger, pepperoni, sausage, ham, salami and bacon, are offered. A variety of subs and sandwiches are available, as well. For more, visit theblackolive125.com. Mustard Seed The Mustard Seed Café is a perfect, quaint meeting place located in the heart of downtown Kingsport. Owners Glen and Debi Tabor moved the restaurant to Market Street in 2011 and the atmosphere of the coffee and sandwich shop reflects their love of antiques and cherished junk items, making patrons’ visits relaxed and enjoyable. The restaurant specializes in soups, fresh organic salads and homemade sandwiches. All soups are made fresh daily and rotate throughout the week, including potato, broccoli cheese, tomato basil and chili. The Mustard Seed offers an even greater variety of salads — spring, chicken, tuna, potato and fruit. All sandwiches come on a variety of bread — sourdough, wheat, croissant, hoagie, ciabatta rye or gluten free. Coffees purchased from a local roaster, wraps, caramel pie and quiches, such as cranberry chicken and spinach tomato pie, round out the menu at the Mustard Seed Café. The owners pride themselves on offering the perfect setting for lunch with friends or a quick meeting with co-workers. The café is open for lunch seven days a week and is available for catering and special events. CONTRIBUTED Potato soup and a spring salad Hokie Smokie KELLY STORY Hokie Smokie Restaurant has taken its regional theme seriously. Home to pulled pork, brisket, ribs, wings and other traditional barbecue pit favorites smoked in Southern flavors, the family owned establishment Brisket Spud and a BB2 (double B.B. Cheezer) on Mountcastle Drive in Johnson City recently expanded with second location in downtown Kingsport on Broad Street. Part-owner Jeff Bailey says the eatery’s name and theme come from a family with split loyalties. “Basically, my father, my brother and I are owners,” he said. “Our father went to Virginia Tech, and my brother and I went to the University of Tennessee, that’s where the Hokie Smokie comes from.” The menu also includes massive spuds, nachos, fried zucchini, tasty sandwiches, smoked Italian sausage and brats, pulled country ham, prime rib, chicken & dumplings and a bison burger. Sides at the Johnson City location include cowboy beans, fried corn, mashed potatoes, mac & cheese, cole slaw, french fries, sweet potato fries, fried potatoes & onions, collard greens, tri-potato salad, green beans, fried okra and baked potatoes, as well as salads and soups. Both locations are open Monday-Saturday 11 a.m.-11 p.m. www.hokiesmokie.com. Sloopy’s CONTRIBUTED Sloopy’s is a family owned and operated “casual joint” near Eastman Chemical Co. in Kingsport and is home to the two-pound burger challenge. Owner Steve Warren opened the burger joint in 1996 and describes it as a one-of-a-kind restaurant with the atmosphere being as if you walked into your own dining room at home. “We care that your food is good and your family is fed,” Warren said. Sloopy’s is best known for its burgers, with the bacon cheddar burger being one of the most popular choices. Other offerings include the Carolina burger, veggie burger, fried bologna, tuna melts and Philly Cheese and Steak. Recently Sloopy’s has branched out with some new items, such as barbecue and fish tacos. “The burgers drive the menu, but we’re more than just a burger joint,” Warren said. And Warren, or Mr. Sloopy to some, is more than just a restaurant owner. He is a minister and a certified instructor with Life Foundations, Inc. Warren teaches classes to help young adults prepare for a job search by discovering their personality traits and strengths, while at the same time improving their people skills. Warren is available for counsel, free of charge, to anyone seriously looking for a job and will provide the “dos” and “don’ts” of interviewing. Warren said he enjoys being involved in the community and tries to help meet the needs of the community. One way is by helping people and hiring those who are struggling, to give them a second chance at a job, he said. CONTRIBUTED Tupelo Honey Key lime pie Cootie Brown’s Tamales When you talk about where to get good pizza or key lime pie or tamales or nachos in Johnson City, there are several restaurants that pop into people’s minds for one or the other, but there is only one — Cootie Browns — that can deliver tastes from across the globe. Locally owned, Cootie Brown’s opened in 1999 and remains a favorite among Tri-Citians, who affectionately shorten the name to Cootie’s. The menu features selections from many worldwide locations, including Jamaica, New Orleans, California, Italy and Mexico. Most items are made in-house, including