Never Buy Gasoline Again – Solar Panels and Electric Autos

February 20, 2012
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Never Buy Gasoline Again – Solar Panels and Electric Autos

Solar energy and an electric auto can totally free you from paying for gasoline for good . Just picture it , you can forget gas taxes, no more reliance on foreign oil, and you can eliminate electricity bills. And the best part is you can construct your own solar panels and alter your own automobile to run on electricity!

This isn’t a castle-in-the-air electric pipe dream , it is real right now . The technology to produce your own solar power is here. The technology to convert your own electric vehicle is here. All you’ll need is the know-how and a few tools and equipment that are most likely in your garage,garage or work shop,work shop right this moment . Keep in mind, we’re not speaking about a hybrid automobile, we’re talking about an all-electric car that makes use of absolutely no gasoline at all .

One disadvantage to an electric car is that the power to run it is normally generated by a utility company utilizing natural gas, oil or coal to generate electricity.

If you need to buy electrical power, where are the savings plus the benefit to the environment? That is where solar panels enter the scene . You could use sunshine to create homemade electrical power to run your car and your whole house to boot. Stop buying electricity and gas and be truly energy independent.

This is the point where people commonly ask, “Isn’t it way too expensive to purchase solar panels? And Don’t electric vehicles cost a lot, too?” That is probably true if you pay someone to put in commercial solar panels and you go out and invest in a brand new electric car. But now it is possible to install DIY solar panels and alter an existing auto to run on electrical power. If you don’t want to convert the car you are driving now to electricity, buy a cheap used car and convert it. A couple of weekends and some sweat equity are a fantastic substitute for cash.

You owe it to yourself to look into this exciting concept that can cut your electric bills and your gas bills to zero. Learn how easy an electric car conversion to be, click Electric Car Conversion now for more information about solar power and all electric vehicle conversions.

