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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Knox County, Tennessee

 
Clickable Map of Knox County, Tennessee and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Knox County, TN (151) Anderson County, TN (61) Blount County, TN (43) Grainger County, TN (11) Jefferson County, TN (23) Loudon County, TN (14) Roane County, TN (20) Sevier County, TN (75) Union County, TN (7)  KnoxCounty(151) Knox County (151)  AndersonCounty(61) Anderson County (61)  BlountCounty(43) Blount County (43)  GraingerCounty(11) Grainger County (11)  JeffersonCounty(23) Jefferson County (23)  LoudonCounty(14) Loudon County (14)  RoaneCounty(20) Roane County (20)  SevierCounty(75) Sevier County (75)  UnionCounty(7) Union County (7)
Adjacent to Knox County, Tennessee
    Anderson County (61)
    Blount County (43)
    Grainger County (11)
    Jefferson County (23)
    Loudon County (14)
    Roane County (20)
    Sevier County (75)
    Union County (7)
 
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Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1Tennessee (Knox County), Concord — The Old Cumberland Presbyterian Meeting House
On 2nd Drive, on the left when traveling east.
The first Cumberland Presbyterian Congregation in East Tennessee was organized c. 1822 and given the name Concord. The church building, often referred to as the "Old Meeting House", was located 2 miles SE of the present town of Concord just off . . . — Map (db m102446) HM
2Tennessee (Knox County), Corryton — 1E 61 — George Mann
On Tazewell Pike (Tennessee Route 131), on the right when traveling north.
This Revolutionary veteran and homesteader was the last man killed by Indians in Knox County. On the night of May 25, 1795, investigating a noise in the barn, he was ambushed and slain. The Indians later attempted to force entrance into the home; . . . — Map (db m151537) HM
3Tennessee (Knox County), Corryton — 1E 41 — Nicholas Gibbs
On Emory Road (Tennessee Route 331) 0.2 miles west of Tazewell Pike (Tennessee Route 131), on the right when traveling west.
Born in Germany in 1733, he served in the French and Indian War, later in the Revolution. He took up a homestead of 450 acres here in 1792 and built the log cabin which stands about 1/2 mile east. A member of Knox County's first court, he died in . . . — Map (db m33074) HM
4Tennessee (Knox County), Corryton — 1E 107 — Nicholas Gibbs Homestead
On Emory Rd (Tennessee Route 331) 1 mile east of Tazewell Pike, on the right when traveling west.
Nicholas Gibbs, a prominent Knox County Pioneer homesteaded 450 acres here in 1792 and built this hewed log house approximately one year later. It remained in the Gibbs family until 1971. The Nicholas Gibbs Historical Society purchased the house in . . . — Map (db m32945) HM
5Tennessee (Knox County), Corryton — 1E 35 — Sawyer's Fort
On Emory Road (Tennessee Route 331) 1 mile west of Washington Pike (Tennessee Route 61), on the right when traveling east.
On this site, about 1785, Col. John Sawyer, a soldier of the Revolution, built a homestead and fort for protection against Indians. Emory Road, which ran Southwest to the Clinch River in 1788, passed through here. — Map (db m82198) HM
6Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Admiral David Glasgow Farragut — History of the Farragut Area
Near North Campbell Station Road at Herron Road, on the left when traveling north.
David Glasgow Farragut was born on July 5, 1801, to Jorge and Elizabeth Farragut at Lowe's Ferry on the Tennessee River, less than five miles from present day Farragut, Tenn. He lived in this area until 1807 when the family moved to New Orleans. In . . . — Map (db m100870) HM
7Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Admiral David Glasgow Farragut Monument
On Municipal Center Drive 0.1 miles west of South Campbell Station Road, on the left when traveling west.
Admiral David Glasgow Farragut Birthplace - Campbell Station in Knox County, Tennessee * James Glasgow Farragut was born on 5 July 1801 in a log cabin at Stony Point just four miles southeast of the location referred to in 1801 as . . . — Map (db m69466) HM
8Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Admiral Farragut's Birthplace — Hero of Mobile Bay
Near South Northshore Drive (Tennessee Route 332) at Maple Seed Road, on the right when traveling east.
In front of you, on the promontory just across the cove, is where David Glasgow Farragut was born on July 5, 1801. Farragut's father, George Farragut, came to the American colonies in 1776 from Spain as a merchant sea captain. During the . . . — Map (db m101431) HM
9Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — 1E8 — Archibald Roane
On Kingston Pike at Concord Road, on the right when traveling east on Kingston Pike.
A short distance north lived Archibald Roane, Continental soldier, frontier judge and the second governor of Tennessee. He is buried in Pleasant Forest Cemetery, one~half mile south. Many other pioneer settlers are also buried there. — Map (db m28572) HM
10Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — 1E 73 — Battle of Campbell's Station
On Kingston Pike at Lendon Welch Way, on the right when traveling west on Kingston Pike.
