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Deer Lodge is an unincorporated community in Morgan County, Tennessee, United States. It is located along Tennessee State Route 329 5.8 miles (9.3 km) west-southwest of Sunbright . [ 2 ] Deer Lodge has a post office with ZIP code 37726, which opened on April 16, 1886.
The Tennessee Division of Archaeology maintains a database of all archaeological sites recorded within the state of Tennessee.As of January 1, 2009 this catalog contains more than 22,000 sites, including both prehistoric and historic resources.
State Route 329 (SR 329), also known as Deer Lodge Highway, is a 9.2-mile-long (14.8 km) north–south state highway in Morgan County, Tennessee. It is the primary road in and out of the community of Deer Lodge .
The group of men freed the massive set of antlers. A shoulder mount of the buck was made by a local taxidermist and hung in the nearby Kent Canadian Club. It hung on the wall of the private hunting club for the next 40 years. [2] The world-record class mount was virtually anonymous to the public and had never been officially scored until 1983.
The Harrow Road Cafe, a restaurant built in the 1980s, was named for a restaurant that existed at Rugby in the 1880s, although its original design is unknown. The Cafe was destroyed by fire on September 4, 2020. The Rugby Printing Works, which originally stood at nearby Deer Lodge, was moved to Rugby in the 1970s. [7]
It passes through Chestnut Ridge before it intersects the southern end of SR 329 south of Deer Lodge and continues east to intersect with SR 298. SR 62 continues eastward and goes through Lancing and becomes even curvier, before coming to an intersection with US 27/SR 29 (Morgan County Highway) north of Wartburg. It becomes concurrent with US ...
Lancing is an unincorporated community in Morgan County, Tennessee, United States.Lancing is located along Tennessee State Route 62 and the Norfolk Southern Railway 3.35 miles (5.39 km) west-northwest of Wartburg, and northeast of the Catoosa Wildlife Management Area. [2]
Oliver Springs was founded in 1821 as Winter's Gap. [1] It was named for its first permanent settler of European descent, Major Moses Winters, who had settled in the area before 1799.