Sevierville, Tennessee

Sevierville, Tennessee
City

Sevier County Courthouse
Motto: "Your hometown in the Smokies."

Location of Sevierville in Sevier County, Tennessee.
Coordinates: 35°52′39″N 83°34′12″W / 35.87750°N 83.57000°W / 35.87750; -83.57000Coordinates: 35°52′39″N 83°34′12″W / 35.87750°N 83.57000°W / 35.87750; -83.57000
Country United States
State Tennessee
County Sevier
Founded 1795
Incorporated 1901
Named for John Sevier
Government
  Mayor Bryan Atchley (R)
Area
  Total 20.0 sq mi (51.8 km2)
  Land 19.9 sq mi (51.5 km2)
  Water 0.1 sq mi (0.3 km2)  0.50%
Elevation 903 ft (275 m)
Population (2010)
  Total 14,807
  Estimate (2016)[1] 16,665
  Density 829/sq mi (236.8/km2)
  Estimate
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
  Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Area code(s) 865 Exchanges: 428,429,453,774,908.
FIPS code 47-67120[2]
GNIS feature ID 1307042[3]
Website http://www.seviervilletn.org

Sevierville /səˈvɪərvɪl/ is a city in and the county seat of Sevier County, Tennessee,[4] located in Eastern Tennessee. The population was 14,807 at the 2010 United States Census and 16,355 according to the 2014 census estimate.

Geography

Sevierville is located at 35°52′39″N 83°34′12″W / 35.87750°N 83.57000°W / 35.87750; -83.57000 (35.878, -83.570).[5] In the town's eastern section, the Little Pigeon River is formed by the confluence of its East Fork and Middle Fork, both of which flow down from their sources high in the Great Smoky Mountains. Five miles (8 km) downstream to the west, the Little Pigeon absorbs its West Fork before turning north and flowing for another five miles (8 km) to its mouth along the French Broad River. Sevierville is centered on the stretch of land between these two junctions of the East and Middle Fork and the West Fork, known traditionally as Forks-of-the-Pigeon or Forks-of-the-River.

The confluence of the West Fork of the Little Pigeon River (left) and the Little Pigeon River (right)

Situated in an area where the Foothills of the Great Smokies give way to the Tennessee Valley, Sevierville has long acted as a nexus between Knoxville to the north and the Appalachian towns in the mountains to the south. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is located approximately ten miles south of Sevierville.

Due to its hilly terrain and the relatively poor roads of 19th-century Sevier County, a number of smaller communities developed independently along the outskirts of Sevierville. These include Harrisburg and Fair Garden to the east and Catlettsburg and Boyd's Creek to the north. In addition, the United States Postal Service associates the name "Sevierville" with ZIP codes for much of Sevier County, including the town of Pittman Center and other geographically extensive areas located outside Sevierville's city limits.

Several major state and federal highways intersect in Sevierville. U.S. Route 441, commonly called "The Parkway," connects Sevierville with Knoxville to the north and the national park and Cherokee, North Carolina to the south. The Sevierville section of U.S. 441 has been named "Forks-of-the-River Parkway." State Route 66, also called Winfield Dunn Parkway, connects Sevierville with Interstate 40 to the north. U.S. Route 411 traverses Sevierville from east to west, connecting Sevierville with Blount and Cocke counties. State Route 416 connects Sevierville with Pittman Center and U.S. Route 321 at the park boundary to the southeast.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 20.0 square miles (52 km2), of which 19.9 square miles (52 km2) is land and 0.1 square miles (0.26 km2) (0.50%) is water.

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
1870159
188025359.1%
189028311.9%
1910675
192077615.0%
193088213.7%
19401,16131.6%
19501,62039.5%
19602,89078.4%
19702,661−7.9%
19804,55671.2%
19907,17857.6%
200011,75763.8%
201014,80725.9%
Est. 201616,665[1]12.5%
Sources:[6][7]
Sevierville City Hall

As of the 2010 United States Census, there were 14,807 people residing in the city. The population density was 613.5 people per square mile. The racial makeup of the city was 88.9% White, 1.5% African American, 0.6% Native American, 1.3% Asian, 1.7% from two or more races, and 10.3% Hispanic or Latino.

The median income for a household in the city was $36,919. The per capita income for the city was $20,907. About 18.3% of the population were below the poverty line.

Sevierville is the principal city of the Sevierville, Tennessee Micropolitan Statistical Area which includes all of Sevier County and is a component of the Knoxville-Sevierville-La Follette Combined Statistical Area.