Cades Cove – China Air Permeability Tester – Auto Electrical Tester

February 15, 2012
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Cades Cove – China Air Permeability Tester – Auto Electrical Tester
Geology
Cades Cove, viewed from the summit of Gregory Bald
Geologically, Cades Cove is a type of valley known as a “limestone window,” created by erosion that removed the older Precambrian sandstone, exposing the younger Paleozoic limestone beneath. More weathering-resistant formations, such as the Cades sandstone which underlies Rich Mountain to the north and the Elkmont and Thunderhead sandstones which form the Smokies crest to the south surround the cove, leaving it relatively isolated within the Great Smokies. As with neighboring limestone windows such as Tuckaleechee to the north and Wear Cove to the east, the weathering of the limestone produced deep, fertile soil, making Cades Cove attractive to early farmers.
The majority of the rocks that make up Cades Cove are unaltered sedimentary rocks formed between 340 million and 570 million years ago during the Ordovician period. The Precambrian rocks that comprise the high ridges surrounding the cove are Ocoee Supergroup sandstones, formed approximately 1 billion years ago. The mountains themselves were formed between 200 million and 400 million years ago during the Appalachian orogeny, when the North American and African plates collided, thrusting the rock formations upward.
Gregory’s Cave
The fracturing and weathering of the limestone and sandstone in Cades Cove has led to the formation of several caves in the vicinity, the two largest of which are Gregorys Cave and Bull Cave. Bull Cave, at 924 feet (281 m), is the deepest cave in Tennessee. Trilobite and brachiopod fossils have been found in Gregorys Cave.
The entrance to Gregory’s Cave is approximately 10 feet (3.0 m) wide and 4 feet (1.2 m) high. The cave consists primarily of one large passage that averages 20 to 55 feet (17 m) wide and 15 feet (4.6 m) high. This passage is 435 feet (133 m) long and a side passage to the right (south) is developed about 300 feet (91 m) from the entrance. This side passage ends after about 100 feet (30 m). In the vicinity of this side passage are “Talley Marks” on the wall, which were typically left by saltpeter miners. The dirt on this side of the cave has been excavated and removed and pick marks are still visible in the dirt. Saltpeter mining occurred in this region from the late 1700s through the Civil War, so this mining activity must have occurred sometime between 1818, when settlers arrived in Cades Cove and 1865, the end of the Civil War. Since this is a relatively small cave and the amount of dirt in the cave was not extensive, this would have been a small mining operation.
Gregory’s Cave is the only cave in the national park that was ever developed as a commercial cave. The cave was opened to the public in July 1925. After the Gregory property was bought for the national park in 1935, the Gregory family was given a “lifetime dowry” and the owner, J. J. Gregory’s wife Elvira, was allowed to live there until she died on March 26, 1943. One of her sons was allowed to remain on the property until he harvested his crop in the fall of 1943. After 1943, the property was completely owned by the National Park Service.
Donald K. MacKay, a geologist with the National Park Service, reported that the Gregory family still showing the cave commercially as late as 1935. At that time the admission price was 50 cents for adults and children were admitted free.
During its history as a commercial cave, Gregory’s Cave had walkways, which were made of wood in some places, and electric lights. Wesley Herman Gregory, son of J. J. Gregory, reported that the lighting system was a “Delco System” This may have been a generator producing electricity for the lights inside the cave.
During the Cold War, Gregory’s Cave was designated as a fallout shelter, with an assigned capacity of 1,000 people. The cave was stocked with food, water, and other emergency supplies.
Gregory’s Cave is now securely gated and entrance is by permit only from the National Park Service. Entrance is generally restricted to scientific researchers.
History
Early history
Throughout the 1700s, the Cherokee used two main trails to cross the Smokies from North Carolina to Tennessee en route to the Overhill settlements. One was the Indian Gap Trail, which connected the Rutherford Indian Trace in the Balsam Mountains to the Great Indian Warpath in modern-day Sevier County. The other was a lower trail that crested at Ekaneetlee Gap, a col just east of Gregory Bald. This trail traversed Cades Cove and Tuckaleechee Cove before proceeding along to Great Tellico and other Overhill towns along the Little Tennessee River. European traders were using these trails as early as 1740.
By 1797 (and probably much earlier), the Cherokee had established a settlement in Cades Cove known as “Tsiya’hi,” or “Otter Place.” This village, which may have been little more than a seasonal hunting camp, was located somewhere along the flats of Cove Creek. Henry Timberlake, an early explorer in East Tennessee, reported that streams in this area were stocked with otter, although the otter was extinct in the cove by the time the first European settlers arrived.
Cades Cove was named after a Tsiya’hi leader known as Chief Kade. Little is known of Chief Kade, although his existence was verified by a European trader named Peter Snider (1776-1867), who settled nearby Tuckaleechee Cove. Abrams Creek, which flows through the cove, was named after another local chief, Abraham of Chilhowee. A now-discredited theory suggested that the cove was named after Abraham’s wife, Kate.
The Treaty of Calhoun (1819) ended all Cherokee claims to the Smokies, and Tsiya’hi was abandoned shortly thereafter. The Cherokee would linger in the surrounding forests, however, occasionally attacking settlers until 1838 when they were removed to the Oklahoma Territory (see Trail of Tears).
European Settlement
John Oliver Cabin, built c. 1822
John Oliver (1793-1863), a veteran of the War of 1812, and his wife Lucretia Frazier (1795-1888) were the first permanent European settlers in Cades Cove. The Olivers, originally from Carter County, arrived in 1818, accompanied by Joshua Jobe, who had initially persuaded them to settle in the cove. While Jobe returned to Carter County, the Olivers stayed, struggling through the winter and subsisting on dried pumpkin given to them by friendly Cherokees. Jobe returned in the Spring of 1819 with a herd of cattle in tow, and gave the Olivers two milk cows to ease their complaints.
