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New Edgeworth Inn Website & Blog

April 16th, 2010 by Jeannine Clements

We are pleased to announce the new website and blog for Edgeworth Inn. This new design was built in WordPress by InsideOut Solutions - also our website host. This new website allows us greater control over the content of our website and also provides us with a blog so that we can bring you the latest news about Edgeworth Inn and our location in the Monteagle, Tennessee and beyond.

Area Events

March 17th, 2010 by Kailey Lampert

South Cumberland State Recreation Area has a number of special events each month. To see the current schedule of events for this month Click Here The Monteagle Assembly offers a varied program of activities for all ages as well as tennis, swimming and private hiking trials.View the history, traditions, education, religious mission of the Monteagle Sunday School Assembly and the Assembly's 2006 Summer Schedule of Events here: Monteagle Assembly Program Sewanee Summer Concert Series and Music Festival's an annual event held at the University of the South. Details can be found here. Sewanee Writer's Conference: Every July, a group of more than 100 students of writing gathers on the idyllic mountaintop campus of the University of the South. During a whirlwind two-week period, these participants talk about the craft of writing with some of this country’s finest novelists, poets, playwrights, and professionals in the publishing field. Details can be found here.

What is a Chautauqua?

March 17th, 2010 by Kailey Lampert

“Chautauqua is an idea, embracing ‘all things of life’ - art, science, society, religion, patriotism, education - whatsoever tends to enlarge, refine and ennoble the individual” - John Heyl Vincent The Chautauqua of the South "A chautauqua is the most American thing about America, it's history and traditions." - President Theodore Roosevelt Many families in the Victorian Era left the cities in the summertime and spent two to three months in the nearby mountains. This exodus to the more natural and cooler setting was motivated not only by a desire to escape the summer heat and to relax, but also as a serious quest for physical and spiritual well-being. The Chautauqua was a natural consequence of such informal gatherings of people from all walks of life. The idea was first proposed at the 1873 Methodist Episcopal camp meeting in Chautauqua, New York, by John Heyl Vincent and Lewis Miller. Inspired by the Lyceum movement, these men suggested combining the summer retreat with eight week programs offering members secular and religious instruction as well as lectures by authors, explorers, musicians, and political leaders. Somewhere between revival meetings and country fairs, Chautauqua were attended by thousands each year. The combination of education and entertainment in a pristine mountain setting caught on rapidly; the Chautauqua Movement spread throughout America and Europe during the latter part of the 19th century. Despite the immense popularity of the movement, only thirteen original Chautauquas in the world are still active today. The Monteagle Assembly is a National Treasure whose existence helps define our country’s history.