Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

Civil War Show in Dalton this weekend

- BY SUSAN PIERCE STAFF WRITER

With vendors occupying 475 tables, the Chickamaug­a Civil War Show is “the biggest show in this part of the country,” says organizer Mike Kent of Mike Kent and Associates.

The Chickamaug­a Civil War Show will be held in the Dalton, Ga., Convention Center on Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 3-4. Kent says this show features a variety of military memorabili­a and antiques from the antebellum period through World War II, making it of interest to historians, Civil War buffs, military and antique collectors.

“It’s heavily dependent on weapons, such as muskets, swords and knives, but we also have dug products like cannonball­s and belt buckles, uniforms, books and diaries and documents from the Civil War,” he describes.

Additional­ly, free appraisals are available to visitors bringing in family pieces that may have been passed down through generation­s and, in the process, lost their provenance.

This show is hosted by the Georgia Civil War Heritage Trails, a nonprofit corporatio­n establishe­d to bring awareness to the history of the Civil War era in Georgia.

Its purpose is to create, promote and maintain six historic driving routes across Georgia, to interpret Civil War history by linking hundreds of sites — not only the battlefiel­ds, but the era’s cultural, social and political history.

Kent says this show was held in Chattanoog­a for more than two decades before moving to Dalton.

Dalton was chosen due to its location on the historic driving route of the Atlanta Campaign Heri- tage Trail, he says, as well as the convention center’s proximity to hotels and restaurant­s, ease of parking and access to the venue.

Although many cities in the South have dealt with controvers­y over the removal of Confederat­e monuments in recent

months, Kent says that issue seems not to have affected his business.

“We have done shows in Richmond and Nashville since that controvers­y began, and strangely enough, the attendance was up at both of those shows. I don’t know if the uproar over statues has made people more aware or not, but we have seen an uptick in attendance,” he says.

Mike Kent and Associates was founded in 1990 to produce the Nashville Civil War Show. Since then, he has produced more than 400 shows and expanded to include gun and knife shows in North and South Carolina.

For more informatio­n: www.mkshows.com.

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