sauces, spices, desserts, veggie burgers, pestos and dressings. Cootie’s also offers signature items like their famous spiral chips, a unique view of how a pizza — from the Sunrise to Eggplant and Pepper — should look and taste and, of course, the all-important key lime pie. Cootie’s also carries a wide variety of locally brewed beer and traditional suds. If you aren’t big on beer, bring your own wine to enjoy and there’s no cork fee. Indoor and patio dining is pleasant year round. Heaters keep the area toasty in cold weather, and when it’s warm, the enclosure is rolled up to let the breeze flow through. And if you’ve ever wondered who Cootie Brown is, you can find out on their website, www.cootiebrowns.com. A new location on Volunteer Parkway in Bristol will open soon. Fried chicken BLT Now in the midst of a major menu overhaul, Asheville-based Tupelo Honey Cafe has its sights set on conquering most of the major cities in the Southeast. Following success at its two Asheville restaurants, Tupelo Honey opened four other locations before cutting the ribbon in June on its Johnson City eatery and introducing a Raleigh restaurant in November. This year, the dominating chain expanded to Myrtle Beach in February, and expects to open three more locations soon. The wild success and rapid expansion are based on the company’s Southern fusion inspired food and community-geared philosophy, but market research led to the recent menu changes, director of marketing Elizabeth Sims said. “We were in growth mode, moving into markets in Arlington and Virginia Beach, (Va.), farther away from Asheville, where they’re less familiar with Tupelo Honey, and we needed to understand our direction from a menu standpoint,” she said. “We did some market research and discovered a bunch of things about our target audience, including that the Millennials are driving everything.” According to the research, members of the valuable Millennials cohort like to share food and like to be able to customize their dining experiences. The new menus introduced recently reflect those findings. The new offerings include a slew of mix-and-match smaller dishes “built Southern small plates for sharing,” the menu boasts, and suppers for which diners can choose an entrée from chicken, seafood or classic categories and add two sides from a list of 15. As for the success of the Johnson City restaurant in the historic CC&O train depot, Sims said, “It’s going very well. We’re happy to be there.” CONTRIBUTED Try our NEW mobile app app.brphomes.com LARGEST SELECTION in KINGSPORT! Compare our prices to competitors. TUESDAYS 20% OFF WINE THURSDAYS 10% OFF EVERYTHING We match competitors ads within boundaries of ABC laws. No additional discounts on sale items or EDLP 423.765.2900 www.parkplaceliquor.com Text BRP7 to 87778 to receive a text link CONVENIENTLY LOCATED – I-26 OFF Wilcox Exit 1309 S. John B. Dennis Hwy, Kingsport, TN CONTRIBUTED Giovanni’s Label Not only does Label Restaurant want to have something for everybody, it wants to have something good for everybody. “That’s what we try to do, come up with a concept that will appeal to a wide range of people,” said owner Rafael Zabala. “We think we have something for everybody, and it’s all fresh ingredients, quality products.” Label, 112 Tipton St. in downtown Johnson City, has been in existence since last May. It’s in the site of the former One12 Downtown, which was more of a nightclub. Label is strictly a restaurant. When the transformation was made from One12 to Label, the business shut down for a month. The burgers are ground fresh every day. The buns come from a local private baker. The steaks are all prime meats from a butcher in Chicago. Everything is cooked on a wood-fire grill, which you can smell the moment you walk into the building. “That’s a unique aspect of Label,” Zabala said. “We cook on 100 percent wood.” Sushi is a also big part of Label’s business. It’s half price at lunchtime Monday through Friday. “We still do a ton of sushi business,” Zabala said. “We do the half-off really to try to drive some lunch business.” In addition to the food, Label features 160 bourbons and scotches in what Zabala calls the largest collection in the area. Twenty beers — including selections from regional brewers Depot Street in Jonesborough and Wolf Hills in Abingdon, Va. — are on tap, and 40-50 others are available in bottles. The wine selection includes some from the Reedy Creek Frost Vineyard in Kingsport. In addition to daily lunch and dinner menus, Label also has Sunday brunch from 11:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. www.labelrestaurant.com 20 % OFF First Item * CONTRIBUTED With over a decade of experience in serving quality Italian cuisine, the owners of Giovanni’s Italiano Cucina pride themselves in preparing Crispy chicken alfredo the finest Italian food for their patrons. Giovanni’s has been serving the Tri-Cities area for eight years, with locations in Blountville, Johnson City and Piney Flats. The owners strive to meet or exceed customers’ expectations by providing prompt, professional, friendly and courteous service through its highly trained staff. Lunchtime offers a choice of salads (Greek, chef, chicken or vegetable) and dishes (lasagna, ravioli, pizza, stromboli and calzone). At dinner time the menu grows even broader with a host of appetizers (Italian garlic knots, stuffed jalapenos, fried mushrooms and buffalo shrimp), salads, gyros, sandwiches and ovenbaked dishes, including Spaghetti Aglioeolio, Fettuccine DaVinci, lobster ravioli, New York stromboli and eggplant Parmigiana. The Italian eatery was started years ago by a group of folks who were passionate about Italian food and this inspired the owners to establish a fine dining place for others to enjoy their passion. Hence the idea of Giovanni’s became a reality and eventually one location branched into three. Salmon pasta salad 10 % OFF PLUS ONE YEAR Second Item * No Interest ** Go to www.TimesNews.net to Largest Selection of Furniture in the TriCities! Voted #1 Furniture and Mattress Store Kingsport! 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Special terms apply to qualifying purchases of $1499.00 or more. BE SURE TO SHOP OUR OUTLET BASEMENT! Higher education opportunities Northeast State Community College King University www.king.edu King University is a Presbyterianaffiliated, doctoral-level comprehensive university with campuses across the region. Founded in 1867 as King College and based in Bristol, Tennessee, King offers more than 80 majors, minors, preprofessional degrees and concentrations in fields such as business, nursing, law, medical and health sciences, pharmacy, education and humanities. Graduate programs are offered in business administration, education, and nursing. Research, off-campus learning opportunities and travel destinations are also available, and King is a NCAA Division II and a Conference Carolinas member with 25 varsity sports. Aside from the main campus in Bristol, King has campuses in Kingsport, Knoxville and Franklin and 10 satellite campuses. King facts: ◆ Student/faculty ratio of 16 to 1 ◆ Enrollment: 2,897 students from 32 states, 29 countries and six continents. ◆ More than $35 million awarded annually in scholarships, grants, loans and work-study; 98 percent of students receive assistance. ◆ 85 percent of King graduates get career placement in their chosen field within six months of graduation, with 92 percent employed or in graduate school within six months after graduation ◆ Recognition by U.S. New & World Report as among the best colleges in the nation, including regional university, and The Princeton Review list of best southeast colleges. ◆ Made the 2013 President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll from the U.S. Department of Education and Corporation for National and Community Service in 2014 and was ranked as having the lightest student debt load among southern universities. ◆ In 2013-14, King received the largest number of transfers from public institutions in Tennessee as well as from out-of-state schools. Northeast State facts: ◆ Fall ’14 enrollment: 5,865 credit students ◆ The main campus is 79.5 acres adjacent to Tri-Cities Regional Airport. East Tennessee State University PRESS FILE PHOTO 16 Northeast State Community College is a comprehensive two-year community college. It falls under the governance of the Tennessee Board of Regents of the State University and Community College System of Tennessee. As a comprehensive community college, Northeast State provides university parallel programs designed for students desiring to transfer to another college or university, career programs for students planning to enter the workforce immediately upon graduation, and continuing education and community service programs for professional growth and personal enrichment. The college began as Tri-Cities State Area Vocational-Technical School in 1966 on the main campus in Blountville. Founded in 1911 as East Tennessee State Normal School, Johnson City’s East Tennessee State University served to train teachers in their craft until 1943, when it was expanded to a college with liberal arts programs. Now hosting 11 colleges and schools, including the James H. Quillen College of Medicine and the Bill Gatton College