The Federal Gen. Ambrose Burnside, pursued by Gen. James Longstreet from Lenoir's Station via Concord, eluded an attempt by Gen. Lafayette McLaws, C.S.A., coming from Loudon via the Hotchkiss Valley and Kingston Roads, to head him off at the . . . — Map (db m28514) HM
11Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Battle of Campbell's Station — "Form on me."
Near Municpal Center Drive 0.1 miles west of South Campbell Station Road, on the left when traveling west.
(preface) On November 4, 1863, to divert Federal forces from Chattanooga, Confederate Gen. James Longstreet led two reinforced divisions from the city to attack Union Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside’s garrison in Knoxville. Burnside confronted . . . — Map (db m69456) HM
12Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Birthplace of Admiral Farragut
Near Christus Way south of South Northshore Drive (Route 332). Reported missing.
Birthplace of Admiral Farragut Born July 5th 1801 Erected by Bonny Kate Chapter D. A. R. Knoxville Dedicated by Admiral Dewey May 15th 1900 — Map (db m32218) HM
13Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — 1E7 — Campbell Station
On Kingston Pike, on the right when traveling west. Reported missing.
This house marks the site of the station established in 1787 by Col. David Campbell as a frontier fort for protection against Indian attacks. On the main highway to the west it was an important trading post and stopping place for travelers and stock . . . — Map (db m28773) HM
14Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — 1E 97 — David Glasgow Farragut — 1801-1870
On Kingston Pike at Lendon Welch Way, on the right when traveling west on Kingston Pike.
A native of Stony Point (Low's Ferry) David Farragut moved to New Orleans at the age of three. At the age of ten, he began a career with the U.S. Navy; ca. 1827, pioneered a school for seamen; 1841, improved hoisting machinery for ammunition; . . . — Map (db m28513) HM
15Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Farragut Schools: Early Years
Near Campbell Station Road.
In 1902, eight men from the community met to consider the question of establishing a high school in the 10th district of Knox County. Mr. C.H. Stoltzfus, a farmer in the community, was elected president of this group. Mass meetings for all members . . . — Map (db m100881) HM
16Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Farragut Schools: Recent Years
Near Campbell Station Road.
Named for Admiral David Glasgow Farragut who was born in this area, Farragut High School began in 1904 as a six-room frame academic building on 12 acres of land at the junction of Concord Road and Kingston Pike. In addition to practical agriculture, . . . — Map (db m101749) HM
17Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — 1E 37 — Loveville
On Kingston Pike (U.S. 11) at Lovell Road (State Route 131), on the right on Kingston Pike. Reported missing.
Robertus Love, a companion of Gen. James White, who founded Knoxville, established the village in this area in 1797 where he had built a fulling mill in 1792. Several of early buildings still exist a short distance from the highway. The . . . — Map (db m31984) HM
18Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Medal of Honor 17th Michigan Volunteer Regiment — Turkey Creek & Campbell Station November 16, 1863 — 9th Corps - First Division - Third Brigade Captain Frederick Swift • Sgt. Joseph Brandle —
On Evans Road at Virtue Road, on the right when traveling east on Evans Road.
On November 16, 1863, the 17th Michigan was assigned as part of the Rear Guard along with the 2nd Michigan, 20th Michigan and the 100th Pennsylvania to protect the rest of Burnside's Army which were now in retreat into the defenses of Knoxville. . . . — Map (db m101830) HM WM
19Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Memorial for Cofounders of Campbell Station
Near Concord Road, on the left when traveling north.
Colonel David Campbell Born 1753 - 1832 * David Campbell donated the land for Pleasant Forest Cemetery. David Campbell and Archibald McCaleb settled Campbell Station on March 7, 1787. By 1798 a small church and school was erected on the . . . — Map (db m102448) HM
20Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Native American Settlement
Near Campbell Station Road.
Initial permanent habitation in the area we now call Farragut began approximately 3,000 years ago when the Woodland Indians moved in the area on a permanent basis and became east Tennessee's first farmers. The Woodland tribe was replaced around . . . — Map (db m100831) HM
21Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Pleasant Forest Church & Cemetery
Near Campbell Station Road.
David Campbell, who owned much of the land in the fertile region called Grassy Valley, donated a portion of it for the purpose of erecting a "Meeting House", as churches were then called. A school building at the location was about one and one . . . — Map (db m100834) HM
22Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — The Battle of Campbell Station — History of the Farragut Area
Near North Campbell Station Road at Herron Road, on the left when traveling north.
On Nov. 4, 1863, Lt. Gen. James Longstreet — with two divisions, about 5,000 cavalry and approximately 12,000 troops — was detached from the Confederate Army of Tennessee near Chattanooga to attack Maj. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside's Union . . . — Map (db m100879) HM
23Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — The Campbell Station Inn
Near Campbell Station Road.
