Finding Aid for the Ilene Jones Cornwell Collection, 1923-1994


MS-2054

University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN


Encoded by: Elizabeth Dunham, November 27, 2006.

Summary Information
Title: Ilene Jones Cornwell Collection

Date/Date Range :   1923-1994

Extent: 1.0 linear feet

Abstract:
This collection houses manuscripts, notes, correspondence, photographs, publications, drawings, and certificates documenting the lives and work of Ilene Jones Cornwell, Paul Jay Adams, and Paul Mathes Fink.

Call number: MS-2054

Repository: University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN

Access and Use
Aquisition Information:
Ilene Jones Cornwell donated these papers to the University of Tennessee's Special Collections Library.
Access Restrictions:
Collection is open for research.
Copyright:
The copyright interests in this collection remain with the creator. For more information, contact the Special Collections Library.
Preferred Citation:
[Identification of Item], Ilene Jones Cornwell Collection, MS-2054. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Special Collections Library.

Arrangement

Collection consists of one box divided into three series:

  1. Series I: Paul Jay Adams and Paul Mathes Fink
  2. Series II: Paul Jay Adams
  3. Series III: Paul Mathes Fink

Biography / History

Ilene Jones Cornwell was born on September 27, 1942 in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Although she never completed a formal college degree, she took courses at the University of Tennessee (1975), Tennessee State University (1987-1988), Cumberland University (1990), and Nashville Travel Institute (1991). At various times in her life, she has worked as the Public Information Officer for the Tennessee Historical Commission (1978-1981), Publications Editor and Public Information Officer at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (1978-1981), Copy Editor and Editorial Cartoonist for the West Nashville Digest (1993-1994), Editor and Partner in the New South Architectural Press (1993-1998), General Editor and Writer for the Serviceberry Press (1993-1998 and 2002-), Administrative Assistant and Teacher at Fisk University (1995-1997), Publications Designer and Typesetter for Typography 2000 (1995-), and Webmaster for WebText 2000 (1995-2002). Cornwell has also written several books, including Footsteps along the Harpeth (1976) and Travel guide to the Natchez Trace Parkway between Natchez, Mississippi, and Nashville, Tennessee (1984).

Paul Mathes Fink was born on June 8, 1892. A lifelong resident of Jonesborough, Tennessee, Fink was deeply interested in Tennessee history and devoted to historic preservation. He served as Washington County's official historian, was an active member of the Historic Jonesborough restoration program, and held office in the Tennessee Historical Society, the Tennessee Archaeological Society, and the Tennessee Folklore Society. Fink was also an active mountaineer and conservationist, and was instrumental in establishing the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the Appalachian Trail in Tennessee and North Carolina. Fink wrote several books, including That's why they call it (1956), Jonesborough: the first century of Tennessee's first town (1972), Bits of mountain speech (1974), and Backpacking was the only way (1975). He died in March of 1980.

Paul Jay Adams is perhaps best known for his Mt. LeConte (1968) and the collection of Tennessee mollusca (acknowledged as the largest in existence) that he assembled with Manley Barber. Adams was born on September 4, 1901. In 1924, he became a charter member of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club and the Knoxville chapter of the Tennessee Ornithological Society. Several years later, he served as a guide for members of the National Park Commission who had been assigned to evaluate the Great Smoky Mountains as a possible park site. He and his wife, Maxine Day Adams, established Alpine Floral Gardens in Alpine, Tennessee in 1934 but quickly relocated to Crab Orchard as their business grew. The couple moved to Oak Ridge in 1943 so that Paul Adams could work as the superintendent of fire prevention and safety for the Atomic Energy Commission, but returned to Crab Orchard immediately after the end of World War II. After Paul Adams retired in 1961, he and his wife developed and operated a thriving weaving business. Adams died on February 2, 1985 in Crab Orchard.


Collection Scope and Content Note

This collection houses manuscripts, notes, correspondence, photographs, publications, drawings, and certificates documenting the lives and work of Ilene Jones Cornwell, Paul Jay Adams, and Paul Mathes Fink.