of Pharmacy, ETSU eventually grew into a major state university and one of the largest employers in the region. The school offers more than 120 baccalaureate, master’s and doctoral programs, some of which, like the Bluegrass, Old-Time and Country Music Studies, Storytelling and Sport Physiology and Performance programs, are unrivaled in the country. ETSU Athletics has 18 NCAA Division I sports; state-of-the-art facilities; 14 conference titles in the last 6 seasons; and Buccaneer football is slated to start its return season in 2015. GOTRI MAGAZINE | TIMESNEWS.NET www.etsu.edu In its 104-year history, ETSU was led by 10 presidents, including current President Brian Noland, who entered his fourth year at the helm this year. ETSU Facts: ◆ Enrollment as of Fall 2014: 14,685 ◆ 340-acre main campus in Johnson City ◆ Satellite locations in Kingsport and Sevierville ◆ The average class size is 19.7 ◆ College of Business and Technology is listed among the nation’s most outstanding business schools in the Princeton Review 2013 edition of “Best 296 Business Schools.” ◆ More than 89 percent of the university’s students receive federal, state or private sources of financial aid. ◆ Although the majority of students are from Tennessee and the surrounding southeastern region, more than 40 states and at least 60 foreign countries are also represented. — Nathan Baker and Rick Wagner u Northeast’s designated areas are the counties of Carter, Johnson, Sullivan, Unicoi and Washington, although students are accepted from other areas. u Northeast offers more than 130 programs of study and popular ones include university parallel, allied health, business management, computer science, electrical technology, industrial technology and nursing. u The newest program is entertainment technology, with headquarters in Bristol. u In addition to the main campus, Northeast State offers courses in Bristol, Elizabethton, Gray, Johnson City and Kingsport at the Kingsport Center for High Education, as well as ITV classrooms in Mountain City and Unicoi County. u The Tennessee Higher Education recently released performance outcomes for 2013-14 showed Northeast State recorded the highest overall percentage increase of all Tennessee Board of Regents institutions. PRESS FILE PHOTO www.northeaststate.edu Milligan College www.milligan.edu Affiliated with the non-denominational Christian Churches/Churches of Christ and a member of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities, Milligan College traces its roots to the Buffalo Male and Female Institute, a private religious secondary school founded in 1866. The arrival of Josephus Hopwood brought the elevation of the school to a liberal arts college in 1881 and a new name, inspired by a former professor of Hopwood’s. Milligan now offers more than 100 majors, minors, pre-professional degrees and concentrations, along with graduate and adult degree completion programs. In the fall of 2016, the college plans to launch an engineering program with majors in electrical and mechanical engineering, and aspires to start a physician’s assistant program in the future. After years of partnership with Milligan, the Emmanuel Christian Seminary will be integrated into the college, offering master of divinity and doctor of ministry degrees. Acclaimed safety. Advanced luxury. Just two of its family values. The 2015 ML350 Milligan facts: u Enrollment as of fall 2014: 1,177 students come from 35 states and 15 nations u 70 percent of students live on campus in one of 11 residence halls or student apartments u 195-acre main campus located in Carter County u Satellite programs offered at the Kingsport Center for Higher Education u Approximately 90 percent of students receive some type of financial aid, including scholarships, grants, loans and employment u Milligan is consistently named one of the Best Regional Colleges in the South in “America’s Best Colleges” by U.S. News & World Report of Kingsport 867 E. Stone Drive Kingsport, TN 37660 423-224-2260 • 1-877-281-2330 www.rickhillimports.com NED JILTON II Ketron Elementary in Sullivan County CONTRIBUTED TIMES-NEWS FILE PHOTO John Adams Elementary in Kingsport School districts Kingsport CITY u 13 schools • 1 pre-K • 9 elementary • 2 middle • 1 high school • 1 alternative u 7,258 students u 491 teachers u 53.7 percent are economically disadvantaged u 1,529 students are disabled (21.1 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $10,352.90 SULLIVAN COUNTY u 22 schools • 2 K-8 schools • 10 elementary • 6 middle • 4 high schools u 10,654 students u 749 teachers u 56 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 1,820 are disabled (17.1 