Southern Appalachian Digital Collections

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Interview with L. Q. Farthing

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Item
Object
  • In this interview, Lois Queen Farthing of Cherokee talks about her family's history in the tourism industry. Farthing grew up on the Cherokee Reservation, where her family operated a dairy farm before building and opening tourist cabins in the late 1930s. She talks about how her family had the initial idea for the cabins and discusses some things about the operation of the cabins and her family's other business endeavors. After working with her family, Farthing opened the Newfound Lodge in 1946, and she discusses her work with that, as well as the growth of tourism on the reservation and how she has adapted to meet the needs of tourists, focusing on how the end of World War 2 impacted tourism and how it changed into the 1950s, including her work with establishing the drama Unto these Hills as a tourist attraction. She talks about how her family's businesses have thrived into the 1990s and how she has been successful.