Oak Mountain State Park hosts Highlands to Hollers lecture

By MACKENZEE SIMMS | Staff Writer

PELHAM – Dozens of park-goers poured into the Oak Mountain State Park office to attend “From Highlands to Hollers,” a lecture about Scottish/Irish influence on Appalachian culture, on Saturday, Nov. 23.

Presented by Oak Mountain State Parks’ naturalist Lauren Massey and assistant park naturalist Anna Ruth Davis, “From Highlands to Hollers” experienced a brief delay due to relocation. The original site of the event was changed due to the number of attendees, so the group gathered in the park’s main office to hear the lecture.

Massey explained that Appalachia is heavily influenced by Scottish/Irish culture due to multiple reasons, including geography. The mountain ranges of Appalachia, Ireland and Scotland all used to be one mountain range, but are now separated by the Atlantic Ocean.

“You’re in the very tail end of the Appalachian Mountains right now,” Massey said. “A lot of people don’t realize that Oak Mountain is a part of the Appalachian Mountains, but it is. The Appalachian Mountain Range actually goes all the way up over the Eastern Seaboard into Scotland and Ireland and parts of Africa.”

In addition to similarities in geography, Appalachia experiences lots of similarities in culture due to heavy immigration from the British Isles caused by the Irish Potato Famine and the Highland Clearances following the failed Jacobite Rebellion of 1745-46.

According to Massey, the heavy influence of Irish/Scottish culture can be seen in several aspects of Appalachian life, including music, food and folk tales. One example discussed in the program was dancing.

In Ireland, Irish step dancing is an incredibly intricate style of dance characterized by stiff, straight arms and the rhythmic tapping of feet. Massey compared this to flatfooting, an Appalachian dance style similar to clogging.

Beyond geography and music, Massey discussed how the areas have similar craftwork, such as quilting and weaving, but that Appalachian versions frequently also feature influence from Native American and African traditions.

The “From Highlands to Hollers” program did not end with the history lecture, but also gave guests the opportunity to make their own Brigid Cross.

As attendees gathered to try their hand at weaving a cross, Massey shared that the Oak Mountain State Park plans to hold an Appalachian cultural festival on Nov. 8, 2025.

“We are actually going to launch our very first annual Appalachian festival here at the park,” Massey said. “It’s going to be a lot of storytelling around the fire and we’re going to have vendors that are truly Appalachian makers.”

Those interested in learning more about the Oak Mountain State Park and their educational programming can visit Alapark.com/parks/oak-mountain-state-park/park-events.

SportsPlus

280 Main Story

Pelham defeats Spain Park behind stout defense, goalkeeping

280 Main Story

Spain Park sweeps season series with Pelham behind four goals from Oldfield

Helena

Helena goes on scoring tear, defeats Ramsay, Hueytown

280 Main Story

Chelsea handles Mortimer Jordan with run-rule victory

280 Main Story

Vincent upsets 5A Leeds, 6A Pelham in 24-hour span

280 Main Story

Oak Mountain routs Vestavia Hills on road to move closer to perfect area run

Alabaster Main Story

Thompson sweeps season series with Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa on senior night as girls remain perfect in area

Alabaster Reporter

Thompson’s three-run fifth helps Warriors sweep area series with Tuscaloosa County

Alabaster Reporter

Thompson starts area play with series sweep of Prattville

News

Edward Delmore appointed as Pelham’s new police chief

Montevallo

Sen. April Weaver receives inaugural University of Montevallo Momentum Award

280 Main Story

Chelsea sweeps area series with Helena to maintain ground in playoff race

280 Main Story

Valley Post business and entertainment district set to open fall 2025

280 Reporter

Pelham, Spain Park split area baseball series as pitchers shine

280 Reporter

Briarwood sweeps area series with Shelby County to remain perfect in area play

Calera

Calera Main Street hosts successful Car Show

Columbiana

Samford University’s Lakeshore to perform in Columbiana on April 13

280 Reporter

Oak Mountain honors 16 seniors in shutout win over Westminster OM, stays undefeated

280 Reporter

Indian Springs continues perfect area run as boys, girls beat Shelby County

News

Extending a hand: Firefighters Drew Babyak and Joe Patton teach public about lifesaving techniques

280 Main Story

Chelsea keeps rolling with wins over Leeds, Oak Mountain

280 Main Story

Chelsea extends 1-percent sales and use tax rate

Helena

Helena’s big bats secure regular season series sweep over rival Pelham

Montevallo

Montevallo to participate in April Walking Tours