Tharp offers a variety of finishes from a hand rubbed stain to a distressed paint. All Tharp cabinets are built with solid wood frames, doors, hanging rails, and veneer end panels and are assembled with the strongest and most durable methods.

Tharp was born in 1941 on a farm in Portland, Indiana, the daughter of William Tharp and Lecile (Confer) Tharp. [1] She was named for Twila Thornburg, the "Pig Princess" of the 89th Annual Muncie Fair.

Today, Marie Tharp is recognized for the revolutionary that she was. In 1997, the Library of Congress named her as one of the four greatest cartographers of the 20th century. She died of cancer in 2006 at the age of 86, but her legacy lives on in the countless women scientists she has inspired.

Beginning in 1965, Tharp choreographed for an all-female group she irreverently labeled “a bunch of broads doing God’s work.” From her tough-minded pieces that challenged rather than entertained, she began to expand horizons.

Sixty Years of Twyla Tharp Creativity, A Gift to Dance and Music

Tharp's Log is a cabin built by Hale Tharp out of a downed, giant sequoia log. Back in 1861, Hale Tharp built this cabin in a tree, making him the first non-Native American to live in the Giant Forest. He grazed cattle in these meadows in summer and near Horse Creek, in the foothills, in the winter.

Marie Tharp was an American geologist and marine cartographer whose groundbreaking visualizations of ocean floors and discovery of the mid-Atlantic rift valley challenged the widely accepted geological views of the time.