History tells us that as early as 1785, the State of Franklin (today Tennessee) entered into an agreement, known as the Dumplin Creek Treaty, with the Cherokees. This treaty opened the land along the French Broad and Holston rivers to a rush of . . . — Map (db m107928) HM
24Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — The Historic Village of Concord — The Establishment of the Railroad and Marble Industry
Near Campbell Station Road.
The need for improved methods of importing supplies and exporting local products had for some time been recognized by farmers and merchants of East Tennessee who, of necessity, relied on horse drawn freight wagons or rafts and barges. In 1852, the . . . — Map (db m100872) HM
25Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — The Historic Village of Concord — The Depression and TVA
Near Campbell Station Road.
By 1887, Concord was the second largest community in Knox County, second to Knoxville. The Village of Concord was a regional transportation center. Tennessee marble, crushed limestone, lime, logs and farm produce were gathered at its public dock. . . . — Map (db m101433) HM
26Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — The U.S. Veterans Memorial
On Evans Road, on the right when traveling east.
"To those who fought for it, life has a special meaning that the protected will never know...". Written on a C-Ration box Khe Sahn RNV 1967 or 68 Unknown U S Warrior Author. The American Veterans of Foreign Wars - AMVETS - erect this monument to . . . — Map (db m101831) HM
27Tennessee (Knox County), Farragut — Town of Farragut & Farragut Folklife Museum
Near Campbell Station Road.
In May 1979, a group of citizens began meeting to discuss the possibility of incorporation. They felt incorporation was necessary in order to control zoning, land use, signage issues and Farragut's own destiny. A small steering committee, named the . . . — Map (db m101750) HM
28Tennessee (Knox County), Fountain City — 1E 24 — Fort Adair
On North Broadway Street (U.S. 441) 0.1 miles north of Adair Drive, on the right when traveling south.
Established in 1788, this fort was used as a depot of supplies for the Cumberland Guard, the militia organization which supplied armed protection for parties of emigrants to the Cumberland Settlements, later the town of Nashborough, now . . . — Map (db m95270) HM
29Tennessee (Knox County), Fountain City — Site of Fort Adair
On North Broadway Street (U.S. 441) north of Adair Drive.
. . . — Map (db m32531) HM
30Tennessee (Knox County), Fountain City, Knoxville — 1E 112 — Fountain City United Methodist Church — Fountain Head Campground
On Hotel Road 0.1 miles west of Broadway Street (U.S. 441), on the right when traveling east.
Fountain City United Methodist Church Founded in 1825In 1824, E.F. Sevier, grandson of Gov. John Sevier, came to this area as a Methodist circuit rider. By 1825, a plot of ground was secured and Fountain Head became a "preaching place." A log . . . — Map (db m32350) HM
31Tennessee (Knox County), Halls Crossroads — 1E 128 — Norris Freeway
On Norris Freeway (U.S. 441) at East Emory Road (State Highway 131), on the right when traveling north on Norris Freeway.
Built in 1934 by TVA as an important part of TVA's first hydroelectric dam project, Norris Freeway provided a connection from the railroad in Coal Creek in Anderson County to Halls Crossroads in North Knox County. Built to transfer materials to the . . . — Map (db m151611) HM
32Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 2111 Terrace Avenue — The Village
On Terrace Avenue just east of 22nd Street, on the left when traveling east.
General Robert R. Neyland 1892~1962 From 1927 to 1930, this site was the home of General Robert R. Neyland, the University of Tennessee, Knoxville’s legendary football coach and a key commander in the Pacific theater during World War II. . . . — Map (db m152121) HM
33Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 79th New York Infantry (Highlanders) Monument
On Clinch Avenue at 16th Street, on the right when traveling east on Clinch Avenue.
The hands that once were raised in strife now clasp a brother's hand; and long as flows the tide of life — in peace, in toil, when war is rife — we shall as brother's stand, one heart, one soul for our free land. J. . . . — Map (db m150869) WM
34Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — A National Cemetery System
Near Tyson Street south of Bernard Avenue, on the right when traveling south.
Civil War Dead An estimated 700,000 Union and Confederate soldiers died in the Civil War between April 1861 and April 1865. As the death toll rose, the U.S. government struggled with the urgent but unplanned need to bury fallen Union troops. . . . — Map (db m100523) HM
35Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Address by President Lincoln — At the Dedication of The Gettysburg National Cemetery — November 19, 1863 —
Near Tyson Street south of Bernard Avenue, on the right when traveling south.
Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, . . . — Map (db m151245) HM WM
36Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 131 — Airplane Filling Station
On Clinton Highway, on the left when traveling west.
In 1931 to tap the market newly created by the evolution of transportation and mobility of Americans, brothers Henry and Elmer Nickle of Powell, Tennessee, opened a gasoline filling station in the unusual shape of an airplane. The airplane is one of . . . — Map (db m123112) HM
37Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Albert Milani — (1892-1972) — Knoxville History Project —
On Main Street Southwest at Walnut Street, on the right when traveling east on Main Street Southwest.
