On Buckfork Road, 0.2 miles east of Cedar Creek Road (County Route 1775), on the left when traveling east.
Tennessee’s iron industry was strategically important to both North and South. Numerous furnaces supplied iron to foundries to manufacture munitions as well as armor for ironclad vessels. The fall of Forts Henry and Donelson in February 1862 opened . . . — — Map (db m74987) HM
On Buckfork Road, 0.2 miles east of Cedar Creek Road (County Route 1175), on the left when traveling east.
In 1832, Wallace Dixon built a single stack charcoal furnace constructed from native limestone with interior handmade fire brick. A second stack was added in 1833, which used the "hot blast" method for smelting the iron ore.
William Bradley & . . . — — Map (db m182695) HM
On Buckfork Road at U.S. 412, on the right when traveling south on Buckfork Road.
Five miles southwest are ruins of the iron furnace built (1834) by Wallace Dixon on the Furnace Branch of Cedar Creek. It was rebuilt in 1846 and discontinued operation in 1862. — — Map (db m74988) HM
On Petty Drive, 0.4 miles east of Whitwell Cemetery Road, on the right when traveling east.
Built about 1885 by Pinkney Hufstedler for burial of family members, this is one of the largest known grave houses in middle Tennessee. It is constructed of cut limestone, double thickness wall, with a frame structure on top of the wall. . . . — — Map (db m183288) HM
On Alvin C. York Bridge (U.S. 412) 0.4 miles west of County Highway 916.
In memory of W. M. (Morg) Conder whose effort and energy helped make this bridge free of toll to all who pass.
W. M. (Morg) Conder was an energetic public spirited citizen of Linden, Tennessee, who served in the House of Representatives of . . . — — Map (db m63129)
On U.S. 412, 0.1 miles west of Old Linden Road, on the left when traveling south.
Lewis County
Established 1843; named in honor of
Meriwether Lewis
Captain in the Army of the United States and one time secretary to President Jefferson. Later, co-commander of the Lewis & Clark Expedition to the Pacific Northwest. . . . — — Map (db m148455) HM
On East Main Street (U.S. 412) at North Poplar Street, on the right when traveling west on East Main Street.
To control shipping and military traffic along the Tennessee River, Union forces moved into this region in 1862. Naval gunboats sought to cut vital Confederate supply links to West Tennessee and the Deep South. Confederate cavalry detachments . . . — — Map (db m75003) HM
On Lower Lick Creek Road, 0.4 miles west of Porter Hollow Road, on the left when traveling west.
The Tennessee General Assembly established
Perry County in November 1819.
The first Perry County court met at this house,
the home of James Dickson, on the first Monday of January 1820.
The first county officials were elected by the group . . . — — Map (db m220184) HM
On U.S. 412 (U.S. 412), on the right when traveling west.
United States Navy gunboats ferried a force of United States cavalrymen from near here to the eastern shore in the predawn hours of May 12. After formation was achieved the force rode to Linden arriving at dawn. The cavalry surrounded the town, . . . — — Map (db m164328) HM