Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
By 1795, what is now Kingston Pike went from James White's Fort to the western end of the county. Beyond the western end of the county, this route became known as the Nashville Road. By 1807, the Knoxville Gazette reported that 200 settlers a day were passing through the city on their way further west.
106 North Castle Heights Avenue Lebanon TN 37087: Lebanon: Owned by the City Of Lebanon and now serves as personnel offices. 17: Pickett Chapel Methodist Church: Pickett Chapel Methodist Church: April 18, 1977 : E. Market St.
SR 168 takes a more northerly route and passes through New Hopewell before crossing a bridge over the French Broad River to re enter Knoxville and pass through an industrial area. The highway then has an intersection with Strawberry Plains Pike, which leads to an interchange with I-40 (Exit 398), before following the banks of the Holston River ...
South Knoxville is the section of Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, that lies south of the Tennessee River. It is concentrated along Chapman Highway ( US 441 ), Alcoa Highway ( US 129 ), Maryville Pike ( SR 33 ), Sevierville Pike, and adjacent roads, and includes the neighborhoods of Lindbergh Forest , Island Home Park , Old Sevier, South ...
Oakwood got its beginning when C.B. Atkin bought farm and forest land approximately three miles north of the city center for industrial and suburban residential development. Nearby were the yards of Southern Railway, Knoxville's largest employer at the time, and Atkin's development was aimed largely at targeting the some 1,600 employees.
The Ramsey House is a two-story stone house in Knox County, Tennessee, United States.Also known as Swan Pond, the house was constructed in 1797 by English architect Thomas Hope for Colonel Francis Alexander Ramsey (1764–1820), whose family operated a plantation at the site until the U.S. Civil War. [1]
Knoxville: 0.0: 0.0: US 441 / SR 33 (SR 71/Broadway) Southern terminus: I-640 / US 25W – Nashville, Asheville: I-640/US 25W exit 6: US 441 south / SR 33 south (SR 71/Broadway) Interchange; northbound exit and southbound entrance from Broadway: Corryton: SR 131 (Tazewell Pike/Emory Road) – Plainview, Halls Crossroads 15.4: 24.8
The home was used by Confederate Generals James Longstreet and Lafayette McLaws as their headquarters from November 17 to December 4 of 1863 during the Battle of Knoxville. Three Confederate sharpshooters who were stationed in the house's tower were killed by Union cannonballs.