History

Tennessee Historical Commission sign marking the site of the McMahan Indian Mound, 1200-1500 A.D.

Native Americans of the Woodland period were among the first human inhabitants of what is now Sevierville, arriving sometime around 200 A.D. and living in villages scattered around the Forks-of-the-River area.[8]

Between 1200 and 1500 A.D., during the Dallas Phase of the Mississippian period, a group of Native Americans established McMahan Mound Site, a relatively large village centered on a platform mound and village site surrounded by a palisade just above the confluence of the West Fork and the Little Pigeon River. This mound was approximately 16 feet (5 m) high and 240 feet (73 m) across. An excavation in 1881 unearthed burials, arrow-points, a marble pipe, glass beads, pottery, and engraved objects.[9] At the time of this first excavation, the mound was located on a farm owned by the McMahan family, and was thus given the name "McMahan Indian Mound".

By the early 18th century, the Cherokee controlled much of the Tennessee side of the Smokies, establishing a series of settlements along the Little Tennessee River. A section of the Great Indian Warpath forked at the mouth of Boyd's Creek, just north of Sevierville. The main branch crossed the French Broad and continued along Dumplin Creek to the Nolichucky basin in northeastern Tennessee. The other branch, known as the Tuckaleechee and Southeastern Trail, turned south along the West Fork of the Little Pigeon River. This second branch forked again at modern-day Pigeon Forge, with the main trail turning east en route to Little River and the other branch, known as the Indian Gap Trail, crossing the crest of the Smokies to the south and descending into the Oconaluftee area of North Carolina.[10] The various Cherokee trails criss-crossing Sevier Co. brought the first Euro-American traders and settlers to the area.

Early Euro-American settlement

Plaque honoring Sevierville pioneer Spencer Clack at the Sevier County Courthouse

European long hunters and traders arrived in the Sevierville area in the mid-18th century. Isaac Thomas (1735?-1818), the most notable of these early traders, was well respected by the Cherokee, and may have lived at the Overhill town of Chota at one time.[11] Europeans like Thomas were mainly in search of animal furs, for which they exchanged manufactured goods.

As settlers began to trickle into East Tennessee, relations with the Cherokee began to turn hostile. During the Revolutionary War, the Cherokee, who had aligned themselves with the British, launched sporadic attacks against the sparse settlements in the Tennessee Valley. In December 1780, Col. John Sevier, fresh off a victory over the British at King's Mountain, launched a punitive expedition against the Cherokee. Sevier routed the Cherokee at the Battle of Boyd's Creek and proceeded to destroy several Cherokee settlements along the Little Tennessee.

A temporary truce secured by James White in 1783 led to an influx of Euro-American settlers in the French Broad valley.[12] Hugh Henry (1756–1838) erected a small fort near the mouth of Dumplin Creek in 1782 known as Henry's Station. He was joined the following year by Samuel Newell (1754–1841), who established Newell's Station along Boyd's Creek, and Joshua Gist, who settled near the creek's mouth. Other early forts in the area included Willson's Station at the confluence of the East and Middle Fork of the Little Pigeon and Wear's Fort at the junction of the Southeastern and Tuckaleechee Trail and Indian Gap Trail.[13][14] The Cherokee signed away all rights to what is now Sevier County in the 1785 Treaty of Dumplin, which was negotiated at Henry's Station.

In 1783, Isaac Thomas established a farm, trading post, and tavern at the confluence of the West Fork and the Little Pigeon River. He was joined shortly thereafter by Spencer Clack (1740–1832) and James McMahan, and a community known as "Forks of the Little Pigeon" developed around them. In 1789, Reverend Richard Wood (1756–1831) established Forks-of-the-River Baptist Church, which reported a congregation of 22 in 1790. By 1795, the congregation had 94 members.[15]

Antebellum Sevierville

The French Broad River at the Brabson's Ferry Plantation site near Boyd's Creek

Sevier County was created in 1794 and named after John Sevier. At a meeting at Thomas's house the following year, the Forks-of-the-Little-Pigeon area was chosen as the county seat, and renamed "Sevierville."[16] James McMahan donated a 25-acre (100,000 m2) tract upon which to erect a townsquare. This tract was parceled out into lots of 0.5 acres (2,000 m2) upon which the purchaser was required to build a brick, framed, or stone structure.[17]

