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Rachael Young: Second Mistress of Buckhorn Inn
The second mistress of the Inn was my dear friend, Rachael Young. Rachael passed away at age 98 on December 8, 2017. Her love of Buckhorn and her keen decorating eye are very much in evidence today.
Knoxvillians Rachael, Robert and Lindsay Young bought the Inn from Douglas Bebb in 1978. Rachael explained to me that their key motivation was preserving the Inn as an important part of regional history and to protect it from commercialization. Many of the pieces of antique furniture currently at Buckhorn came from the Young family. Her background as an art professor at the University of Tennessee stood her in good stead as she guided the inn’s revitalization, including updating all the furniture and soft furnishings in the bedrooms and dining room and modernizing the kitchen. It was Rachael who introduced air conditioning to Buckhorn and converted the water tower to a bedroom–still one of our most special places. She brought a timeless, unstudied charm to this little mountain retreat.
Second Mistress of the Buckhorn Lived a Life of Accomplishment
Rachael Young was a highly accomplished woman. Intellectually gifted, she left Knoxville to attend Columbia University, a daring step for a young woman at that time, and went on in her lifetime to earn four academic degrees. During World War II, she worked for the Red Cross in England, France and Germany. After marriage and two children, she became a beloved and respected art professor at the University of Tennessee. A cancer survivor, she was anxious to begin a wellness community in order to provide cancer patients and their families the opportunity to be active participants in their healing. Now called the Cancer Support Network, the organization plays a vital role in regional cancer care. She was very interested in holistic medicine and she inspired the creation of our annual Mindfulness Meditation Retreat. We created Rachael’s Labyrinth in her honor. She was a woman full of effortless grace and full of laughter. As I began my time at Buckhorn, we had Sunday morning phone calls about the goings-on up here in the mountains and, bless her, she never gave me a bit of advice but one: “Don’t start your renovations in the kitchen as I did. It will use up all your resources and you won’t have enough to do the fun things.”
Rachael passed on her love of Buckhorn to me, and every day, in every way, she inspires me still.
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