Historical Marker Search

You searched for Postal Code: 37857

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM25FU_rogersville-engagements_Rogersville-TN.html
In June 1861, 1,250 Hawkins County residents voted against secession, while 835 voted in favor. Rural residents tended to have Unionist sympathies but townspeople such as those in Rogersville sided with the Confederacy. Confederate forces often…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM25FT_the-battle-of-big-creek_Rogersville-TN.html
Along Big Creek the 2nd Illinois Artillery spent an uncomfortable night as a cold rain fell in the early morning hours of November 6, 1863. Nearby, under orders to strike the Union camp that morning, two Confederate brigades were crossing the Hols…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YX4_the-hickory-cove_Rogersville-TN.html
This hill-locked body of land was discovered in 1774 by Castleton Brooks, onetime Long Hunter, who settled here in 1775 and was killed by Indians in 1777. A fort was here in 1775, under the command of Captain Robert Kyle.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UBN_clay-kenner-house-historical_Rogersville-TN.html
John G. Bynum and his wife Nancy Bradley Phipps Bynum, owned this house during the Civil War. The value of his land and slaves in 1860 totaled $140,000, an enormous sum for the time. Bynum helped raise the county's first Confederate unit, the Hawk…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UBA_hawkins-county-milestone-historical_Rogersville-TN.html
Right To commemorate John Carter, sturdy pioneer, first merchant after whom this valley is named. Left To commemorate Benjamin Hawkins of North Carolina, Senator of the United States, after whom this county is named. Back This monument mar…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UB9_mitchells-hollow-historical_Rogersville-TN.html
About two miles southwest, about 1784, young Joab Mitchell, who had successfully made the trip to the North Fork of the Holston bringing salt for the besieged garrison at Big Creek Fort, was ambushed and mortally wounded by Indians. Beating them o…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1QA2_hawkins-county-tennessee_Rogersville-TN.html
This county was both Spencer County, State of Franklin, and Hawkins County, State of North Carolina 1786 - 1788, and became Hawkins County, Tennessee in 1796.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1QA1_rogersville-town-well_Rogersville-TN.html
The Hawkins County Chapter of the Association for the Preservation of Tennessee Antiquities, (A.P.T.A.), has chosen to fund and erect this monument to commemorate the nearby site of the original town well in Rogersville. This marble block was q…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1Q9F_alexander-peter-stewart_Rogersville-TN.html
Born here, Oct. 2, 1821: graduate USMA, 1842; resigned 1845,and a professor Cumberland U., and U. of Nashville until 1861. Appointed major, CSA, quickly advanced to brigadier general; Successively to corps command, Army of Tenn., and twice wounded…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1Q93_michael-looney_Rogersville-TN.html
7.9 miles north was the homestead of this pioneer, veteran of Lord Dunmore's War, and of the Revolution, originally from Botetourt County, Va. Among his descendants were Joseph Emerson Brown, governor of Georgia during the Civil War, and his son, …
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