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Jasper is a town in and the county seat of Marion County, Tennessee, United States. The population was 3,612 at the 2020 census. [ 6 ] The town was formed in 1820 from lands acquired from Betsy Pack (1770–1851), daughter of Cherokee Chief John Lowery.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Marion County, Tennessee, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map. [1]
View looking east across the intersection of Tennessee State Route 28 and Tennessee State Route 283 in Whitwell. The Cumberland Plateau's Walden Ridge section is in the distant background. SR 28 begins just south of Jasper at an interchange with I-24 / SR 27 (Exit 155) in Marion County .
Travis Randall McDonough, United States District Judge, Eastern District of Tennessee; John T. Raulston, Judge who presided over the Scopes Trial in 1925. Sequoyah, Cherokee scholar, lived in the Marion County area. Peter Turney, Governor of Tennessee and Chief Justice of the Tennessee Supreme Court, was born in Jasper. Eric Westmoreland, NFL ...
U.S. Route 411 (US 411) is an alternate parallel-highway associated with US 11.It extends for about 309.7 miles (498.4 km) from US 78 in Leeds, Alabama, to US 25W/US 70 in Newport, Tennessee.
I-75 near Jasper, FL I-16 in Macon, GA I-20 in Madison, GA I-85 near Jefferson, GA I-985 / US 23 / SR 365 in Gainesville, GA US 19 / SR 9 in rural Lumpkin County, GA US 64 / US 74 near Murphy, NC US 19 / US 74 near Andrews, NC I-140 in Alcoa, TN: North end: I-40 in Knoxville, TN: Location; Country: United States: States: Florida, Georgia, North ...
SR 156 begins in Franklin County atop the western part of the Cumberland Plateau near Sewanee at an intersection with U.S. Route 41A/Tennessee State Route 15/SR 56.It winds its way southeastward across a remote section of the plateau, passing through Franklin State Forest along the way and crossing into Marion County after straddling the county line for a few miles.
The triangle marker design was the only design until November 1983, when Tennessee divided its routes into primary routes and secondary or "arterial" routes with the adoption of a functional classification system, creating a primary marker and making the triangle marker the secondary marker; primary marker signs were posted in 1984. [2]