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Delano is an unincorporated community in Polk County, Tennessee, United States. It is located near the junction of U.S. Route 411, Tennessee State Route 30 and Tennessee State Route 163 4.3 miles (6.9 km) south-southwest of Etowah. [4] Delano has a post office with ZIP code 37325, which opened on August 14, 1909. [5]
George Calvin Waldrep: The New Order Amish And Para-Amish Groups: Spiritual Renewal Within Tradition, in The Mennonite Quarterly Review 82 (2008), pages 395-426. Richard A. Pride: Elmo Stoll and the Christian Community at Cookeville, in Border States: Journal of the Kentucky Tennessee American Studies Association, Volume 14 : 2003, pages 36-49.
Frederick Schrock: The Amish Christian Church – Its History and Legacy, Monterey TN 2001. (In this book 4 of the 16 chapters describe the history of the Titus Hoover and the Noah Hoover group since the merger with the Reformed Amish Christian Church.) Eric Brende: Better Off: Flipping the Switch on Technology. (The book describes the Noah ...
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Location of McMinn County in Tennessee. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in McMinn County, Tennessee. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in McMinn County, Tennessee, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided ...
Tennessee could lose over 1 million acres of farmland to imminent development, according to an American Farmland Trust study, a "Farms Under Threat Tennessee," examining expected trends from 2016 ...
The Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) is a wholly owned United States government corporation that was created in 1933 to "stabilize, support, and protect farm income and prices" (federally chartered by the CCC Charter Act of 1948 (P.L. 80-806)). The CCC is authorized to buy, sell, lend, make payments, and engage in other activities for the ...
So Elmo Stoll and his followers withdrew from the Amish church in Aylmer in September 1990 to organize a plain, horse-and-buggy, English-speaking community in Cookeville, Tennessee, that should be rooted in Anabaptism. Cookeville was chosen because of its proximity to the like-minded Noah Hoover Mennonites in Scottsville, Kentucky [8] [4]