In 1821, a veteran of the American Revolution named William “Fighting Billy” Tipton (1761-1849) bought up large tracts of Cades Cove which he in turn sold to his sons and relatives, and settlement began to boom. In the 1820s, Peter Cable, a Pennsylvania Dutch farmer, arrived in the cove and designed an elaborate system of dykes and sluices that helped drain the swampy lands in the western part of the cove. In 1827, Daniel Foute opened the Cades Cove Bloomery Forge to fashion metal tools. Robert Shields arrived in the cove in 1835, and would erect a tub mill on Forge Creek. His son, Frederick, built the cove’s first grist mill. Other early settlers would build houses on the surrounding mountains, among them Russell Gregory (1795-1864), for whom Gregory Bald is named, and James Spence, for whom Spence Field is named.
Between 1820 and 1850, the population of Cades Cove grew to 671, with the size of cove farms averaging between 150 and 300 acres (0.6 and 1.2 km). The early cove residents, although relatively self-sufficient, were dependent upon nearby Tuckaleechee Cove for dry goods and other necessities.
The isolation often attributed to Cades Cove is probably exaggerated. A post office was established in the cove in 1833, and Sevierville post master Philip Seaton set up a weekly mail route to the cove in 1839. Cades Cove had phone service as early as the 1890s, when Dan Lawson and several neighbors built a phone line all the way to Maryville. By the 1850s, various roads connected Cades Cove with Tuckaleechee and Montvale Springs, some of which are still maintained as seasonal passes or hiking trails.
Religion In Cades Cove
The Cades Cove Primitive Baptist Church
Religion was an important part of life in Cades Cove from its earliest days, due in large part to the efforts of John and Lucretia Oliver. The Olivers managed to organize a branch of the Miller’s Cove Baptist Church for Cades Cove in 1825. After briefly realigning themselves with the Wear’s Cove Baptist Church, the Cades Cove Baptist Church was pronounced an independent entity in 1829.
In the 1830s, a division in Baptist churches known as the Anti-mission Split occurred throughout East Tennessee. The split was due to a debate over whether or not missions and other “innovations of the day” were authorized by scripture. This debate made its way to Cades Cove Baptist Church in 1839, becoming so emotionally charged as to require the intervention of the Tennessee Association of United Baptist. In the end, 13 members of the congregation departed to form the Cades Cove Missionary Baptist Church later that year, and the remaining congregation changed its name to the Primitive Baptist Church in 1841. The Primitive Baptists, as the name implies, believed in a strict, literal interpretation of Biblical scripture. William Howell Oliver (1857-1940), pastor of the Primitive Baptist Church from 1882 to 1940, explained:
We believe that Jesus Christ himself instituted the Church, that it was perfect at the start, suitably adopted in its organization to every age of the world, to every locality of earth, to every state and condition of the world, to every state and condition of mankind, without any changes or alterations to suit the times, customs, situations, or localities.
The Primitive Baptists remained the dominant religious and political force in the cove, their meetings interrupted only by the Civil War. The Missionary Baptists, with a much smaller congregation, continued to meet on and off throughout the 19th century.
The Cades Cove Methodist Church was organized in the 1820s, probably due to the efforts of circuit riders such as George Eakin. The Methodist congregation, like that of the Missionary Baptist, was relatively small.
The Civil War
The Grave of Russell Gregory at the Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery
In the decades before the Civil War, Blount County, Tennessee was a hotbed of abolitionist activity. The Manumission Society of Tennessee was active in the county as early as 1815, and the Quakers who were relatively-numerous in Blount at the time were so vehemently opposed to slavery that they fought alongside the Union army, in spite of their pacifist agenda. The founder of Maryville College, Rev. Isaac Anderson, was a staunch abolitionist who often gave sermons in Cades Cove. Blount doctor Calvin Post (1803-1873) was believed to have set up an Underground Railroad stop within the cove in the years preceding the war. With such sentiment and influence, it’s no surprise that Cades Cove remained staunchly pro-Union, regardless of the destruction it suffered throughout the war (there were some exceptions, however, such as the cove’s affluent entrepreneur and Confederate sympathizer, Daniel Foute).
In 1863, Confederate bushwhackers from Hazel Creek and other parts of North Carolina began making systematic raids into Cades Cove, stealing livestock and killing any Union supporter they could find. Elijah Oliver (1829-1905), a son of John Oliver and a Union sympathizer, was forced to hide out on Rich Mountain for much of the war. Calvin Post had also gone into hiding, and with the death of John Oliver in 1863, the cove had lost most of its original leaders.
Although Federal forces occupied Knoxville in 1863, Confederate raids into Cades Cove continued. A pivotal figure at this time was Russell Gregory, who had originally vowed to remain neutral after his son’s defection to the Confederate cause. Gregory organized a small militia, comprised mostly of the cove’s elderly men, and in 1864 ambushed a band of Confederate marauders near the junction of Forge Creek and Abrams Creek. The Confederates were routed and chased back across the Smokies to North Carolina. Although this largely put an end to the raids, a band of Confederates managed to sneak into the cove and kill Gregory just two weeks later.
Cades Cove would suffer from the effects of the Civil War for most of the rest of the 1800s. Only around 1900 did its population return to pre-war levels. The average farm was much less productive, however, and the cove residents were suspicious of any form of change. It wasn’t until the Progressive Era that the cove recovered, economically.
