enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rutledge, Tennessee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rutledge,_Tennessee

    Rutledge Middle School in Rutledge is the location of the Grainger County Tomato Festival, which celebrates the tomato, Grainger County's most popular cash crop, annually since 1992. Around thirty-thousand festival-goers across the state of Tennessee and the United States gather to witness events about the county's heritage and its significant ...

  3. List of newspapers in Tennessee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_newspapers_in_Tennessee

    Bibliography of Tennessee Bibliographies: Newspapers, Nashville: Tennessee Secretary of State "Tennessee". CJR's Guide to Online News Startups. New York: Columbia Journalism Review. "Historical Newspapers: Tennessee Newspapers". Research Guides. University of Memphis Libraries. "Tennessee Newspapers". Historical U.S. Newspapers Online. Library ...

  4. Remains found in 2010 identified as Nashville man who ...

    www.aol.com/news/remains-found-2010-identified...

    Marcus Rutledge vanished from Nashville, Tennessee in June 1998. Remains found off Pecan Valley Rd in 2010 have just been identified as belonging to him. The Metro Nashville Police Department has ...

  5. Grainger County, Tennessee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grainger_County,_Tennessee

    Grainger County would be established into a county from Knox and Hawkins counties by the North Carolina state legislature on April 22, 1796, [9] the year Tennessee became the sixteenth state of the United States. [10] It is named for Mary Grainger Blount, [11] the wife of William Blount, making it the only county in Tennessee named for a woman ...

  6. Battle of Bean's Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Bean's_Station

    The Confederate force paused at Rutledge until December 8, then continued to Rogersville where it halted from December 9–14. Many of Longstreet's soldiers hoped to return to Virginia, and were disappointed to remain in Tennessee. Because the men were poorly supplied during the retreat, they plundered local farmers with a heavy hand.

  7. Henderson Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henderson_Chapel_African...

    Henderson Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church is a historic African-American church on Church Street in Rutledge, Tennessee. The church building was constructed in 1890. It is a frame building with a gable entrance, a vernacular design that is commonly seen in rural African-American churches built in the twentieth century. [2]

  8. A. W. Davis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._W._Davis

    Davis is best known for his All-American college career at the University of Tennessee (UT). He was known by several nicknames, including the "Rutledge Rifle" and "The Man With the Golden Arm." [1] Davis, a 6"7' center, came to Tennessee from Rutledge, Tennessee, where he once scored 71 points in a game.

  9. The Tennessean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tennessean

    The Tennessean, Nashville's daily newspaper, traces its roots back to the Nashville Whig, a weekly paper that began publication on September 1, 1812. The paper underwent various mergers and acquisitions throughout the 19th century, emerging as the Nashville American. The first issue of the Nashville Tennessean was