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Carl
Sandburg, nationally renowned poet, biographer, lecturer, newspaper columnist,
folksinger, author of American fairytales, and winner of two Pulitzer
Prizes, provided broad and enduring 20th century insight into the circumstances,
worth and spirit of the American people. He passionately championed for
the everyday working person, those who may neither have had the words
nor the power to speak for themselves.
A Midwesterner most of his life, Sandburg and his family moved to North
Carolina in 1945. This farm offered the peace and solitude required for
his writing and offered Mrs. Sandburg over 30 acres of pasture-land that
she desired to raise her champion dairy goats.
Sandburg, having already
achieved literary fame before relocating to North Carolina, continued
to write and lecture and published more than one-third of his works during
his 22 years at Connemara.
Today the site, managed
by the National Park Service, preserves the Sandburg legacy for future
generations.
The historic landscape
consists of the Sandburg residence, a dairy goat barn complex that is
home to the park's Connemara Farms goat herd, sheds, rolling pastures,
mountainside woods, five miles of hiking trails on moderate to steep terrain,
two small lakes, several ponds, flower and vegetable gardens, and an apple
orchard.
Operating Hours &
Seasons: Open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. all year; closed December
25.
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