Italian-born sculptor Albert Milani's majestic marble eagles crown the Art Deco-style Tennessee Supreme Court building across the street, constructed in the early 1930s. Tennessee marble, perhaps Knoxville's most famous natural resource, has been . . . — Map (db m134878) HM
38Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Andrew Johnson Office Plaza
On South Gay Street at W Hill Ave, on the right when traveling north on South Gay Street.
Site of original Andrew Johnson Hotel constructed in 1927 Restoration by Aetna Casualty & Surety Company 1985. This property has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the U.S. Dept. of Interior — Map (db m4110) HM
39Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 9 — Archie Campbell / Chet Atkins — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
On West Summit Hill Drive at South Gay Street, on the right when traveling west on West Summit Hill Drive.
Archie Campbell Archie Campbell, a beloved comedian in the country music family, launched his career as an announcer for WNOX in 1937. After a brief stint on Chattanooga radio and service in World War II, Campbell returned to Knoxville and . . . — Map (db m118603) HM
40Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Back Door to Knoxville
On Chapman Hwy SW north of Woodlawn Pike SE, on the left when traveling north.
Fort Dickerson came under attack only once during the Civil War. in a prelude to the 1863 Siege of Knoxville, Federal and Confederate cavalry fought for possession of these heights. Its lofty presence, however, served as a deterrent until the end of . . . — Map (db m4316) HM
41Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 32 — Ball Camp
On Kingston Pike (U.S. 11, 70) at Cedar Bluff Road and Kingston Pike, on the right when traveling east on Kingston Pike.
About 3 miles NW, on Plumb Creek, Nicholas Ball, trapper and Long Hunter, established a camp which was used by westbound emigrants. Several years after founding this camp he was killed by Indians near Wells Station, Dec 23 1793. — Map (db m32615) HM
42Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E-83 — Battery Wiltsie
On West Vine Avenue east of Walnut Street, on the left when traveling west.
A large Federal earthwork was located back of Vine Avenue between Gay and Walnut Streets when General James Longstreet besieged Knoxville, Nov. 17-Dec. 4, 1863. The Federal defense line ran along this ridge from Fort Hill, (Surrey St. and Saxton . . . — Map (db m133841) HM
43Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Beauford Delaney — (Knoxville 1901-1979 Paris)
On Clinch Avenue at Henley Street (U.S. 70), on the left when traveling east on Clinch Avenue.
Internationally acclaimed modern artist Beauford Delaney was born in 1901 in a small wooden house on Knoxville’s East Vine Street. His father was a Methodist preacher and ran a barber shop to make ends meet. Beauford always loved to draw, even in . . . — Map (db m152124) HM
44Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Bleak House — Confederate Memorial Hall
Near Kingston Pike (U.S. 70) 0.4 miles east of Cherokee Boulevard, on the right when traveling east.
Bleak House, the home of Robert Houston Armstrong and Louisa Franklin Armstrong, is an Italianate-style mansion completed in 1858. During the Siege and Battle of Knoxville, November 17–December 4, 1863, the house was Confederate Gen. James . . . — Map (db m69488) HM
45Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 43 — Blount Mansion
On W Hill Ave west of State St.
Built in 1792, this was one of the first frame houses west of the Alleghenies. It served as both the residence of William Blount, Governor of the Territory South of the River Ohio, and as capitol of that territory, now the State of Tennessee. Born . . . — Map (db m82200) HM
46Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 126 — Byington
On Byington Beaver Ridge Road (Tennessee Route 131), on the left when traveling north.
Born circa 1862 in McMinn County, Tennessee, Moses Brownlow Byington Sr., moved to the Beaver Ridge community circa 1883. He was instrumental in establishing the town of Byington and two major landmarks: the Byington L & N Railroad Station around . . . — Map (db m114040) HM
47Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — C. Kermit "Buck" Ewing — (Bentleyville, Pennsylvania 1910-1976 Bali, Indonesia) — Knoxville History Project —
On South Gay Street at Main Street Southwest, on the right when traveling north on South Gay Street.
Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., Kermit "Buck" Ewing graduated from Carnegie Mellon University where he later taught art. Ewing started the University of Tennessee's visual arts program after moving to Knoxville in 1948. The department began with 35 . . . — Map (db m134900) HM
48Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Captain Charles T. McMillan II — United States Air Force
Near South Gay Street south of Main Street Southwest, on the right when traveling south.
Husband of Janice Means McMillan Fort Walton Beach, Florida Only son of Charles T. and Nora Long McMillan Corryton, Tennessee, Born Oct. 4, 1951 A Tennessee volunteer who gave his life while attempting to rescue 53 American hostages in Iran, on . . . — Map (db m134886) HM
49Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Catherine Wiley — (1879-1958) — Knoxville History Project —
On Union Avenue at South Gay Street, on the right when traveling east on Union Avenue.
