Decoration Day in the Mountains: Traditions of Cemetery Decoration in the Southern Appalachians

Decoration Day in the Mountains: Traditions of Cemetery Decoration in the Southern Appalachians

Decoration Day in the Mountains: Traditions of Cemetery Decoration in the Southern Appalachians

Decoration Day in the Mountains: Traditions of Cemetery Decoration in the Southern Appalachians

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Overview

Decoration Day is a late spring or summer tradition that involves cleaning a community cemetery, decorating it with flowers, holding a religious service in the cemetery, and having dinner on the ground. These commemorations seem to predate the post-Civil War celebrations that ultimately gave us our national Memorial Day. Little has been written about this tradition, but it is still observed widely throughout the Upland South, from North Carolina to the Ozarks.

Written by internationally recognized folklorist Alan Jabbour and illustrated with more than a hundred photographs taken by Karen Singer Jabbour, Decoration Day in the Mountains is an in-depth exploration of this little-known cultural tradition. The Jabbours illuminate the meanings behind the rituals and reveal how the tradition fostered a grassroots movement to hold the federal government to its promises about cemeteries left behind when families were removed to make way for Fontana Dam and Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

Richly illustrated and vividly written, Decoration Day in the Mountains presents a compelling account of a widespread and long-standing Southern cultural practice.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807895696
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 05/31/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 15 MB
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About the Author

Alan Jabbour served as head of the Archive of Folk Song at the Library of Congress, director of the Folk Arts Program at the National Endowment for the Arts, and director of the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress. Now retired, he continues to do research as an independent folklorist.
Fhotographer Karen Singer Jabbour and her husband, Alan Jabbour have worked together to document grassroots culture in the American South. Since 2004 they have documented Decoration Day from North Carolina west to the Ozarks

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Fills a significant void in the study of American folk culture. In examining the establishment of Memorial Day (originally called Decoration Day), the Jabbours make a compelling case for the pre-existence of a widespread folk observance providing the model for this new military-oriented observance. And the photographs beautifully illustrate the text and capture the spirit of both the decorated landscape and the decorators.—Joey Brackner, Alabama Center for Traditional Culture



How a society deals with its dead can tell us much about its values, beliefs, and traditions. This fascinating and visually rich study of cemeteries and their decoration in western North Carolina does just that, and along the way, tells us much about families, communities, and folk life in the Great Smoky Mountains. A thoroughly fresh and multi-faceted contribution to Appalachian studies.—John C. Inscoe, author of Race, War, and Remembrance in the Appalachian South



Alan and Karen Jabbour have filled a deep gap in our knowledge of the South with fresh information and handsome photographs. They have produced an excellent history and geography of Decoration Day, the time when communities gather to remember the dead.—Henry Glassie, author of Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the Eastern United States

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