The first Sevier County Courthouse was built in 1796. Before its construction, according to local legend, court was held in a flea-infested abandoned stable. Irritated lawyers were said to have paid an unknown person a bottle of whiskey to burn down the stable, forcing the new county to build an actual courthouse.[18]

As the county grew, several large farms were established in the fertile Boyd's Creek area. In 1792, Andrew Evans purchased a tract of land near the mouth of Boyd's Creek and built a ferry near the site of the old ford. In 1798, Evans sold the farm to John Brabson, and it was henceforth known as the Brabson's Ferry Plantation. In the early 1790s, Thomas Buckingham established a large farm between Boyd's Creek and Sevierville. Buckingham went on to become the county's first sheriff. In the early 19th century, Timothy Chandler and his son John Chandler (1786–1875) established the Wheatlands plantation in Boyds Creek.[19]

As towns situated along the French Broad are connected via waterway to New Orleans, a flatboat trade flourished along the river in the early 19th century. In 1793, James Hubbert, who lived along Dumplin Creek, established Hubbert's Flat Landing to trade with flatboats moving up and down the river.[20]

In the early 19th century, Knoxville and Asheville were connected via Route 17, a crude road which followed the banks of the French Broad. This new road gave Tennessee's cattle drovers greater access to markets along the east coast. In 1820, a stagecoach road connected Sevierville with Maryville to the west.[21] Sevierville's situation as a county seat along these early roads helped it to grow. By 1833, the town had a population of 150, including two doctors, two carpenters, a tanner, two tailors, a shoemaker, three stores, a hatter, two taverns, and two mills.[22] Distilleries were popular means of supplemental income. By 1850, John Chandler's distillery was producing 6,000 gallons of whiskey per year.[23]

A notable late arrival in Sevierville was Dr. Robert H. Hodsden (1806–1864), who had been an attending physician for the Trail of Tears. In 1846, Hodsden began construction on a plantation near Fair Garden, just outside Sevierville to the east. This plantation, known as Rose Glen, was worth $28,000 in 1860, one of the most valuable in the county.[24]

In 1856, a fire swept through Sevierville, burning a recently constructed courthouse, 41 houses, and several shops in the downtown area. The county lost nearly all of the vital records of its early settlers.[25]

The Civil War

William "Parson" Brownlow delivers an anti-secession speech in Sevierville in 1861

Slavery was not common in Sevier County, although there were instances, especially at the large plantations along the French Broad River. Even before the American Civil War, Sevierville, a hotbed of abolitionist activity, was home to a relatively large community of free African-Americans.[26] In 1861, only 3.8% of Sevier Countians voted in favor of secession from the Union.[27]

In late 1861, a pro-secession speech delivered by Henry Foote met with an angry response in Sevierville, and was followed by a series of explosive anti-secession speeches. The following year, pro-Union Knoxville newspaper editor Parson Brownlow gave a rousing anti-secession speech in Sevierville en route to a hideout in Wears Valley. Brownlow's audience remained gathered throughout the night after a rumor spread that Confederate forces were approaching.[28] Union supporters in Sevier County were harassed and threatened throughout the war, even after Union forces under Ambrose Burnside occupied Knoxville in September 1863.

Sevierville, situated at a major crossroads south of Knoxville, suffered consistent harassment, looting, and confiscation of property by both Union and Confederate forces moving through the town in 1863 and 1864. Vance Newman, a Union recruiting officer living in Sevierville at the time, later recalled:

A guard of rebel soldiers in 1864 threatened to burn my house, and the rebel soldiers so often threatened to take my life that I cannot particularize. They were always after me because of my Union sentiments.[29]

After Confederate General James Longstreet failed to retake Knoxville in the Battle of Fort Sanders, Union and Confederate forces quickly initiated a series of maneuvers to gain control of the strategic fords along the French Broad, culminating in an engagement near Hodsden's farm at Fair Garden in January 1864. Although the Union forces were victorious, they were later forced to retreat for lack of supplies. A state of general anarchy ensued, continuing until the end of the war. On October 30, 1864, Sevierville resident Terressa McCown wrote in her diary:

The robbers have come at last, they robbed my husband of his pocketbook, money and papers and pocket knife. Times get worse everyday. We know not what will come next. I feel this morning like nothing but destruction awaits us.[30]

At the war's end, the county's few remaining Confederate sympathizers, most notably members of the Brabson family, were forced to flee.[31]