Recognized as one of Knoxville’s most influential artists of the early 20th century, Catherine Wiley was born near Knoxville in Coal Creek (later Lake City, now Rocky Top). Her father worked in the coal industry before moving the family to Knoxville . . . — Map (db m134895) HM
50Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 31 — Cavett's Station
On Kingston Pike (U.S. 11 70) at Kingston Pike and Gallaher View Rd, on the right when traveling east on Kingston Pike.
About 1/2 mile north was this early fortified settlement. Here on Sept 25, 1793, Alexander Cavett and 12 other settlers were massacred by a Cherokee war party under Doublehead, one of the more savage chiefs of the tribe. — Map (db m32688) HM
51Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Charles Christopher Krutch — (1849-1934) — Knoxville History Project —
On South Gay Street north of Clinch Avenue, on the right when traveling south.
Born of German parents who settled in the area before the Civil War, Charles Christopher Krutch spent most of his life in Knoxville, the family home not far from here at 914 East Hill Avenue. Without formal training, Krutch worked throughout his . . . — Map (db m134896) HM
52Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 12 — Charlie Oaks — The New Market Train Wreck — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
On West Depot Avenue east of North Gay Street, on the right when traveling east.
Built in 1903, the Southern Depot became a venue for street musicians. Among them was Charlie Oaks, a blind man who some country music historians consider the first professional country musician. One of his best-known songs, New Market Train . . . — Map (db m134890) HM
53Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Chisholm Tavern
On W Hill Ave east of State St, on the left when traveling east.
. . . — Map (db m4108) HM
54Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Chisolm's Tavern — c 1790s
On West Hill Avenue at State Street, on the right when traveling west on West Hill Avenue.
Chisholm's Tavern was the name of a tavern (more defined as an Inn) in the 1790s located near the site of the Dwight Kessel Garage. The tavern was established by John Chisholm, an early settler important to the development of Knoxville. Chisholm was . . . — Map (db m118582) HM
55Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 88 — Civil War Hospital
On West Summit Hill Drive SW at Locust Street, on the left when traveling east on West Summit Hill Drive SW.
This building was used as a hospital for Confederate forces from their occupation of Knoxville until September, 1863; thereafter similarly by the Federals. It was formerly the main building for the Tennessee School for the Deaf, which was located on . . . — Map (db m107949) HM
56Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Civil War Knoxville
On Fort Dickerson Road west of Chapman Highway SW, on the left when traveling north.
What Brought the Armies of the Blue and the Gray to Knoxville? Knoxville was a pro-Confederate town of some 3700 persons when Tennessee seceded from the Union in June of 1861. It was the commercial and light manufacturing center of East . . . — Map (db m82201) HM
57Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Commemorating the Treaty of Holston
On South Gay Street, on the left when traveling south.
Signed by Gov. Wm. Blount and forty one Cherokee Chiefs and Warriors. On the site of the home of Gov. Blount, corner of Hill Ave. and State Street, Knoxville Tenn. July 2, 1791 — Map (db m81209) HM
58Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 86 — Confederate Cemetery
Near Bethel Ave..
During the Confederate War, 1861-1865, more than 1600 Confederate soldiers and about 50 Federal prisoners were buried here. About 20 Confederate veterans have been buried here since the war. The tall monument was erected in 1892 by the Ladies' . . . — Map (db m84327) HM
59Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 114 — Confederate States of America Camp Van Dorn — March 28 ~ July 28, 1862
On Western Avenue (Tennessee Route 62) at News Sentinel Drive, on the left when traveling west on Western Avenue.
Major General E. Kirby Smith of the Confederate Army established Camp Van Dorn 1 1/2 to 2 miles west of Knoxville Depot, near the banks of a little stream, Third Creek. It operated from March 28 through July 28, 1862. Most Georgia Confederate . . . — Map (db m143034) HM
60Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Cormac McCarthy — 1951 — Describing Market Square in his novel "Suttree" (1979) —
Near Wall Avenue west of Strong Street.
Market Street on Monday morning, Knoxville, Tennessee. In this year 1951. Suttree with his parcel of fish going past the rows of derelict trucks piled with produce and flowers, an atmosphere rank with country commerce, a reek of farmgoods in the . . . — Map (db m134192) HM
61Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Cowan, McClung and Company Building / Fidelity Building — National Register of Historic Places
On South Gay Street at Union Avenue, on the right when traveling north on South Gay Street.
The United States Department of Interior has placed this property on the National Register of Historic Places — Map (db m134894) HM
62Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — David Madden — 1940's — Describing Market Square in the postwar 1940's in his novel "Bijou" (1974) —
Near Wall Avenue west of Strong Street.
