Silver, Timothy

ASU

There are 5 item/s.

TitleDateViewsBrief Description
Piscatorial Protestants: Angling, Religion, and Nature in Nineteenth-Century America 2012 2689 This thesis focuses on philosophies of George Washington Bethune, Henry Ward Beecher, and Henry Van Dyke, ministers who championed angling as a method to reconcile human nature with the natural world. On the heels of European Enlightenment, nineteen...
Great Women of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park: Defining Nature and the National Park Service 2012 6748 Utilizing the cases of three previously overlooked women—Anne May Davis, Laura Thornburgh, and the Walker Sisters—who participated in the creation of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park this thesis argues that the GSMNP was representative of this...
Agrarianism, Industry, the Environment, and Change: Gold Mining in Antebellum North Carolina, 1799-1860 2012 3756 Using personal correspondence, geological surveys, travelers’ accounts, and tools and methodologies borrowed from other studies of mineral extraction, this thesis argues that gold mining in North Carolina was an important aspect of southern antebellu...
“Making the Mountain Pay”: Hugh Morton’s Grandfather Mountain and the Creation of Wilderness 2011 4293 As one of the most prominent private tourist attractions in the South, Grandfather Mountain offers an opportunity to examine the evolution of the tourism industry. Hugh Morton, Grandfather Mountain’s owner, also used language invoking natural preserv...
Appalachian Baptism: The Asheville Flood Of 1916 2016 1569 The Southern Appalachian flood of 1916 was no act of God. The actions of a few powerful white men added to the severity of the disaster. It ignited broad social discord and challenged the hegemony of Asheville’s elites. The socio-economic priorities ...