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The Tennessee Overhill Heritage Series will
document the turn of the century as well as illustrate the importance
placed on heritage and historic preservation by the people of McMinn,
Monroe and Polk Counties. The second in Linda Miller's Tennessee
Overhill Heritage Series of limited edition lithographic prints
depicts the cross erected in Polk County by Henry Harrison Mayes
during the 1940s. Linda was drawn to the cross the first time
she saw it in the mid 1970s. She recognized its value as American
folk art and began asking about the history of the cross. She was
inspired by the faith of Henry Harrison Mayes and the divine healing
he received.
The large concrete cross is located south of Benton,
Tennessee on Highway 411. For half a century, highway travelers
have passed by this 1,400 pound Christian icon with its two-sided
message. The southbound inscription warns mankind that JESUS IS
COMING SOON while the other side strongly advises GET RIGHT WITH
GOD. This unique piece of religious folk art is the work of Kentucky
coal miner Henry Harrison Mayes.
Mr. Mayes was born in 1898 and began his roadside
mission in 1917. Feeling that his life had been spared after a mining
accident, Mr. Mayes decided to serve God by sharing his prophesy
with a mobile society. The small man from Kentucky used money he
made as a free-lance sign painter to support his advertising crusade
that resulted in crosses being erected in forty-four states.
Mr. Mayes fashioned crosses by using homemade wooden
molds and hand mixing and pouring concrete crosses in his backyard.
After producing a substantial inventory he hoisted his artwork on
his truck and set out for well traveled areas. Without permission,
he would dig a hole on property near the highway and set his massive
cross in place. Mr. Mayes energetic devotion is much like a 20th
century Johnny Appleseed combined with the daring of a See Rock
City promoter.
Henry Harrison Mayes constructed and erected concrete
crosses for some sixty years. Many of his original crosses no longer
exist because of highway expansion programs, traffic accidents,
and natural erosion.
Even though this Middlesboro, Kentucky man was quiet
and unassuming, his service and artwork have been reported in newspapers
and featured in Newsweek, Life, and Foxfire 9.
The life and work of Henry Harrison Mayes ended in
1986. Though his efforts brought about titles like "Gods
Ad Man" and a "Americas Roadside Evangelist,"
Mr. Mayes remained The Almightys humble servant all his life.
The actions of Henry Harrison Mayes spoke as loud as any sermon
and his life testified to the power of one person serving God.
The painting is full of Christian symbolism. Click
on various parts of the painting and learn about the symbols Linda
Miller has incorporated into this artwork.
This lithographic print is
available in two sizes:
Full size prints (signed by artist)
$ 50.00
(Image size 17 x 20.5 inches)
Small prints (unsigned)
$ 15.00
(Image size 8.625 X 10.25 inches)
Included with the print is the information
about the cross and a sheet of the symbolism used in the artwork.
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