Lucius enjoyed passing through the ancient three-storey, block-long, brick Market House, its arched ceiling looming over them, a line of rough little tables running down the spine of the building where country women sold eggs, shelled walnuts, . . . — Map (db m134191) HM
63Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 67 — Death of Gen. William P. Sanders
On Kingston Pike (U.S. 11/70) 0.2 miles west of South Concord Street, on the right when traveling west.
Brig. Gen. William P. Sanders, using dismounted cavalry to hold off the Confederate advance from the west, was fatally wounded on this ridge, Nov. 18, 1863, dying the next day. — Map (db m76541) HM
64Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Death of General William P. Sanders — November 19, 1863
On South Gay Street at Cumberland Avenue, on the right when traveling south on South Gay Street.
U.S. General William P. Sanders died in the bridal suite of this building which was the Lamar House hotel at the time of the Civil War. On the previous afternoon Sanders was mortally wounded as his cavalry fought on Kingston Road, delaying the . . . — Map (db m118761) HM
65Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 117 — Desegregation of the University of Tennessee
On Circle Drive 0.1 miles south of Cumberland Avenue (U.S. 70), on the right when traveling south.
During a federal lawsuit in 1952, the University of Tennessee opened enrollment in the graduate and law programs of the institution to African Americans. Gene Mitchell Gray enrolled in graduate school, and Lincoln Blakeney enrolled in the College . . . — Map (db m118342) HM
66Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 19 — Elvis Presley — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
On Wall Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
At a small store on Market Square, a Knoxville record merchant helped launch the most famous career in musical history. Sam Morrison of Bell Sales Company chose to promote Elvis Presley's That's All Right, Mama by playing it on loudspeakers to the . . . — Map (db m118602) HM
67Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Fallen Military Heroes of Bearden High — A Tribute To Our Vietnam Dead
Near Cedar Spring Road.
GM2 (Seal) Carter M. Dean • CPL. James D. Travis • LT Charles H. Pilkington • Sgt. George E. Clark, Jr. • LT Frederick M. Rader III • SP-4 George E. Clark, Jr. • SGT. William B. Bishop II • CWO2 Stephen M. Hiscock • 2ND LT William H. . . . — Map (db m101375) WM
68Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Father Abram J. Ryan — (1838–1886)
On West Vine Avenue at Walnut Street, on the left when traveling west on West Vine Avenue.
Confederate chaplain, poet of the Confederacy, author of the requiem of the Lost Cause, “The Conquered Banner,” written at Knoxville soon after Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court House, April 9, 1865, and pastor of the Immaculate . . . — Map (db m115499) HM
69Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — First Baptist Church
On West Main Street west of Walnut Street, on the right when traveling east.
First Baptist Church Built 1924 has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior — Map (db m3786) HM
70Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 70 — Fort Byington
On Cumberland Avenue (U.S. 70) at Phillip Fulmer Way, on the right when traveling east on Cumberland Avenue.
"The Hill," dear to University of Tennessee alumni, was protected by a battery of Federal cannon and a brigade of infantry during Longstreet's siege of Knoxville, in Nov., 1863. A line of entrenchments ran across the west and south slopes of the . . . — Map (db m101787) HM
71Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Fort Dickerson — Civil War Earthen Fort
Near Fort Dickerson Road west of Chapman Highway, on the left when traveling north.
–1863– • One of sixteen Union Army earthen forts and battery positions protecting Knoxville, Nov. 1863–May 1865. • Named for Capt. Jonathan C. Dickerson, 112th Illinois Mounted Infantry who was killed near Cleveland, TN . . . — Map (db m4319) HM
72Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E-79 — Fort Dickerson
On Chapman Highway SE north of Woodlawn Pike SE, on the left when traveling north.
This Federal work was a major factor in the defense of Knoxville against Lt. Gen. Longstreet's assault in November, 1863. The fort and neighboring hills were manned by the 2nd Brigade(Cameron), 3rd Div., XXIII Corps, which repulsed by fire Wheeler's . . . — Map (db m62514) HM
73Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 82 — Fort Dickerson
Near Fort Dickerson Road.
Linking with other hills south of the river, this Union position was a major factor in the defense of Knoxville. Occupied on Nov. 1, 1863, by the 2nd Brig. (Col. Daniel Cameron), 3rd Div. XXIII corps, its gunfire broke up an attempt on Nov. 15-16 by . . . — Map (db m84480) HM
74Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Fort Dickerson — Defending Knoxville
On Fort Dickerson Road SW when traveling north.
On November 4, 1863, Confederate Gen. James Longstreet led two reinforced divisions from Chattanooga to attack Union Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside's garrison at Knoxville. Burnside confronted Longstreet below Knoxville, then withdrew on November 12. . . . — Map (db m100512) HM
75Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Fort Dickerson 1863–64
On Fort Dickerson Road west of Chapman Hignway SW, on the left when traveling north.