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $9,129.50 JOHNSON CITY u 11 schools • 8 elementary • 2 middle • 1 high school u 7,849 students u 508 teachers u 47.4 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 1,299 are disabled (14.4 18 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $9,391.90 WASHINGTON COUNTY u 15 schools • 9 elementary • 3 middle • 2 high schools • 1 K-12 u 8,991 students u 532 teachers u 47.4 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 1,299 are disabled (14.4 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $8,398 ELIZABETHTON CITY u 5 schools • 3 elementary • 1 middle • 1 high school u 2,521 students u 180 teachers u 51.9 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 406 are disabled (16.1 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $9,664.60 CARTER COUNTY u 15 schools • 9 elementary • 1 middle • 4 high schools • 1 alternative school u 5,566 students u 426 teachers GOtri Magazine | timesnews.net Cherokee High School in Hawkins County u 71.4 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 941 are disabled (16.9 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $9,014.60 UNICOI COUNTY u 10 schools • 5 elementary • 1 middle • 1 high school • 2 alternative schools • 1 K-12 online school u 5,736 students u 209 teachers u 66.9 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 742 are disabled (12.9 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $7,922.70 ROGERSVILLE CITY u 1 school • 1 elementary u 678 students u 45 teachers u 48.7 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 74 students are disabled u Per pupil expenditure is $9,558 HAWKINS COUNTY u 18 schools • 1 K-8 school • 1 K-2 school • 9 elementary • 1 5th-6th grade school • 3 middle • 2 high schools u 7,266 students u 476 teachers u 67.4 percent of students are economically disadvantaged u 1,146 are disabled (15.8 percent) u Per pupil expenditure is $9,397.30 Fair way Volkswagen 2013 & 2014 Customer First Club Winner “One of only 60 Volkswagen Dealers Nationwide” THE 2015 VW GOLF TDI FAIRWAY VOLKSWAGEN 2301 EAST STONE DRIVE • KINGSPORT, TN 423-378-1800 • www.fairwayofkingsport.com Own a piece of Downtown Kingsport contact@urbansynergy.net 423.247.2267 urbansynergy.net REVITALIZE LIFESTYLE URBAN ~ Get outside and play ~ WINGED DEER PARK Sitting just off Bristol Highway, Winged Deer Park is one place locals flock to, regardless of the season. Owned by Johnson City, Winged Deer hosts a variety of family-friendly activities from playground areas to lakeside venues. The 200-acre district park, established in 1991, is home to an 18-hole disc golf course, five softball fields, three soccer fields, batting cages and a half-mile paved walking trail. The park area at Boone Lake features sand volleyball courts, picnic tables, boat access and an amphitheatre. CONTRIBUTED BY BAYS MOUNTAIN LAUREL RUN PARK A river otter at Bays Mountain BAYS MOUNTAIN PARK Bays Mountain Park in Kingsport features more than 30 miles of hiking and biking trails, wildlife and scientific exhibits, a state-ofthe-art planetarium and an adventure ropes course. The park opened in the early 1970s and is one of the largest city-owned parks in the country. The 3,600-acre nature preserve offers a diverse array of programs, activities and exhibits to the more than 200,000 visitors who visit every year. Bays Mountain Park’s 36 miles of trails surround a man-made 44-acre lake, serving as the scenic centerpiece for the park. Twenty of those miles of trails are also approved for mountain biking. The park’s Nature Interpretive Center has exhibits on rocks and minerals, pond life, insects and mammals, space exploration and a cave for youngsters to play in and explore. One of the main draws of the park is the planetarium. Park officials have produced a number of planetarium shows in-house, including programs on the solar system and the Orion constellation and “Astronaut.” Featured in Bays Mountain Park’s habitats are white-tailed deer, several species of snakes, a bobcat, river otters, raccoons, birds of prey and a pack of gray wolves. www.baysmountain.com CONTRIBUTED BY BAYS MOUNTAIN Bays Mountain’s 44-acre lake 20 GOtri Magazine | timesnews.net TIMES-NEWS FILE PHOTO A bridge over Laurel Run Creek TIMES-NEWS FILE PHOTO Fishing on the lake at Warriors’ Path WARRIORS’ PATH Named for its proximity to an ancient Cherokee trading and war path, Warriors’ Path State Park includes nearly 1,000 acres along Patrick Henry Lake. The park’s 8.5-mile mountain bike system, also open to hikers, was recently named a National Recreational Trail. There is also a 12-mile hikers-only trail through park