3 entries match your criteria.
Historical Markers in Harrison, Tennessee
Chattanooga is the county seat for Hamilton County
Harrison is in Hamilton County
Hamilton County (606) ►
ADJACENT TO HAMILTON COUNTY
Bledsoe County (17) ►
Bradley County (56) ►
Marion County (31) ►
Meigs County (31) ►
Rhea County (29) ►
Sequatchie County (5) ►
Catoosa County, Georgia (813) ►
Dade County, Georgia (16) ►
Walker County, Georgia (371) ►
Whitfield County, Georgia (85) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
ADJACENT TO HAMILTON COUNTY
Bledsoe County (17) ►
Bradley County (56) ►
Marion County (31) ►
Meigs County (31) ►
Rhea County (29) ►
Sequatchie County (5) ►
Catoosa County, Georgia (813) ►
Dade County, Georgia (16) ►
Walker County, Georgia (371) ►
Whitfield County, Georgia (85) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 ► Tennessee, Hamilton County, Harrison — 2A 37 — Harrison Academy — ![]() |
On Tennessee Route 58 at Tyner Lane, on the right when traveling north on State Route 58. |
Founded in 1838, this was the first public school in Hamilton County. It stood on a small hill about two miles northeast. Many citizens, later prominent in the life of the state and the community, received their early education here. It closed its . . . — — Map (db m51688) HM |
2 ► Tennessee, Hamilton County, Harrison — 2A 38 — Joseph Vann's Town — ![]() |
On Tennessee Route 58, on the right when traveling south. |
About ½ mile N of here, a Chickamauga village was destroyed by Evan Shelby's punitive expedition of 1779. Following his expulsion from Georgia, this wealthy Cherokee chief built a homestead here, with three racetracks, about which a new village . . . — — Map (db m4493) HM |
3 ► Tennessee, Hamilton County, Harrison — 2A 36 — Old Harrison — ![]() |
On State Highway 58 near Hunter Road (State Route 2205), on the right when traveling south. |
Hamilton County's first court met at Hasten Poe's tavern near the present Daisy in 1819, later moving to Rawlings' Farm, near the present Dallas. In 1840, a courthouse was built about 500 yards NW of this point, and the new town named for President . . . — — Map (db m4492) HM |