Fort Dickerson was one of the sixteen Federal forts and battery emplacements constructed around Knoxville during the Civil War. Temporary earthworks were thrown up here in November 1863. Designed by Capt. Orlando M. Poe, Chief Engineer of the Army . . . — Map (db m4315) HM
76Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 69 — Fort Sanders
On 16th Street at Cumberland Avenue (U.S. 70), on the left when traveling north on 16th Street.
Fort Sanders, a bastioned earthwork on the ridge two blocks north of here, was the scene of Gen. James Longstreet's unsuccessful assault upon the Federal defenses of Knoxville at dawn, Nov. 29, 1863. — Map (db m69491) HM
77Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Fort Sanders — Decisive Battle for Knoxville — Knoxville Campaign —
On South 17th Street at Highland Avenue, on the left when traveling south on South 17th Street.
(preface) On November 4, 1863, to divert Federal forces from Chattanooga, Confederate Gen. James Longstreet led two reinforced divisions from the city to attack Union Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside’s garrison in Knoxville. Burnside confronted . . . — Map (db m82209) HM
78Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Fort Sanders U.D.C. Monument
On 17th Street SW south of Laurel Avenue, on the left when traveling north.
To the memory of the Confederate soldiers Who fell in the assault on Fort Sanders November 29, 1863. Nor wreck, nor change, nor winter's blight Nor Time's remorseless doom Shall dim one ray of glory's light That gilds your glorious . . . — Map (db m76504) WM
79Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 74 — Forts Dickerson and Stanley
On Chapman Hwy SW south of E Martin Mill Pike SE, on the right when traveling north.
Fort Dickerson to the west and Fort Stanley to the east were the center two of four fortified heights held by the Federals south of the river during the siege of Knoxville, Nov. 17-Dec. 4, 1863. Maj. Gen. Jos. Wheeler C.S.A., made a vain effort to . . . — Map (db m62515) HM
80Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Frances Hodgson Burnett Home Site — 1869
Near Neyland Drive (Tennessee Route 158) 0.1 miles east of Walnut Street, on the right when traveling east.
Near this spot in 1869 was the early Knoxville home of Frances Hodgson Burnett, the English-born author of The Secret Garden, Sarah Crewe, and Little Lord Fauntleroy, who moved to Knoxville with her family when she was 15. When Frances . . . — Map (db m134855) HM
81Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — From Scuffletown to Sunsphere
Near Neyland Drive (Tennessee Route 158).
For six months in 1982, the world visited Knoxville's Second Creek valley. The World's Fair attracted more than 11 million visitors to the city. An amusement park was near the mouth of Second Creek and international pavilions filled 70 acres between . . . — Map (db m118571) HM
82Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Gay Street — The Center of Celebrations — Betsey Beeler Creekmore —
On South Gay Street, on the right when traveling south.
July 4, 1793, was a gala day in the tiny Territorial Capital. The Gazette ecstatically reported that, at 2 p.m., the newly arrived Federal troops paraded, and fired a cannon to salute; at 4 o'clock, all the citizens partook of an elegant . . . — Map (db m118451) HM
83Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 111 — General Clifton Bledsoe Cates — 1893-1970 — United States Marine Corps —
On Cumberland Ave. at James Agee Street, on the left when traveling east on Cumberland Ave..
Side A Born in Cates Landing, Tennessee, on August 31, 1893, Clifton B. Cates attended school in Tiptonville and the Missouri Military Academy in Mexico, Missouri. While excelling in varsity football and baseball, he received his law degree . . . — Map (db m101786) HM
84Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Governor John Sevier — The First Governor of Tennessee
Near Main Street Southwest at South Gay Street, on the right when traveling east.
John Sevier, ”Nolichucky Jack,” Sept. 23, 1744, Sept. 24, 1815. Pioneer, Soldier, Statesman and one of the founders of the Republic. (west side) The typical pioneer who conquered the wilderness and fashioned the State. . . . — Map (db m134861) HM WM
85Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Hubris Building
On South Gay Street south of West Jackson Avenue, on the right when traveling south.
The Hubris Building is in the National register's Southern Terminal and Warehouse Historic District. This area flourished during the shipping and migration boom of the late 1700's and early 1800's, due to its proximity to the railroads. The building . . . — Map (db m134892) HM
86Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — In Grateful Memory to the Defenders of Cavett Blockhouse
Near Broome Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Upon this spot stood the house of Alexander Cavett who was murdered together with two men and the Cavett family of twelve, September 25th, 1793, after heroic resistance against a combined Creek and Cherokee force numbering one thousand warriors, . . . — Map (db m109336) HM
87Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — James Agee — 1916 — Describing Market Square in 1916 in his novel "A Death in the Family" (1957) —
Near Wall Avenue west of Strong Street.
They turned aside into a darker street, where the fewer faces looked more secret, and came into the odd, shaky light of Market Square. It was almost empty at this hour, but here and there, along the pavement streaked with horse urine, a wagon . . . — Map (db m134190) HM
88Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 115 — James Park House
On Walnut Street at Cumberland Avenue, on the right when traveling north on Walnut Street.