woodlands. Features also include a paved path around Duck Island, a popular spot for swimmers in the summer. Sunbathers also flock to the park’s Olympic-sized swimming pool. The park boasts a state-of-the art boundless playground, the only one of its kind in East Tennessee. It is designed to accommodate any child regardless of physical disabilities or obstacles. Biker on the Warriors’ Path National Recreational Trail TIMES-NEWS FILE PHOTO Laurel Run Park remains one of the bestkept secrets in Hawkins County. Amenities include a walking trail, ball fields, picnic shelters and barbecue pits. One of its best features is Laurel Run Creek, which flows over large boulders from Bays Mountain and empties into the Holston River. The park, located near Church Hill on the south bank of the Holston River about a mile east of Goshen Valley Road, owes its origins to “The River,” a 1984 film about a family fighting to keep its farm. The movie was filmed, in part, at the park. The park features a mountain creek, playground, volleyball court, tennis courts, basketball courts and picnic tables. SYCAMORE SHOALS Sycamore Shoals State Historic Park is open from daylight to dark each day. Picnicking is available at the park with tables and grills provided. A 2-mile fitness trail constructed jointly between the park and adjacent hospital is also available. The trail follows the Watauga River. Sycamore Shoals includes one of the most historically significant sites in Tennessee. It was there that the Watauga Association was formed in 1772. The association was cited by Theodore Roosevelt as the first independent community established by men of American birth. Sycamore Shoals also was the site of the Transylvania Purchase, in which early entrepreneurs bartered with the Cherokee to purchase much of what is now Kentucky and Middle Tennessee. During the Revolutionary War, Fort Sycamore Shoals withstood an attack by the Cherokee. A few years later, it was a mustering ground for the Overmountain Men on their march to the Battle of Kings Mountain. The story of the site is told in a new interpretive exhibition area in the Visitors Center. A recreated Fort Watauga matches the dimensions of the original and offers a backdrop for the annual presentations of the state’s official outdoor drama, “Liberty!” which runs during July. The Visitors Center is open Monday through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and on Sunday from 1-4:30 p.m. ~ PARKS C DAVID COOK Tweetsie Trail bridge over Highway 321 TWEETSIE TRAIL Since its official opening on August 30 last year, the Tweetsie Trail has become Johnson City’s premier location for walking, running and cycling. The Tweetsie Trail task force — the organization that has helped plan all aspects of the trail — still has to complete the final 2.7 miles of the 10-mile multi-use recreational connector between Johnson City and Elizabethon, but that doesn’t stop them from developing the trail to its fullest extent in the process. Benches and bridges that will bear the names of the trail’s donors are set to be put in, signage to educate users on the birds, plant life and geological structures in the AND RECREATION area will be installed and, most notably, construction is underway at a quarry, where local Rotary Clubs have banded together to produce a pavilion. The pavilion is scheduled to be completed in about three months and will provide a place where those on the trail can rest their legs, picnic and enjoy the view and students can learn something at the outdoor classroom. Currently passable until the Holly Street intersection in Elizabethton, the Tweetsie Trail task force expects the final 2.7 miles of the trail that go through downtown Elizabethton to be completed by the end of 2015. Gauging the success of the trail since it’s open has been easy for the group’s chairman, Dr. Dan Schumaier, who’s said that anyone doubting its popularity can count the cars at the Alabama Street trailhead in Johnson City on any nice day. “Though it’s not a park, it’s the most popular park in Johnson City,” Schumaier said. BUFFALO MOUNTAIN PARK Johnson City’s Buffalo Mountain Park is a 725-acre natural resource area obtained in 1994 through a land swap with the U.S. Forest Service. The park, at which there is no fee, is located on the north slope of Buffalo Mountain and consists of steep topography and densely forested land. Changing dentistry, changing lives. Dr. Charles E. Guest • Dr. Cheston B. Guest • Dr. Meaghan E. Guest Thank you for voting us #1 ~ The park functions as a nature preserve primarily for hiking, picnicking and nature programs. There are eight trails at the park. One of the