Moonshining and Prohibition
The home of Henry Whitehead and Matilda Shields, near Chestnut Flats
The Chestnut Flats area of Cades Cove, located at the base of Gregory Bald, was well-known for producing high-quality corn liquor. Among the more prominent moonshine distillers was Josiah “Joe Banty” Gregory (1870-1933), the son of Matilda “Aunt Tildy” Shields by her first marriage. The Primitive Baptists, especially William Oliver and his son, John W. Oliver (1878-1966), were fervently opposed to the distilling or consumption of alcohol, and the practice was largely confined to Chestnut Flats. John W. Oliver, who was a mail carrier in the cove, often found stills on his mail route and reported them to authorities. Oliver would later deride the image of the moonshiner as an integral part of the mountaineer stereotype:
All these men are public outlaws, and were never recognized as true, loyal mountaineers or as true American citizens, by the rank and file of the mountain people.
In 1921, Josiah Gregory’s still was raided by the Blount County sheriff. Although it was later revealed that the sheriff was tipped off by a surveyor in the area, the Gregorys blamed the Olivers. On the night following the raid, the barns of both William and John W. Oliver were burned, destroying a large portion of the family’s livestock and tools. Shortly thereafter, Gregory’s son was assaulted by Asa and John Sparks after a prank-gone-wrong. In response, Gregory and his brother, Dana, hunted down and shot the Sparks brothers on Christmas night in 1921. Both of the Gregorys were convicted of barn burning and later convicted of felonious assault. After serving only six months, however, they were pardoned and personally escorted home by Governor Austin Peay.
As mentioned previously, Gregory’s cave may also have been involved in the manufacture of moonshine.
The National Park
Of all the Smoky Mountain communities, Cades Cove put up the most resistance to the formation of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The cove residents were initially assured their land would not be incorporated into the park, and welcomed its formation. By 1927, the winds had changed, however, and when the Tennessee General Assembly passed a bill approving money to buy land for the national park, it gave the Park Commission the power to seize properties within the proposed park boundaries by eminent domain. Long-time residents of Cades Cove were outraged. The head of the Park Commission, Colonel David Chapman, received several threats, including an anonymous phone call warning him that if he ever returned to Cades Cove, he would “spend the next night in hell.” Shortly thereafter, Chapman found a sign near the cove’s entrance that read {sic}:
COL. CHAPMAN: YOU AND HOAST ARE NOTFY, LET THE COVE PEOPL ALONE. GET OUT. GET GONE. 40 M. LIMIT.
The “40 mile” (64 km) limit referred to the distance between Cades Cove and Chapman’s hometown of Knoxville. Despite these threats, Chapman initiated a condemnation suit against John W. Oliver in July of 1929. The court, however, ruled in favor of Oliver, reasoning that the federal government had never said Cades Cove was essential to the national park. Shortly after the verdict, the Secretary of the Interior officially announced that the cove was necessary, and another condemnation suit was filed. This time, Oliver lost, with the case going all the way to the Tennessee Supreme Court. Oliver would return to court several times over the value of his 375 acre (1.5 km) tract, which he said was worth ,000, although the court awarded him just ,000 plus interest. After attaining a series of one-year leases, Oliver finally abandoned his property on Christmas Day in 1937. The Primitive Baptist Church congregation continued to meet in Cades Cove until the 1960s in defiance of the park service, who wanted to develop the land where their church was located.
For about one-hundred years before the creation of the national park, much farming and logging was done in the valley, as the main source of economic development for the peoples living in the cove, both leading to massive deforestation. At first, the National Park Service planned to let the cove return to its natural forested state. It ultimately yielded to requests by the Great Smoky Mountain Conservation Association to maintain Cades Cove as a meadow. Nonetheless, on the advice of contemporary cultural experts such as Hans Huth, the service demolished the more modern structures, leaving only the primitive cabins and barns which were considered most representative of pioneer life in early Appalachia. As a result, a visitor to the cove may leave with an impression of a technologically backward community. In its day, the cove was as well educated and progressive as any rural community in Blount County.
Historical structures in Cades Cove
Cades Cove Historic District
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. Historic District
Becky Cable House
Location:
10 mi. SW of Townsend in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Nearest city:
Townsend, Tennessee
Built/Founded:
1818
Governing body:
National Park Service
Added to NRHP:
July 13, 1977
NRHP Reference#:
77000111
Cades Cove has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places as an historic district since July 13, 1977. The historic district is bounded by the 2,000-foot (610 m) elevation contour (that is, it comprises all areas below that elevation) and includes both historic buildings and prehistoric archaeological sites.
The National Park Service currently maintains several buildings in Cades Cove that are representative of pioneer life in 19th century Appalachia. By the time the cove was incorporated into the park, most residents lived in relatively modern frame houses, rather than the log cabins that predominate among the buildings preserved in the cove.
The following are listed in the order they are approached along the Cades Cove Loop Road:
1. The John Oliver Cabin, constructed c. 1822-1823 by the cove’s first permanent European settlers. Dunn reports that the Olivers spent the winter of 1818-1819 in an abandoned Cherokee hut, and built a crude structure the following year. The Oliver Cabin was built as a replacement for this first crude structure, which was

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