Postwar-present

House at 217 Cedar in Sevierville, designed by Lewis Buckner

Sevierville recovered quickly from the war, with a number of new houses and businesses being built in the 1870s. Two members of the town's African-American community house builder Lewis Buckner (1856–1924) and brickmason Isaac Dockery (1832–1910) would play a prominent role in Sevierville's post-war construction boom. Buckner designed a number of houses in the Sevierville area over a 40-year period, 15 of which still stand.[32] Dockery's contributions include the New Salem Baptist Church in 1886 and the Sevier County Courthouse in 1896, both of which still stand.[33]

By the 1880s, Sevierville was growing rapidly, as was the population of Sevier County. In 1887, the town had four general stores, two groceries, a jeweler, a sawmill, and two hotels. It was also home to the Sevierville Lumber Company, which had recently been established to harvest trees in the area. Tourists also started to trickle into Sevier County, drawn by the health-restoring qualities of mountain springs. Resorts sprang up throughout the county, with Seaton Springs and Henderson Springs located just south of Sevierville.[34]

In 1892, a vigilante group known as the "Whitecaps" was formed to rid Sevier County of vice. The group wore white hoods to conceal their identities and used Ku Klux Klan-like tactics, although they were not considered a racist entity. While the Whitecaps initially threatened women accused of prostitution, the group began launching nightly attacks in the mid-1890s. In 1893, Sevierville physician J.A. Henderson took over an anti-Whitecap group, which he renamed the "Blue Bills." The two vigilante groups clashed at Henderson Springs in 1894, with deaths on both sides. In 1896, the Whitecaps' murder of a young Sevierville couple led to widespread outrage, and in 1898, the Tennessee State Legislature banned "extra-legal conspiracies" and vigilante groups. Due to this measure and the efforts of Sevier County Deputy Sheriff Thomas Davis, the Whitecaps had largely vanished by the end of the century.[35]

Court Avenue, developed in 1901 as part of Sevierville's new commercial district

After a fire destroyed much of the downtown area in 1900, businesses shifted from the old town square at Main Street to the new Sevierville Commercial District, viz. Court Avenue and Bruce Street, which was centered on the new courthouse.[36] The town incorporated in 1901.[37]

In 1910, Indiana entrepreneur William J. Oliver finished work on the Knoxville, Sevierville and Eastern Railroad, which was Sevier County's first standard gauge rail line. Known as the Smoky Mountain Railroad, this line offered passenger service between Knoxville and Sevierville until 1962.[38]

With the opening of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in 1934, tens of thousands of tourists began passing through Sevierville, which was situated about halfway between the park and Knoxville. U.S. 441, initially known as the Smoky Mountain Highway, was completed to Sevierville in 1934, and later extended to North Carolina.[39]

Entertainer Dolly Parton was born in Sevierville in 1946. Her ancestors had migrated to Greenbrier sometime around 1850, and later moved to Locust Ridge (near Pittman Center), where Parton was born, after the establishment of the national park. Parton has been honored with the Dolly Parton Parkway being named for her and with a statue on the lawn of the Sevierville courthouse.

Much of Cormac McCarthy's 1973 novel Child of God takes place in Sevierville and the surrounding area.

Economy

Like other towns situated along the Parkway in Sevier County, Sevierville has reaped the benefits of the burgeoning tourism industry brought on by the development of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. As of 2004, nearly fifty percent of businesses based in Sevierville were linked to tourism. For example, there are over 2,000 hotel and motel rooms in the city today, generating more than $500,000(USD) in hotel-motel tax revenues each year.

East Tennessee Radio Group owns and operates the Sevierville area's primary local radio stations, WPFT-FM 106.3 and FM 105.5. Also, WWST-FM 102.1, a Top 40 music station serving the Knoxville market, is licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to Sevierville.

Education

Sevierville is served by the Sevier County public school system. The educational system in Sevierville consists of the following public institutions:

Sevierville is also home to the following private institutions:

In addition to the preceding institutions, Sevierville is home to the Sevier County satellite campus of Walters State Community College, based in Morristown, Tennessee. King University, based in Bristol, Tennessee also operates a satellite campus in Sevierville at the Walters State Community College location.

Points of interest

Sevierville Commercial District

The following are located in the Kodak area of North Sevierville:

Notable people

Festivals and events

Registered historic sites

Bibliography

McHugh, Dick; Mitch Moore (2005). Insider's Guide to the Great Smoky Mountains. Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot Press. ISBN 0-7627-3504-X. 

