Woodcarving: bull

Dublin Core

Title

Woodcarving: bull

Subject

Brasstown Carvers
Handicraft
John C. Campbell Folk School
Wood-carving -- Appalachian Region, Southern
Woodwork -- Appalachian Region, Southern

Description

This bull was carved from cherry wood by Jack Hall (1920-1984). Hall was born into a family of carvers living in the Warne community east of Brasstown. His father, A. Ben Hall, and uncles, John and Elisha, were well-respected carvers. With carving all around him, Jack began to try his hand at carving when he was just 11 years old. He carved throughout the 1930s and 1940s and was listed as having sold more than $150 of his work on a sales list dated 1942. During the war, Hall left the region to work first as a machinist in Ohio and then at a defense plant in Marietta, Georgia. After the war, he returned to Brasstown where he took up carving again. He was an assistant to John C. Campbell Folk School carving teacher Murrial Martin and, upon her retirement in the 1973, took over as carving instructor at the school.

Creator

Brasstown Carvers
Hall, Jack, 1920-1984

Source

Artifact Collection

Publisher

Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723

Date

1930/1979

Rights

http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/

Format

jpg
photographs

Type

StillImage

Identifier

14920
https://southernappalachiandigitalcollections.org/object/14920

Date Created

2007-10-08

Rights Holder

All rights reserved. For permissions and use, contact John C. Campbell Folk School, Brasstown, NC 28902;

Spatial Coverage

Clay County (N.C.)
Appalachian Region, Southern

Extent

4" x 6" x 2"(dimension)

Is Part Of

Craft Revival

Collection

Citation

Brasstown Carvers and Hall, Jack, 1920-1984, “Woodcarving: bull,” OAI, accessed May 2, 2025, https://sadc.qi-cms.com/omeka/items/show/14920.