Countdown Begins
Flight Plan
Ron, Donna and Jake flew to St. Louis on US Air using vouchers we received from our disasterous flight home from Orlando in November. Sam flew on United using our United Miles. Both flights were free and both went well.
Our hotel, the Hilton St. Louis at the Ballpark, was perfect. We could see the ballpark from our window.
Father's Day at Busch Stadium II
From our hotel window we could see the grounds crew preparing the field for the game. We walked to the park and Jake, being under 15, got a Fredbird Bobblehead (the Cardinal's mascot).
The ballpark is beautiful and we had seats in the Bank of America section of the club level. This included an all-you-can-eat and drink buffet.
The game was a sloppy one but the Cardinals ended up winning it in the 10th inning. Yadier Molina was hurt on a play at homeplate. He was carted off the field and taken to the hospital. Final Score: Cardinals 7, Phillies 6.
Trail of Tears State Park - Jackson, MO
Cherokee Heritage Center - Tahlequah, OK
June 17, 2008
We spent most of the day at the Cherokee Heritage Center. In the museum we saw two exhibits: one on the Trail of Tears and the other on the history of the Cherokee Phoenix, the newspaper published by the Cherokees since 1828.
Next we took the tour of the Ancient Village, which showcases the way a traditional Cherokee community would have looked prior to European contact. We saw demonstrations of canoe building, basket weaving, stickball, bow and arrow construction, blow darts, and more.
George Murrell Home - Tahlequah, OK
Walkingstick Mountain - Outside Stilwell, OK
June 18, 2008
I had heard about Walkingstick Mountain and did a Google Map search to find it. We knew it was a few miles north of Stilwell. We drove around and found what we knew had to be it so we turned around to get to a better spot to take pictures. As we were driving back, we saw the street sign -- WALKINGSTICK MTN RD. So we had to turn around again and drive up the road to take these photos.
Shiloh Cemetery -- Sallisaw, OK
June 18, 2008
We found Shiloh Cemetery.
The gravesites shown here are:
Mary Akin (my great grandmother), wife of William Polk Akin and mother of Alfred Akin
Nancy Whitsett (my great great grandmother), Mary Akin's mother
Susan C. Foreman, Nancy Whitsett's sister
Sue E. Akin (age 1), Alfred's sister
Whitsett Akin (age 3), Alfred's brother
Charley Whitsett, Mary Akin's brother
What an amazing day we had. First finding Walkingstick Mountain and then finding Shiloh Cemetery in Sallisaw. I had read about Shiloh Cemetery in a book published in 1970. The book said that the cemetery was in poor shape so I was not certain it even existed anymore. We got a map of Sallisaw at the Chamber of Commerce office and asked if anyone there knew of the cemetery. No one did. We drove out to Shiloh Road. Ron made a left turn (we could have gone right) and we drove for a couple of miles. Just as he was saying that maybe we should turn around we saw the sign, Shiloh Cemetery. I just couldn't believe it. Out of the 28 gravesites there, I knew of 25 of the people from my genealogy research.
Sequoyah's Cabin - Sallisaw, OK
Alfred Akin's Allotment
Fort Smith and Little Rock, Arkansas
Graceland - Memphis, TN
Nashville, TN
We arrived in Nashville the night of the 20th and drove around downtown a bit. We saw the Ryman Theater, the Cumberland River, and the Music Square Area, where music publishers, recording studios and other music-related business are located. We then went to the Opry Land Mall to shop and to see the Grand Ole Opry.
Gatlinburg, TN
Cherokee, NC
June 22, 2008
We drove through the Smoky Mountain National Park to get to Cherokee, NC. There we visited the Museum of the Cherokee, the Kituwah Mound, and the Cherokee Casino. Cherokee, NC, is the home to the Eastern Band of Cherokees. This is a separate tribe from the Cherokee Nation, located in Oklahoma. This tribe is made up of Cherokees from North Carolina who were able to keep their land and did not have to move west along the Trail of Tears.
Gatlinburg, TN/Smoky Mountains
Today was our day to do the typical tourist activities. We played miniature golf twice: once at the Old McDonald's Farm course and once at Hillbilly Golf. The traffic, both human and automobile, was crazy.
To get away from the crowds, we drove back into the park. We drove the Roaring Fork Loop and then hiked up to Clingman's Dome, the highest point in the park (6648 feet).
In the evening we walked around downtown Gatlinburg.