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Falcon Rest Newsletter

September 29, 2006

Attraction that "was meant to be"

Tennessee boy most unlikely to succeed

Louisiana girl who knows her food


Dealing with the folks in charge


www.falconrest.com

For reservations, information or itinerary planning,
call The Victorian Lady, Charlien McGlothin, at 931-668-4444.

(The Gent is the talent; she's the brains)

She also answers
our e-mail:
falconrest@falconrest.travel

Dealing with the folks in charge
  
We identify with motor-
coach and tour operators, because -- like us -- many of you are running your own business.
   It's unusual to see a historic attraction in private hands, especially where the owners actually run it.  But it's a real plus for you as a buyer.
   You don't have to wonder who'll answer the phone next time you call, or if the service will be up to par.  The person you talk to at the trade show (usually the gent) is the one who'll be entertaining your folks.  The person who takes the reservation and helps you plan your trip (the Lady) is the one who'll see to it that your food is outstanding and your customers feel like kings and queens.
   As a couple and as a company, we have a lifetime investment in seeing to it that your stop at Falcon Rest is one of the highlights of your trip.

Around 90 ladies from several North Alabama Red Hat groups recently enjoyed a meal and  performance of "Murder at the Mansion." 
Groups from school age to senior adults love the fun, food and history at Falcon Rest in McMinnville, Tenn.

BOOK YOUR 2007 GROUPS NOW.
The McGlothinsThe People Behind the Victorian Gentleman and Lady
    Visitors to Falcon Rest and the buyers we meet at tourism shows associate this 1896 mansion with the costumed couple best known as the Victorian Gentleman and Lady.  In real life, we're George and Charlien McGlothin. 
   Tuesday, we celebrated our 38th wedding anniversary  (miracles do happen), so this seemed like a good time to tell our friends a little more about the people behind the costumes and how we got there.

The Victorian Gent and LadyAttraction that "was meant to be"
   If anybody had told me 17-1/2 years ago -- before I "accidentally" bought this mansion at an auction -- that I would be a member of NTA and ABA promoting it as a nationally acclaimed historic attraction, I'd have figured their crystal ball was cracked.  
   It would have been more likely to think I'd be lucky to live this long, considering I bought the run-down mansion-turned-hospital-then-derelict without my wife having seen it. 
   Not long after we finished our 4-1/2-year, do-it-yourself restoration, Charlien's mother declared, "This had to have been meant to be, or you would never have gotten this far." 
   Now I hear that all the time from visitors who seem to enjoy my on-stage characters as much as touring the mansion.  One senior tourist recently told me, "You know you were born to do this."  "Well, maybe so," I modestly concurred.  She retorted, "There's no maybe about it!" 

Tennessee boy most unlikely to succeed
   I was born in Chattanooga but grew up here in McMinnville -- the most unlikely guy to end up as either a restorationist or a performer.  My dad always said I wasn't good with my hands, but Falcon Rest won a first-prize National Trust restoration award.
   My fourth-grade teacher held me back because she thought I was too dumb to learn, but I made up the time by graduating from high school in three years, then finished my Master's Degree with honors. 
   I was the only nine-year-old I know of to be thrown out of a church play for incompetence.  In fact, when I was a teenager, a minister's wife told me I was the worst speaker she ever heard.  Now folks roll in the motorcoach aisles with laughter as I spin local history stories as their step-on tour guide.
  Miracles really do happen.

Louisiana girl who knows her food
   When I was 18, our family moved to Denham Springs, La.  Our pastor's son there asked me to speak at a local high school chapel meeting.  Even then, I was a storyteller. I rared back at the teacher's desk and started weaving tales about my "old" high school days.  Once heard, I'm remembered.  When a pretty young lady spoke to me later at the food store where I worked, it took a while to realize she was the high-school freshman who'd led singing at the chapel service.  (If you've heard the Victorian Lady sing during Murder at the Mansion, you'll know they were pretty desperate.) 
   Desperation comes in many forms.  The minister's son bet me he could bring a prettier girl to the church Sweetheart Banquet than I could, so in desperation I invited Charlien. I won the bet, and three years later I won her heart. 
   As of Sept. 27, we've been happily married for 38 years.
   One thing South Louisiana is famous for is its food.  Charlien's dad shared cooking duties at the American Legion with another local veteran, Justin Wilson.  In my opinion, her dad was the better cook.  People rave about the food at Falcon Rest.  They expect the entertainment and the mansion to be very good, but the food is a delightful surprise.  Considering that Charlien grew up surrounded by the best of Louisiana cooking, it's not that surprising after all.  She develops the recipes and supervises our dedicated staff to make sure the food is always right.

Picture YOUR Group having fun at Falcon Rest
Alabama Red Hat Group
Tennessee mapTreat your tour groups to the Victorian mansion
where history is fun ... on your way to everywhere thru
Middle Tennessee! 
Click on map for itinerary planning.