• Home
  • About
  • Advertise
    • Classifieds
    • Media Kit
  • Archives
    • Archived Editions
    • COVID-19
    • Ray Hill’s Archives
    • This Week’s Focus
  • Find Us
  • Links
  • Public Notices
  • Weather
[simple-weather location="Knoxville" show_current="yes"]
  • Columnists:
  • Black
  • Duncan
  • Ferguson
  • Hill
  • Hunley
  • Major
  • Mattingly
  • McKeehan
  • Nagi
  • Pratt
  • Rector
  • Steely
  • Williams
[simple-weather location="Knoxville" show_current="yes"]
  • Columnists:
  • Black
  • Duncan
  • Ferguson
  • Hill
  • Hunley
  • Major
  • Mattingly
  • McKeehan
  • Nagi
  • Pratt
  • Rector
  • Steely
  • Williams

A Feudin’ Son of Tennessee: Kenneth McKellar, Chapter 5

by Ray Hill | Jun 24, 2012 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

  By Ray Hill When K. D. McKellar first entered the United States Senate on March 4, 1917, he was forty-eight years old.  One long-time Senate employee recalled McKellar was well dressed, “a real Beau Brummell.”  McKellar frequently wore a black bow tie and...

A Feudin’ Son of Tennessee: Kenneth McKellar, Chapter 4

by Ray Hill | Jun 17, 2012 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

  By Ray Hill Tennessee Democrats entered the 1910 gubernatorial campaign divided and in disarray.  Many Democrats breathed a collective sigh of relief when the veteran old campaigner Robert Love Taylor agreed to seek the governorship.  Taylor had been Governor...

A Feudin’ Son of Tennessee: Kenneth McKellar, Chapter 3

by Ray Hill | Jun 10, 2012 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

  By Ray Hill Even as a freshman Congressman, Kenneth McKellar had demonstrated an ability to bring improvements and projects to his district, a talent that would serve him and Tennessee well during his legislative career. In April of 1912 as much as 170 acres of...

A Feudin’ Son of Tennessee: Kenneth McKellar Chapter 2

by Ray Hill | Jun 3, 2012 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

By Ray Hill Kenneth McKellar was forty-two years old when first elected to the House of Representatives in a 1911 special election to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Congressman George Washington Gordon. His rise to political prominence had come despite the...

A Feudin’ Son of Tennessee: Kenneth McKellar Chapter 1

by Ray Hill | May 28, 2012 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

  By Ray Hill It will soon be one hundred years since the people of Tennessee elected their first United States Senator by popular vote in 1916.  Prior to that time, senators had been elected by state legislatures.  The framers of the U. S. Constitution had never...

The Senator’s Secretary: D. W. McKellar

by Ray Hill | May 20, 2012 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

  By Ray Hill Tennessee’s longest serving United States Senator, Kenneth D. McKellar, employed several secretaries during his thirty-six years as a member of the nation’s upper chamber. For sixteen years, Senator McKellar’s secretary was his youngest brother,...
« Older Entries
Next Entries »

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Sundress Academy for the Arts Announces Writing Retreat for Survival and Healing
  • Knox County Health Department Announces New Smartphone App
  • Halls Republican Club meets Tuesday
  • Dogs Dive In at the 4th Annual Pooch Plunge!
  • Sen. Blackburn: Under Biden, Child Trafficking Soared. The One Big Beautiful Bill Helps Prevent Another Humanitarian Crisis
Phone

865-686-9970

Email

staff@knoxfocus.com

Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
© 2026Knoxville Focus

Privacy Policy

Terms Of Use