111 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 111 are listed.
⊲ Previous 100 Historical Markers and War Memorials in Sevier County, Tennessee
Sevierville is the county seat for Sevier County
101 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Sevierville — The Great Indian Warpath — |
The Great Indian Warpath ← — — Map (db m169715) HM |
102 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Sevierville — The Mayors of the City of Sevierville — |
Several attempts were made in the incorporation of the city of Sevierville since its founding in 1795, but it was not until 1901 that a continuous chartered city government was established. Ambrose M. Paine was elected Sevierville's first mayor on . . . — — Map (db m52081) HM |
103 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Sevierville — 1C 69 — The McMahan Indian Mound — |
This Mississippian substructure,16 ft. high and 240 ft.in circumference, built during the Dallas phase (1200-1500), was first excavated in 1881, with artifacts being sent to the Smithsonian. Later excavations exposed nearby villages of the Woodland . . . — — Map (db m17194) HM |
104 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Sevierville — Thomas Atchley — 1755-1836 — |
A soldier of the colonial army of 1776, and a veteran of the American Revolution, 1776-1781, Thomas Atchley served alongside private Andrew Jackson in 1794 under the command of Brigadier General James Robertson in the Indian Wars of the lower . . . — — Map (db m17103) HM |
105 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Sevierville — Timothy Reagan — 1750 - 1830 — |
A soldier of The American Revolution, Timothy Reagan fought in the Battle of Brandywine in 1777 with Major General Marquis de Lafayette where both men were wounded in 1795, Reagan forged into the wilderness of The Middle Creek area of Sevier County . . . — — Map (db m17105) HM |
106 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Sevierville — Wheatlands — |
Built in 1825 Wheatlands Est. 1791 National Registry of Historic Places — — Map (db m184601) HM |
107 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Sevierville — William M. Whaley — 1789-1880 — |
One of the many volunteers of the War of 1812 which earned Tennessee its nickname, William Whaley came to Sevier County in 1810. A farmer and later Baptist minister, Whaley married in 1811 Mary Ann Ogle (1793-1880). A resident of the White Oak Flats . . . — — Map (db m52080) HM |
108 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Seymour — Keener-Johnson Farm — |
The National Register Tennessee Historical Commission [unreadable] of Historic Places — — Map (db m195422) HM |
109 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Seymour — 1C 3 — Newell's Station — |
Early fort established here, 1783 by settlers in Boyd's Creek Valley. Samuel Newell, Revolutionary Captain, was leader of the settlement. Sevier Co., state of Franklin, held its first court here. Also seat of government for the . . . — — Map (db m32780) HM |
110 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Seymour — 1C 12 — The Great Indian War Trail — |
A branch of the Great Indian War & Trading Path came up the valley of this creek, named for a Virginia trader killed by Indians in 1775. Col. William Christian's punitive expedition used it in 1776, crossing the French Broad River. John Sevier broke . . . — — Map (db m32686) HM |
111 ► Tennessee, Sevier County, Strawberry Plains — 1 C 11 — Jefferson County / Sevier County — |
Jefferson County Established 1792; named in honor of Thomas Jefferson Secretary of State, formerly member of the Continental Congress; principal author of the Declaration of Independence; later Governor of Virginia: Vice President and . . . — — Map (db m210349) HM |
111 entries matched your criteria. Entries 101 through 111 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100