Subject Terms

  • Adams, Paul J. (Paul Jay).
  • Cornwell, Ilene J.
  • Fink, Paul M.
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.)
Contents List
   

Series I: Paul Jay Adams and Paul Mathes Fink, 1923-1984

Box   Oversize      
Notebook of photographs, 1923-1984

Scope Note:

Includes pictures of the first log cabin on Mount LeConte (built by Paul Adams), Paul Adams, Adams' dog Cumberland Jack, Paul Fink, Gatlinburg, Tennessee, the tar-paper shack on Mount Le Conte, the camp on the mountain, and more.

   

Series II: Paul Jay Adams, 1925-1994

Box   1     Folder   1    
Two business cards, Sylvia J. Stipe, undated

Box   1     Folder   2    
Two drawings of Cumberland Jack (artist unknown), undated

Box   1     Folder   3    
Manuscript, Paul Jay Adams, autobiography, undated

Scope Note:

This is a handwritten, seven-page autobiography of Paul Jay Adams.

Box   1     Folder   4    
Certificates and letter, Cumberland Jack II, 1925-1929

Scope Note:

Consists of two kennel club certificates and a two-page "letter" from Cumberland Jack II to his "beloved Master."

Box   1     Folder   5    
Publications, 1973-1994

Scope Note:

Includes a section of a book, two magazine articles on Paul Adams, and seven newspaper articles on the Great Smoky Mountains, Paul Adams, Governor Lamar Alexander, James L. "Jim" Bailey, Ken Jenkins, and more.

Box   1     Folder   6    
Manuscripts of introductions for Cumberland Jack , 1976-1983

Scope Note:

Includes two introductions for Paul Adams' manuscript, one typed by Larry Richardson in December 1976 and one hand-written by James L. Bailey in 1983.

Box   1     Folder   7    
Smoky Mountain Visitor's Guide , 1983 August

Scope Note:

Features articles on log cabins, Mount Le Conte, quilting, trout fishing, and more.

Box   1     Folder   8    
Notes, Ilene Jones Cornwell, 1983-1984

Scope Note:

Includes hand-written notes relating to Ms. Cornwell's articles and her work editing and soliciting publishers for Paul Adams' manuscript.

Box   1     Folder   9    
Correspondence, 1983-1984

Scope Note:

Includes correspondence relating to Ms. Cornwell's articles and her work editing and soliciting publishers for Paul Adams' manuscript.

Box   1     Folder   10    
Postcard, circa 1984

Scope Note:

This is the official golden anniversary postcard for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Features a photograph by Dean Stone entitled "Above the Clouds."

Box   1     Folder   11    
Manuscript, Ilene Jones Cornwell, 1985

Scope Note:

This is a six-page, typed rough draft of the article by Ms. Cornwell that appears in Folder 12.

Box   1     Folder   12    
The Tennessee Conservationist 51, no. 4, 1985

Scope Note:

Includes an illustrated article by Ms. Cornwell on pages 4-8 entitled, "Paul Jay Adams: A Pioneering Naturalist." Features articles on Frozen Head State Natural Area, Greeter Falls, TVA-owned natural areas, and more.

Box   1     Folder   13    
Manuscript, James L. Bailey, 1985 September

Scope Note:

This a three-page, typed draft by James L. Bailey for a brochure entitled, "Bowen-Campbell House."

Box   1     Folder   14    
Manuscript; Ilene Jones Cornwell, 1994 October 28

Scope Note:

This is a two-page, typed tribute by Ms. Cornwell for The Tennessee Conservationist entitled, "James L. Bailey (1908-1994): A Remembrance."

   

Series III: Paul Mathes Fink, 1974-1984

Box   1     Folder   15    
Miscellaneous materials, 1974-1984

Scope Note:

Includes a brochure on his publication, Bits of Mountain Speech ; correspondence relating to the article; an undated newspaper article on an early Fourth of July celebration; notes on Mr. Fink; and an undated resolution honoring him. Also includes an illustrated article on Paul Fink with the following citation: Cornwell, Ilene Jones. "Tennessee's Venerable Mountain Man." The Tennessee Conservationist 44, no. 1 (January/February 1978): 3-5.