Exploring Pressmans Home | Drone Footage | Tour | Abandoned Ghost Town in Rogersville TN |

Drone footage taken with a DJI Mavic Air 2. Still images taken with a Nikon B500. Lots of information about this area provided below: Pressmen's Home is a ghost town and former headquarters for the International Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union of North America from 1911 to 1967, in the Poor Valley area of Hawkins County, Tennessee, United States, nine miles north of Rogersville. It included a trade school, a sanitarium, a retirement home, a hotel, a post office, a chapel, a hydroelectric power production plant, telecommunication utilites, and other facilities designed to make it a self-sufficient community. Pressmen's Home had a post office from 1914 to 1971. It closed three years after the union moved. A second post office operated in Pressmen's Home as Camelot from 1971 to 1975. The Administration Building was built in 1912 and was the original location of the Trade School. After new Trade School facilities were built in 1947, the building housed the executive offices of the union's international president and secretary-treasurer. The Membership Records Department, the Accounting Department, the Service Bureau and the editorial offices were also housed here. The building was abandoned after the union left Pressmen's Home in 1969. The Home Building was built in 1911. It was under construction when the union moved its headquarters to Pressmen's Home after purchasing the Hale Springs Resort. It was built to house the visitors that had formerly visited the Hale Springs (which were believed to have medicinal qualities, due to the high sulphur concentrations in the spring water). The building was home to many international officers while they stayed at Pressmen's Home. After a hotel was completed in 1926, the building became known as simply "The Home," and it was used as an apartment complex for full-time residents. The Home was equipped with a kitchen, dining room, pool room, and other amenities. The building fell into disrepair after the Union left Pressmen's Home; today it stands in ruins. The sanatorium was built in 1916. In the early years of printing it was thought that exposure to printer's ink was a cause for tuberculosis. The union was interested in the welfare of its members, so the hospital was completely staffed, adequately equipped, and ideally situated for combating the deadly disease within the means of the technology of the times. Union members who contracted the disease could receive care at no charge. Many who died from the disease are buried in the cemetery at Pressmen's Home. The building was demolished in 1962, to make way for other facilities before the union left. In 1926, a four-story hotel was built to accommodate union members and their families who came to Pressmen's Home to train at the Trade School. The hotel's facade was made from sandstone from a quarry located on the premises. The lobby had a beautiful tile floor and an adjacent reading room. Home-cooked meals were prepared for the hotel's guests, largely from on-site facilities that included a dairy farm for milk, chickens for eggs and poultry, a large vegetable garden, and hog lot for pork. The guest rooms were appointed with iron beds and dressers. The hotel was destroyed in October 1994 by arson. The Memorial Chapel was built in 1926 as a non-denominational church dedicated to the memory of union members who died in World War I. Later, the chapel's dedication was expanded to include all people who had served in United States and Canadian military service since that time. The chapel was designed by architect John Sheridan in the Italianate style and was built of native sandstone. It had stained glass windows from Louis Comfort Tiffany and a fresco painting on its ceiling. At the time of its construction, it was thought to be the only church owned by a labor union. Outside the chapel, in a garden, stood the printing press upon which the design of the union's logo was based. George L. Berry, the president of the union and founder of Pressmen's Home, was interred in a mausoleum near the chapel. Both the chapel and the mausoleum still stand today, although the Berrys' remains have been relocated to the town cemetery in Rogersville. The Trade School building was built in 1948. It was the cornerstone of the educational and training program at Pressman's Home. The school housed over $500,000 (the equivalent of more than $5.4 million in 2007) in presses and equipment. The school provided training in letterpress, gravure, and offset presses, ink mixing, camera, stripping, platemaking, color separation, and bindery operations. All of the equipment was provided to Pressman's Home by the manufacturer on a loan basis. This trade school was an attempt by the union to set itself apart from its union competitors. Trainees were required to have been in the union for five years; however, many people from the Hawkins County area were allowed to train at the school at no charge without any experience.

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CHOSEN ONE! U HAVE UNKNOWN FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES & WHAT THEY WILL DO TO PROTECT U IS UNBELIEVABLE

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Exploring Rogersville, Tennessee. Another On The Road special

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5 Years of Saving, One Dream: Young Girl Builds a Massive 268m² Luxury Villa.|by@hoangthibinh

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Abandoned Ghost Town, Pressman's Home with Drone Footage!
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Abandoned Ghost Town, Pressman's Home with Drone Footage!

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