McEly's Serendipitous Site


Hi! I'm McEly
and this is my "Serendipitous Site"!
If you don't know what "serendipitous" means
or if you're not quite sure
just click here and find out all about it!

Now here are some varied links through which you can find out more about serendipity, then indulge in some yourself in the People and Places section:

Serendip's Icon.
An artist's vision of the magical land of Serendip.
Serendipity Plays Hide and Seek.
A game of exploration, with a moral!
Serendipity in a Digital Age.
A journalist explores the serendipity generation gap.
Three Principles of Serendip.
A scholarly paper on insight, chance and discovery in scientific research.
Dystopia: Serendipitous Snack.
Lots of fun with lots of jokes and lots of cartoons.
Serendipity, Here We Come!
A collection of serendipitous travel diaries.
Serendipity.
A compendium of marvellous things, places and information.
Serendipitous Sites.
A trove of interesting and useful gems.
The Serendipity Diet.
Yes, there is such a thing!
Ajit's Sri Lanka Pages.
A comprehensive illustrated scrapbook of the original Serendip.

People and Places

By origin I am an authentic hillbilly, born in Mountain City, the seat of < b>Johnson County, "where the sun first rises on Tennessee", just a few miles from North Carolina to the East and South, Virginia to the North, and the Appalachian Trail to the West. You may not believe it, but Mountain City is as far from Memphis, Tennessee as it is from Newark, New Jersey or Buffalo, New York. Check it out on the map!

Now I propose to introduce you (if you like!) to some very interesting and unusual people and places, and the logical place to begin is the land of my roots - Upper East Tennessee:

After the Native Americans this area was settled mostly by Scotch-Irish (more properly Ulster Scots) immigrants who moved down the mountains from Pennsylvania. But there was another group before them, whose origins are quite enigmatic - the Melungeons, a dark-skinned but often grey- or green-eyed race about whom I heard a great deal in my youth, but who have only recently been extensively investigated. The link given above is full of information about them, as well as some analogous groups such as the Lumbee of North Carolina.

Another strange group of people of whom you have probably never heard is the Koreshans, a sect who believed that the heavens are at the center of the Earth and we view them from inside the Earth's crust. The place where they settled in Southwestern Florida is now the Koreshan State Historical Site, and is well worth a visit if you find yourself around Bonita Springs (Estero, to be more precise). The website contains a biography of the founder, Dr. Cyrus Teed, a tour of the grounds and information on other proponents of the Hollow Earth theory.

As are so many unusual sects and cults, the Koreshan Unity was the creation of one man, but sometimes one man creates a whole world for himself, by himself. A prime example of this was the eccentric genius (?) who called himself St. EOM (derived from his initials and pronounced "ohm") and built a fantastic and colorful world for himself called the Land of Pasaquan, in rural Georgia near the city of Columbus. At the above website you'll find lots of information about St. EOM and Pasaquan, including a fascinating gallery of forty color photographs.

[updated 2/27/00]

Click here to go back to the top.

For a 180° turn and a bit of Ageless Wisdom go to Page Two.

© 1998 mcely@webtv.net


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