![]() “ The Rich, Sexy History Of Oneida - Commune And Silverware Maker,” WBUR, May 20, 2016.“ The Utopia of Sharing in Oneida, N.Y.”by Beth Quinn Barnard, The New York Times, August 3, 2007.“ People & Ideas: Charles Finney,” God in America, PBS.“‘ My Heart Was So Full of Love That It Overflowed’: Charles Grandison Finney Experiences Conversion,” History Matters: The U.S.“ The Second Great Awakening,” by Isaiah Dicker, Guided History: History Research Guides by Boston University Students.“ Religion and the Founding of the American Republic: Religion and the New Republic,” Library of Congress.“ Religious Transformation and the Second Great Awakening,”.“ Great Awakening,”, Originally posted March 7, 2018, Updated September 20, 2019.“ The First Great Awakening.” by Christine Leigh Heyrman, Divining America, TeacherServe©, National Humanities Center.The episode image is “ Oneida Community,” photograph taken between 18 image is in the Public Domain and available via the Library of Congress. The mid-episode Music is “Walk Together (Acoustic Piano and Guitar Version)” by Olexy from Pixabay. Our theme song is Frogs Legs Rag, composed by James Scott and performed by Kevin MacLeod, licensed under Creative Commons. Joining me to discuss the Oneida community, and its most infamous resident, presidential assassin Charles Guiteau, is New York Times bestselling writer Susan Wels, author of An Assassin in Utopia: The True Story of a Nineteenth-Century Sex Cult and a President's Murder. What captured the attention of the outside world, though, were the sexual practices of the Oneidans, who believed in complex marriage where every man and every woman in the community were married to each other and where birth control was achieved via male continence. Women in the community had certain freedoms compared to the outside world, in both dress and occupation. West-Murley Funeral Home is serving the family of Eula Ellen Lay.In 1848, a group of religious perfectionists, led by John Humphrey Noyes, established a commune in Oneida, New York, where they lived and worked together. ![]() Honorary pallbearer will be Charles "Chuckie" Lay. Serving as pallbearers: Phillip Lay, Jacob Lay, Josh Lay, Tim McGinnis, Eugene Lay, and Gabriel Terry. at the Lay-Silcox Cemetery in the Rockhouse community of Scott County. Graveside service will be conducted on Sunday, Octoat 11 a.m. in the chapel of West-Murley Funeral Home with Bro. until time of the funeral service at 8 p.m. She is also survived by a host of nieces, nephews, other family, friends, and former students who all loved her dearly.įriends may visit with the Lay family on Saturday, Septemfrom 6 p.m. Special friends: Billy and Anna Mae Marlow of Morgan County. (2) brothers: Hoyle Lay, Amon Lay and wife Bertha Lou. She is survived by (4) sisters: Luretta Comer, Dorothy Tighe, Phyllis Muse, and Sarah McGinnis and husband Gerald. She was loved by many and will be greatly missed. Anything she did for others was from her heart. She cared for her father, mother, brothers, sisters, and other family members when needed. She loved to teach and she loved children. She then returned to Scott County finishing up her 30 year teaching career at the Capital Hill Elementary School. She also taught for 17 years at Joyner Elementary School in Morgan County. Over her career she taught at one room schools in the Rockhouse, Smokey Junction, and Bull Creek communities. She then taught school in Scott County and went on to earn a teaching degree from the Tennessee Tech University in Cookeville. When she returned to Tennessee, she earned a teaching certificate from the George Peabody School. Upon graduation, at the end of WWII, she decided to go to Mobile, Alabama to work as a “Rosie the Riveter” making airplane parts. She then attended the Draughon’s Business College in Nashville, TN. Lay, after being diagnosed legally blind, graduated from Norma High School. (2) Sisters: Geneva Navaro and Nancy Collins. She was also preceded in death by (7) brothers: J.P., J.W., Larry, Earl, James, Eugene, and Lloyd George “Bucky” Lay. She was born on Septemto the late George Flemon Lay and Bertie Silcox Lay. She was a member of the Five Black Gums Baptist Church. Eula Ellen Lay, age 99 of the Rockhouse Community passed away on Thursday, Septemat her home with family and friends by her side.
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