more popular trails is 4.5 miles long and leads to the Pinnacle Mountain fire tower which is located off Dry Creek Road. ATVs are allowed on certain trails, and mountain biking is only allowed on the steep service road up to the towers. The park also offers great opportunities for bird-watching and tree identification. WILLOW SPRINGS PARK The 1.8 mile paved path that weaves around Willow Springs Park has a beautiful backdrop — Buffalo Mountain. Established in 1998, the park encompasses 36 acres in southwest Johnson City between Huffine and Antioch roads. It was named after a dairy that operated near the site around the turn of the century. Architectural designs for shelters and light fixtures are reminiscent of styles prevalent during the city’s earliest days. Our heritage is also the inspiration for the name of the playground: Johnson’s Depot. In the mid-1850s, Henry Johnson, the city’s first mayor, built a general store and post office. Accordingly, the playground design features train and village theme play elements. FREE GUTTERING WITH /PURCHASE OF METAL ROOF OR VINYL SIDING enry Ft. H all M NRY HE FT. E DRIV . H RT RT 93 NO TH U SO RD T. YS LE AD BR H CHESTNUT GROVE DENTAL BLDG. . RD RT 36 WAL-MART • Metal-Free Crown/Bridge • KOR Whitening • Cosmetic Dentistry • Smile Rejuvination • Invisalign Braces • Sedation Dentistry 2975 Fort Henry Drive Kingsport, Tennessee 423-247-2151 www.guestdds.com Unlimited Window & Siding Company Call Joey Salyer 423.292.2906 10% SENIOR DISCOUNT APRIL PLENTY TO SEE, PLENTY TO DO Want your event included in next month’s Plenty to See, Plenty to Do calendar? Email it to Editor Kelly Story at kstory@johnsoncitypress.com. 11 Court Appointed Special Advocates of Northeast Tennessee will host an American Girl Fashion Show from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Grace Fellowship Church in Johnson City. Party favors, door prizes and a silent auction of American Girl dolls and accessories. Girls are encouraged to bring their dolls. Tickets are $25 per person. There will be a Parisianthemed tea party from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. for a separate ticket price of $15 per person. The event will include a lemonade bar and make-your-own cupcake. Proceeds will benefit abused and neglected children. 423-461-3500 or www.casanetn.org for tickets. “Nashville on the Road,” 7:30 p.m., Niswonger Performing Arts Center in Greeneville. $20-$30. 423-638-1679 or www. npacgreeneville.com A Doll, Bear and Toy Show will be held at the Kingsport Civic Auditorium from 9:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. featuring antique, modern and play dolls and toys. Admission is $2. 423-753-0022 or ellen@jonesdollhouse.com 24 25 A celebration of the oldest frame house in Tennessee and the historically prominent Carter family will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and April 12 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Carter Mansion in Elizabethton. Kingsport Ballet’s “Swan Lake” at 7 p.m. and April 12 at 2:30 p.m. at Eastman’s Toy F. Reid Employee Center in Kingsport. Tickets: $10-$20. 423-378-3967 or www.kingsportballet.org. 12 17 18 20 “Unbroken Circle: Bristol’s Music in Motion,” presented by Bristol Ballet, 7:30 p.m. and April 12 at 2:30 p.m. at the Paramount Center for the Arts in Bristol. Tickets: $15 for adults, $10 for seniors, $6 for students with ID. 423-2748920 or www.theparamountcenter.com Blue Ridge Trio kicks off Abingdon’s Music on the Lawn series with a performance at 1 p.m. on the front lawn of The Martha Inn & Spa. The free series continues through May 17. 276676-2282 or www.abingdonmusicexperience.com The Haywood County Ramblers will perform at 2:30 p.m. at the Birthplace of Country Music Museum. Tickets are $15. 423-573-1927 or www.birthplaceofcountrymusic.org Warriors’ Path State Park’s 36th annual Spring Nature Festival will be held April 17-19 at the park in Kingsport. Seminars taught by professionals and hikes guided by trained naturalists. Topics include wildflowers, tracking, astronomy, stream life, geology, spring trees and more. Free, but pre-registration required. Call 423-239-6786 or email marty.silver@tn.gov. 26 1 2 Triumphant Quartet, 7 p.m., at the Paramount Center for the Arts in Bristol. Tickets: $13.25. 423-274-8920 or www.theparamountcenter.com Frühlingsstraussball, a Spring Flower Dance, will be hosted by the Johnson City German Club at Memorial Park Community Center in Johnson City from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Sample international foods, hear live German music and more. Admission is $5 per person. markpollock1944@icloud.com Bring cuttings and potted outdoor and indoor plants to exchange for species you don’t have during a community plant exchange from 9 to 10 a.m. at Sycamore Shoals in Elizabethton. 