Marker Logo HMdb.org THE HISTORICAL
MARKER DATABASE
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
202 entries match your criteria. The first 100 are listed.                                               Next 100 

 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Knoxville, Tennessee

 
Clickable Map of Blount 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 Blount County, TN (68) Knox County, TN (240) Loudon County, TN (24) Monroe County, TN (41) Sevier County, TN (111) Graham County, NC (23) Swain County, NC (68)  BlountCounty(68) Blount County (68)  KnoxCounty(240) Knox County (240)  LoudonCounty(24) Loudon County (24)  MonroeCounty(41) Monroe County (41)  SevierCounty(111) Sevier County (111)  GrahamCountyNorth Carolina(23) Graham County (23)  SwainCounty(68) Swain County (68)
Maryville is the county seat for Blount County
Knoxville is in Blount County
      Blount County (68)  
ADJACENT TO BLOUNT COUNTY
      Knox County (240)  
      Loudon County (24)  
      Monroe County (41)  
      Sevier County (111)  
      Graham County, North Carolina (23)  
      Swain County, North Carolina (68)  
 
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 Tennessee, Blount County, Knoxville — 1E 18 — James Gillespy's Fort
2 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 2111 Terrace Avenue — The Village
3 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 400 Mulvaney Street — Nikki Giovanni
4 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 79th New York Infantry (Highlanders) Monument
5 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — A National Cemetery System
6 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Address by President Lincoln — At the Dedication of The Gettysburg National Cemetery — November 19, 1863 —
7 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 131 — Airplane Filling Station
8 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Albert Milani — (1892-1972) — Knoxville History Project —
Paid Advertisement
9 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Alfred Buffat Homeplace
10 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Andrew Johnson Office Plaza
11 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 9 — Archie Campbell / Chet Atkins — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
12 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Asbury Methodist Church
13 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Back Door to Knoxville
14 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 32 — Ball Camp
15 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E-83 — Battery Wiltsie
16 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Beauford Delaney — (Knoxville 1901-1979 Paris)
17 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Beauford Delaney — (Knoxville 1901-1979 Paris)
Paid Advertisement
18 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Beauford Delaney — (Knoxville 1901-1979 Paris)
19 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 129 — Beauford Delaney / Joseph Delaney — 1901-1979 / 1904-1991
20 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Bleak House — Confederate Memorial Hall
21 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 43 — Blount Mansion
22 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Buffat Mill
23 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Burial Mound
24 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Burn Memorial
25 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 126 — Byington
26 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — C. Kermit "Buck" Ewing — (Bentleyville, Pennsylvania 1910-1976 Bali, Indonesia) — Knoxville History Project —
Paid Advertisement
27 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Captain Charles T. McMillan II — United States Air Force
28 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Catherine Wiley — (1879-1958) — Knoxville History Project —
29 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Catherine Wiley — (Coal Creek [now Rocky Top], Tennessee 1879-1958 Norristown, Pennsylvania)
30 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 31 — Cavett's Station
31 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Central United Methodist Church
32 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Charles Christopher Krutch — (1849-1934)
33 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Charles Krutch — (South Carolina 1849 - 1943 Knoxville)
34 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Charles Krutch — (South Carolina 1849 - 1943 Knoxville)
35 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 12 — Charlie Oaks — The New Market Train Wreck — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
Paid Advertisement
36 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Chisholm Tavern
37 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Chisolm's Tavern — c 1790s
38 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 88 — Civil War Hospital
39 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Civil War Knoxville
40 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Commemorating the Treaty of Holston
41 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 86 — Confederate Cemetery
42 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 114 — Confederate States of America Camp Van Dorn — March 28 ~ July 28, 1862
43 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Cormac McCarthy — 1951 — Describing Market Square in his novel "Suttree" (1979) —
44 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Cowan, McClung and Company Building / Fidelity Building — National Register of Historic Places
Paid Advertisement
45 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Creation of the Southeastern Conference
46 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — David Madden — 1940's — Describing Market Square in the postwar 1940's in his novel "Bijou" (1974) —
47 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 67 — Death of Gen. William P. Sanders — Reported missing
48 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Death of General William P. Sanders — November 19, 1863
49 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 117 — Desegregation of the University of Tennessee
50 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 13 — Dolly Parton — Cradle of Country Music Tour
51 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Earl O'Dell Henry — (1911-1945)
52 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Earl O'Dell Henry — (1911-1945)
53 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 19 — Elvis Presley — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
Paid Advertisement
54 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Fallen Military Heroes of Bearden High — A Tribute To Our Vietnam Dead
55 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Father Abram J. Ryan — (1838–1886)
56 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 122 — First African American Church
57 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — First Baptist Church
58 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 38 — First Presbyterian Church
59 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 24 — Fort Adair
60 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 70 — Fort Byington
61 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Fort Dickerson — Civil War Earthen Fort
62 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Fort Dickerson — Defending Knoxville
Paid Advertisement
63 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 82 — Fort Dickerson
64 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E-79 — Fort Dickerson
65 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Fort Dickerson 1863–64
66 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Fort Higley — Decisive Battle for Knoxville — Knoxville Campaign —
67 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Fort Sanders — Decisive Battle for Knoxville — Knoxville Campaign —
68 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 69 — Fort Sanders
69 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Fort Sanders U.D.C. Monument
70 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 74 — Forts Dickerson and Stanley
71 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 112 — Fountain City United Methodist Church — Fountain Head Campground
Paid Advertisement
72 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Frances Hodgson Burnett Home Site — 1869
73 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — From Scuffletown to Sunsphere — Reported permanently removed
74 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Gay Street — The Center of Celebrations — Betsey Beeler Creekmore —
75 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Gay Street and the Civil Rights Movement
76 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 111 — General Clifton Bledsoe Cates — 1893-1970 — United States Marine Corps —
77 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Governor John Sevier — The First Governor of Tennessee
78 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Herbert H. Hoover — 1912 - 1952
79 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Hubris Building
80 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Hugh Tyler — (1885 - 1976)
Paid Advertisement
81 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — In Grateful Memory to the Defenders of Cavett Blockhouse
82 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Indian Mound
83 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — James Agee — 1916 — Describing Market Square in 1916 in his novel "A Death in the Family" (1957) —
84 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 115 — James Park House
85 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 101 — James Rufus Agee
86 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — James White — Founder of Knoxville
87 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E-80 — John Sevier Farmstead
88 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Journal Arcade Building
89 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Katherine Sherrill Sevier — Bonny Kate
90 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Knox County Spanish American War Monument
91 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Knox County World War II Memorial
92 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Knoxville — First Capital of Tennessee — 1796-1807, 1807-1812, 1817-1818 —
93 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 132 — Knoxville — Birthplace of Mountain Dew
94 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 87 — Knoxville College
95 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Knoxville National Cemetery
96 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Knoxville: A Divided City — Simultaneous Union and Confederate Rallies
97 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Knoxville's Market House
98 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1 — Knoxville's Old Custom House / Fiddlin' Bob Taylor — Cradle of Country Music Tour —
99 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — Krutch Park — Charles E. Krutch — 1887-1981 —
100 Tennessee, Knox County, Knoxville — 1E 118 — Land Grant University

202 entries matched your criteria. The first 100 are listed above. Next 100 ⊳
 
 
CeraNet Cloud Computing sponsors the Historical Marker Database.
This website earns income from purchases you make after using our links to Amazon.com. We appreciate your support.
Paid Advertisement
Apr. 18, 2024