The Foundation for this house was laid by Governor John Sevier on a block bought from Knoxville founder James White in 1797. James Park, pioneer merchant and Knoxville's second mayor, completed the main house in 1812. His son, Dr. James Park . . . — Map (db m118398) HM
89Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 101 — James Rufus Agee
On Cumberland Ave. at James Agee Street, on the right when traveling west on Cumberland Ave..
Born in Knoxville November 27, 1909, Agee was well-known and respected in the fields of journalism, poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and film. He won a Pulitzer Prize posthumously in 1957 for A Death in the Family, a novel based on his youth in . . . — Map (db m101785) HM
90Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — James White — Founder of Knoxville
On Women's Basketball Hall of Fame Drive north of East Hill Drive, on the left when traveling north.
Erected the city's first dwelling in this block in 1786. White's Fort was later constructed to surround the house. Knoxville was named for Henry Knox, Washington's Secretary of War, and was chosen by Governor William Blount as capital of the . . . — Map (db m82210) HM
91Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E-80 — John Sevier Farmstead
On Governor John Sevier Highway (Tennessee Route 168) east of Neubert Springs Road, on the left when traveling west.
Marble Springs was the farmstead of John Sevier. Tennessee’s first governor (1796–1801 and 1803–1809). While Sevier used the farm as a retreat where he entertained guests, it was originally a frontier station used by immigrants on the . . . — Map (db m62516) HM
92Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Katherine Sherrill Sevier — Bonny Kate
Near Main Street Southwest at South Gay Street, on the right when traveling east.
Died in Russellville, Ala. October 7, 1836 (south side)Historical Katherine Sherrill Sevier, Bonny Kate, came when a girl with her parents, to Tennessee from North Carolina; married John Sevier August 14, 1780 when she was 26 years . . . — Map (db m134862) HM
93Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Knox County Spanish American War Monument
Near Main Street Southwest at South Gay Street, on the right when traveling east.
This monument erected by veterans of the war with Spain and members of their auxiliary as a memorial to their departed comrades of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps – every one of them a volunteer – who served from 1898 to 1902 in Cuba, . . . — Map (db m134880) WM
94Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Knox County World War II Memorial
On West Main Street, on the right when traveling east.
In memory of those from Knox County who gave their lives in the Second World War — Map (db m101829) WM
95Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Knoxville — First Capital of Tennessee — 1796-1807, 1807-1812, 1817-1818 —
On South Gay Street south of Main Street Southwest, on the right when traveling south.
(north side) Knoxville, previously the capital of the Southwest Territory, 1792-1796, was designated as the first capital of the State of Tennessee by the Constitutional Convention of 1796. Near this site the first General Assembly of the . . . — Map (db m134871) HM
96Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1E 87 — Knoxville College
On Knoxville College Drive at Alfreda Delaney Street, on the left when traveling east on Knoxville College Drive.
This liberal arts institution was opened in Knoxville by the United Presbyterian Church in 1875. It crowns the ridge from which the main batteries of Lt. James Longstreet's attacking force shelled the Federal Fort Sanders about 1800 yards to the . . . — Map (db m107952) HM
97Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Knoxville National Cemetery
On Bernard Avenue at Tyson Street, on the right when traveling east on Bernard Avenue.
Civil War Knoxville In an 1861 referendum, 81 percent of East Tennessee voters rejected secession. Many in Knoxville, the region's largest city, supported the Union. During the Civil War, 30,000 East Tennesseans joined the U.S. Army. When . . . — Map (db m100498) WM
98Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Knoxville: A Divided City — Simultaneous Union and Confederate Rallies
On Main Street east of Walnut Street, on the right when traveling east.
In April 1861, before Tennessee seceded, Knoxville was deeply divided. Excited residents gathered in the streets and held rallies to sway public opinion. These divisions were never more visible then than during simultaneous Union and Confederate . . . — Map (db m100524) HM
99Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — Knoxville's Market House
On Union Avenue at Market Street, on the left when traveling east on Union Avenue.
Knoxville's first Market House, opened on Main Avenue between Walnut and Market Streets in 1816, and the second and third on this square in 1854 and 1897, long served for the sale of farm products and as a colorful center of civic life. In 1863-64 . . . — Map (db m98566) HM
100Tennessee (Knox County), Knoxville — 1 — Knoxville's Old Custom House / Fiddlin' Bob Taylor — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
On Clinch Avenue at Market Street, on the left when traveling west on Clinch Avenue.
Knoxville's Old Custom House You are standing in front of Knoxville's first federal building, the Old Custom House (1874). The Custom House originally housed the federal court, excise offices, post office, and later, Tennessee Valley . . . — Map (db m118517) HM

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Nov. 25, 2020