423-543-5808 Exchange Place Spring Garden Fair will be held from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and April 26 from noon-5 p.m. at 4812 Orebank Road, Kingsport. Thousands of plants, garden accessories and crafts will be for sale, garden talks, a rain barrel workshop, children’s activities, ol’ timey music and traditional foods and demos of springtime activities on the 1850s farm. $3 for adults and free for children under 12. 423-288-6071 or www.exchangeplace.info “Broadway Comes to Greeneville,” 7:30 p.m., at NPAC. $25$35. 423-638-1679 or www.npacgreeneville.com The Tri-Cities Music Collectors Show will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the DoubleTree Hilton, Johnson City. Music dealers from across the South selling vintage vinyl LPs and 45s, plus CDs, DVDs and memorabilia. Bring record and CD collections in for appraisal and purchase. Admission is $2. “Spot the Dog,” 3 p.m., at Niswonger Performing Arts Center, 212 Tusculum Blvd., Greeneville. Tickets: $10-$15. 423-638-1679 or www.npacgreeneville.com MAY The Kingsport Senior Artisan Center’s May Senior Artisan Fair will be held in the first floor atrium of the Kingsport Renaissance Center from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Admission is free. Crafts will be for sale from various vendors including woodworkers, basket weavers, quilters and more. 423-765-9047 “The Very Hungry Caterpillar,” 11 a.m., at Niswonger Performing Arts Center, 212 Tusculum Blvd., Greeneville. Tickets: $10-$15. 423-638-1679 or www.npacgreeneville.com Kingsport Theatre Guild’s “Stand and Deliver,” April 17-26 at the Renaissance Arts Center in Kingsport. Tickets: $12 for adults; $10 for seniors and students; $8 for children. 423-392-8427 or www.kingsporttheatre.org An array of unusual ornamental and native perennials, trees and shrubs will be auctioned off during a landscape seminar and plant auction to be held from 9 am. to noon at Sycamore Shoals State Historic Area in Elizabethton. 423-543-5808 “Cinderella,” presented by the Russian National Ballet, 7:30 p.m., at Niswonger Performing Arts Center, 212 Tusculum Blvd., Greeneville. Tickets: $25-$35. 423-638-1679 or www. npacgreeneville.com 2523 E. Stone Drive • Kingsport (423) 246-4455 www.donhillautomotive.com BUY HERE. PAY HERE. Weekly, Bi-Weekly & Monthly Payments Available 423-224-2222 or 800-926-8428 NO PROCESSING FEE 10 MINUTE CREDIT APPROVAL ON BUY HERE, PAY HERE VEHICLES in a New Development Conveniently located. All city amenities including underground utilities, sidewalks, and city schools. 3’ 93.14’ 57.05’ 43.00’ 68.58 3’ 90.00’ ’ 33 21 90.51’ .14 20 86.97’ ’ 18 40.4 22 145.5 33.45’ 19 .70 ’ 96.89’ 230 Highway 11W/East Stone Drive in Kingsport toward Bristol, go past new Target & Walgreens and turn left into Windridge Drive, stay straight until you enter the new ROSE GARDENS AT WINDRIDGE. ’ 93.29’ 138.02’ 110.96’ 140.00’ 140.00’ 90.00’ 65 126.65’ 5’ 3. SOLD 249.11’ 138.15’ 234.57’ 220.04’ 135.70’ 23 163.6 17 136.66’ 127.40’ ’ 80 .77 SOLD 24 27 156.26’ 4’ 90.00’ 90.00’ 165.85’ .00’ 105 130.8 144.07’ ’ 166.70’ 9’ 75.9 26 89.29 90.13’ ’ 48 E RIV ED ’ .03 137 IDG 61’ 126 .03’ 46’ 91. DR WIN 25 217.34 90 ’ .32 ’ 28 21 149 ’ 46.31’ 95.96 SOLD 98.91 29 223.38’ 1 131. 7. 13 .94’ ’ 14 0’ 1.3 13 ’ 6 .5 ’ 30 16 76.00’ SOLD 90.00 91.17’ 52.33’ 90.00’ 70 .84’ 53.5 8’ 3’ 253.81’ 198.30’ 175.00’ 115 .34’ 81.8 5’ 92.02’ 2’ 75.5 150.00’ 150.00’ 7’ 91.17’ 90.00’ 1.6 SOLD 126.5 2 31 92.64’ 79.37’ 157.36’ 12 100.00’ 0’ 9 200. 32 40 167.17’ 92.97’ 90.12’ 108.78’ 15 59.98’ 104.47’ 66.44’ 38 167.53’ 33 37 180.09’ SOLD 189.63’ ’ 36 5’ 39 106.72’ 3 54 35 108.90’ 88.67’ 159.97’ 34 2. 9.0 90 .45 ’ SOLD 15 90.00’ 90.00’ 72.58’ .17’ 14 90.00’ 90.00’ 14 ’ .10 69 4 140.00’ ROSE GARDEN CIRCLE 105 13 90.00’ 90.00’ 90.00’ 12 124.93’ 135.43’ .20’ 11 143.30’ 142.19’ 191 10 90.09’ 146.21’ SOLD 9 90.09’ 150.23’ 7’ .4 70 154.24’ ’ 62.56 90.09’ 90.00’ 89.85’ ’ .39 5 8 2’ 3’ 239 7 90.10’ 158.57’ SOLD 130.26’ 170.6 6 1.9 120.00’ 150.00’ 23 This development is the newest in a long and successful building development of Rose Construction such as Fall Creek III, Rosebrooke, North Dennis Place, Rosefield, numerous homes built in Preston Forest, Huntington Woods, Quail Creek, Preston Woods, Rivermont Estates, Allandale, Warrior Falls, Lake Harbor, Rosemary Court Villas and many custom homes. 120.00’ 125.00’ Lots starting at $70,000 333 LYNN GARDEN 423.247.4181 Connie Salyer CRS, GRI Affiliate Broker, Tennessee & Virginia 423-534-1621