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Posts Tagged ‘antlered underwater panther’

001Our Early Everyman, like the Antlered Underwater Panther we use for the Clarion Friends banner, is an early resident taken from among many prehistoric petroglyphs at Parkers Landing on the Allegheny River in Clarion County. When low water made fishing easy, area residents gathered at Parkers Landing for a summer chautauqua. They fished, feasted, socialized, governed, provisioned, and educated. The flat rocks were cleaned, the art outlined with red ocher, and the storyteller/carver used the Early Everyman , for example, to teach traditions, values, behavior, skills, identity, and certainly not least to entertain.

To our modern sensibilities the Early Everyman has a Charlie Chaplin quality about him. He seems to need a good neighbor, maybe a helping hand bringing food home, or someone to be friendly company. History and our own experience affirms, we all need someone at some time. It is also true that every community needs a friend now and then. To know that help is there gives strength to our claim on home. Clarion County Community Foundation locates its efforts in Clarion County as did these early artists and storytellers.

For a scholarly article on Parkers Landing rock art, see Kenneth Burkett and Edward Kaufman, “On The Rocks at Parkers Landing”, Pennsylvania Archaeologist 75(1):29-48.

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Our banner logo is an antlered underwater panther, mythical creature, taken from one of many prehistoric petroglyphs at Parkers Landing on the Allegheny River in Clarion County, Pennsylvania.  When low water level made fishing easy, prehistoric area residents gathered at Parkers Landing for a summer chautauqua.  They fished, feasted, socialized, governed, provisioned, and educated.

The flat rocks were cleaned, the art outlined with red ocher, then the storytellers used the petroglyphs, our antelered underwater panther for example, to teach traditions, values, behavior, skills, identity, and certainly not lease to entertain.  These are all things we hope to do with the endowment funds of the Clarion County Community Foundation.  And we locate our efforts in Clarion County as did those early artists and storytellers.

For a scholarly article on Parkers Landing rock art, see Kenneth Burkett and Edward Kaufman, “On The Rocks at Parkers Landing,” Pennsylvania Archaeologist 75(1):29-48.  If you have a chance to talk with Ken Burkett who helped me understand our logo you will find him both a gentleman and a scholar.  It will be the best part of your day.

And a special thanks to John Hink for putting together our banner.  My skills do not reach that far.  Charles Marlin

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