Dennis, Delmar D. (1995). The Fact Book of the Great Smokies. Norris, Tennessee: Covenant House Books. ISBN 0-925591-32-7. 

Jones, Robbie (1997). The Historic Architecture of Sevier County, Tennessee. Sevierville, Tennessee: Smoky Mountain Historical Society. ISBN 1-890150-00-2. 

References

  1. 1 2 "Population and Housing Unit Estimates". Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  2. "American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  3. "US Board on Geographic Names". United States Geological Survey. 2007-10-25. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  4. "Find a County". National Association of Counties. Retrieved 2011-06-07.
  5. "US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990". United States Census Bureau. 2011-02-12. Retrieved 2011-04-23.
  6. "Census of Population and Housing: Decennial Censuses". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2012-03-04.
  7. "Incorporated Places and Minor Civil Divisions Datasets: Subcounty Resident Population Estimates: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2012". Population Estimates. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 11 December 2013.
  8. Tennessee Historical Commission Marker, "McMahan Indian Mound," in Sevierville, Tennessee. Information accessed 3 September 2007.
  9. William Holmes, "Illustrated Catalogue of a Portion of the Collection Made During the Field Season of 1881." Third Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1881-82 (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1884), 427-510. Transcribed for use online by Project Gutenburg, 2006. Retrieved: 4 October 2007.
  10. Robbie Jones, The Historic Architecture of Sevier County, Tennessee (Sevierville, Tenn.: Smoky Mountain Historical Society, 1997), 3-7.
  11. "Isaac Thomas & Elizabeth Massengill." 13 April 2001. The source quotes Jean Fladger Shanelec, For His Own Personal Adventure, 1996. Retrieved: 26 September 2007.
  12. Goodspeed Publishing Company, "Sevier County." History of Tennessee (1887), B32-35. Transcribed for the web by Cliff Manis with revision by Robert Beckwith, 1996. Retrieved: 4 October 2007.
  13. J.G.M. Ramsey, The Annals of Tennessee (Johnson City, Tenn.: Tennessee Overmountain Press, 1999), 369.
  14. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 3, 11.
  15. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 14.
  16. J.G.M. Ramsey, The Annals of Tennessee (Johnson City, Tenn.: Tennessee Overmountain Press, 1999), 637.
  17. J.A. Sharp, "Sevierville, One Hundred Fifty-Five Years Old." c. 1950. Retrieved: 4 October 2007.
  18. Goodspeed Publishing Company, "Sevier County." History of Tennessee (1887), B32-35. Transcribed for the web by Cliff Manis with revision by Robert Beckwith, 1996. Retrieved: 4 October 2007.
  19. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 14, 24.
  20. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 17.
  21. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 19.
  22. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 21.
  23. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 29.
  24. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 22, 29.
  25. M.A. Rawlings, "Sevierville Fire of 1856," Smoky Mountain Historical Society Newsletter 12, no. 4 (Winter of 1986), 95.
  26. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 27.
  27. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 33.
  28. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 35.
  29. U.S. National Archives Microfilm Publication P2257. Records of the U.S. House of Representatives: Southern Claims Commission, 1871-1880. Part II, Vol. II, Claim No. 21037 (Vance Newman), submitted 1876.
  30. Mary Rury, "The Diary of Terressa Ann Lanning McCown," Smoky Mountain Historical Society Newsletter 12, no. 4 (Winter of 1986), 99.
  31. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 37-39.
  32. Robbie Jones, "Lewis C. Buckner." The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 2 October 2007.
  33. Robbie Jones, "Isaac Dockery." The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 2 October 2007.
  34. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 49-50.
  35. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 63-64.
  36. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 66.
  37. J.A. Sharp, "Sevierville, One Hundred Fifty-Five Years Old." c. 1950. Retrieved: 4 October 2007.
  38. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 67.
  39. Jones, Historic Architecture of Sevier County, 124-125.
  40. http://www.bloominbbq.com/
  41. http://www.dumplinvalleybluegrass.com/
  42. http://www.corvetteexpo.com/
  43. http://www.seviercountyfair.org/home-1.html
  44. http://shadrackchristmas.com/
  45. http://www.tnvacation.com/events/43513/
  46. Beulah Linn, "The Centennial of Sevier County's Fifth Courthouse." Smoky Mountain Historical Society Journal 23, no. 2 (Summer of 1997), 3.
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