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By David E. Booker
Sunday, September 30th was an almost
perfect fall day. The temperature was in the seventies and the sky was
dotted by only small white clouds. From 2 – 4 p.m. that day, Old North
Knoxville hosted its first Porch Tour. Called “Sunday on the Porch: A
Celebration of the Porches of Old North Knoxville,” this event invited
residents from inside and outside the historic neighborhood to stroll down
the sidewalks and appreciate an element of homes that doesn’t exist much
on newer styles.
Twenty homeowners in the neighborhood swept off
their porches, set up their porch furniture, and put out snacks and
refreshments for anybody who wanted to say hello. The tour was free and a
flyer describing the homes and the neighborhood, including a map, was
provided to anybody stopping by. The average number of people to visit
each porch was between 10 and 15.
Porches ranged from Queen Anne Victorian to
Bungalow to American Four Square, representing almost every style in Old
North Knoxville, a neighborhood with homes built mainly between the 1880s
and the 1940s. There were porches on Grainger and Glenwood Avenues, East
Oklahoma and East Scott Avenues, and other streets and avenues that make
up Old North Knoxville. There were porches attached to homes that had been
restored and porches attached to homes being restored.
Those whose porches were on tour said they
enjoyed the tour and looked forward to the event continuing next year. If
nothing else, Beth Booker said, “It gave me a good excuse to sit out on
my porch, which I haven’t done enough of.”
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