Knox County, Tennessee
Adair Gardens Historic District
Airplane Service Station
Asbury Methodist Episcopal Church, South
Ayres Hall
Bethel Confederate Cemetery and Winstead Cottage
Bishop, Alexander, House
Bleak House
Blount, William, Mansion
Boyd-Harvey House
Buffat, Alfred, Homestead
Burwell Building Tennessee Theater
Camp House
Candoro Marble Works
Central United Methodist Church
Chesterfield
Christenberry Club Room
Church Street Methodist Church
Concord Village Historic District
Contractor's Supply, Inc.
Cowan, McClung and Company Building
Craighead-Jackson House
Daniel House
Daylight Building
Dulin, H. L., House
Ebenezer Mill
Emory Place Historic District
Fire Station No. 5
First Baptist Church
First Presbyterian Church Cemetery
Forest Hills Boulevard Historic District
Fort Sanders Historic District
Fourth and Gill Historic District
Gay Street Commercial Historic District
Gay Street Commercial Historic District (Boundary Increase)
General Building
Gibbs Drive Historic District
Gibbs, Nicholas, House
Giffin Grammar School
Happy Holler Historic District
Hilltop
Holston National Bank
Hopecote
Hotpoint Living-Conditioned Home
Island Home Park Historic District
Jackson Avenue Warehouse District
Jackson Avenue Warehouse District Extension
Johnson, Andrew, Hotel
Keener, Leroy, House
Kern's Bakery
Kingston Pike Historic District
Knollwood
Knox County Courthouse
Knoxville Business College
Knoxville College Historic District
Knoxville Iron Foundry Complex-Nail Factory and Warehouse
Knoxville National Cemetery
Knoxville Post Office
Knoxville YMCA Building
Lamar House Hotel
Lawhon, Charles L., Cottage
Lebanon in the Forks Cemetery
Lincoln Park United Methodist Church
Lindbergh Forest Historic District
Louisville and Nashville Freight Depot
Louisville and Nashville Passenger Station
Mabry, Joseph Alexander, Jr., House
Mall Building
Marble Springs
Market Square Commercial Historic District
Maxwell-Kirby House
McCammon, Samuel, House
McMillan, Alexander, House
Mechanics' Bank and Trust Company Building
Mechanicsville Historic District
Medical Arts Building
Middlebrook
Minvilla
Monday House
Morton, Benjamin, House
Murphy Springs Farm
New Salem United Methodist Church
Newman, Capt. James, House
North Hills Historic District
Old Gray Cemetery
Old Knoxville City Hall
Old North Knoxville Historic District
Old Post Office Building
Ossoli Circle Clubhouse
Park City Historic District
Park City Junior High School
Park, James, House
Peters House
Racheff, Ivan, House
Ramsey House
Riverdale Historic District
Riverdale Mill
Riverdale School
Russell, Avery, House
Savage House and Garden
Seven Islands Methodist Church
South Market Historic District
Southern Terminal and Warehouse Historic District
Southern Terminal and Warehouse Historic District (Boundary Increase)
St. John's Lutheran Church
Statesview
Stratford
Talahi Improvements
Tennessee School for the Deaf Historic District
Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church
Tyson Junior High School
Tyson, Gen. Lawrence D., House
Westmoreland Water Wheel and Gatepost
Westwood
Wilder, Gen. John T., House
Williams, Col. John, House
2111 Terrace Avenue
400 Mulvaney Street
79th New York Infantry (Highlanders) Monument
A National Cemetery System
Address by President Lincoln
Admiral David Glasgow Farragut
Admiral David Glasgow Farragut Monument
Admiral Farragut's Birthplace
After the Civil War
Airplane Filling Station
Albert Milani
Alfred Buffat Homeplace
Andrew Johnson Office Plaza
Archibald Roane
Archie Campbell / Chet Atkins
Asbury Methodist Church
Back Door to Knoxville
Ball Camp
Battery Wiltsie
Battle of Campbell's Station
Battle of Campbell's Station
Beauford Delaney
Beauford Delaney
Beauford Delaney / Joseph Delaney
Birthplace of Admiral Farragut
Bleak House
Blount Mansion
Buffat Mill
Burial Mound
Burn Memorial
Byington
C. Kermit "Buck" Ewing
Campbell Station
Captain Charles T. McMillan II
Catherine Wiley
Cavett's Station
Central United Methodist Church
Charles Christopher Krutch
Charles Krutch
Charlie Oaks
Chisholm Tavern
Chisolm's Tavern
Civil War Hospital
Civil War Knoxville
Commemorating the Treaty of Holston
Confederate Cemetery
Confederate States of America Camp Van Dorn
Cormac McCarthy
Cowan, McClung and Company Building / Fidelity Building
Creation of the Southeastern Conference
David Campbell builds a station
David Glasgow Farragut
David Madden
Death of Gen. William P. Sanders
Death of General William P. Sanders
Desegregation of the University of Tennessee
During the Civil War
Elvis Presley
Fallen Military Heroes of Bearden High
Farragut Schools: Early Years
Farragut Schools: Recent Years
Father Abram J. Ryan
First African American Church
First Baptist Church
First Presbyterian Church
Fort Adair
Fort Byington
Fort Dickerson
Fort Dickerson
Fort Dickerson
Fort Dickerson
Fort Dickerson 1863–64
Fort Higley
Fort Sanders
Fort Sanders
Fort Sanders U.D.C. Monument
Forts Dickerson and Stanley
Fountain City Schools
Fountain City United Methodist Church
Frances Hodgson Burnett Home Site
From Scuffletown to Sunsphere
Gay Street
Gay Street and the Civil Rights Movement
General Clifton Bledsoe Cates
George Mann
Governor John Sevier
Greek Revival
Herbert H. Hoover
Hubris Building
In Grateful Memory to the Defenders of Cavett Blockhouse
Indian Mound
James Agee
James Park House
James Rufus Agee
James White
John Sevier Farmstead
Journal Arcade Building
Katherine Sherrill Sevier
Knox County Spanish American War Monument
Knox County World War II Memorial
Knoxville
Knoxville
Knoxville College
Knoxville National Cemetery
Knoxville: A Divided City
Knoxville's Market House
Knoxville's Old Custom House / Fiddlin' Bob Taylor
Krutch Park
Land Grant University
Lawson McGhee Library
Lebanon in the Fork
Lizzie Crozier French 1851-1926
Lloyd Branson
Longstreet's Headquarters
Loveville
Magnolia Avenue History
Magnolia Avenue History
Magnolia Avenue History
Manifold Station
Market House Bell
Mary Boyle Temple
Mary Frances Housley
Master Sgt. Roddie Edmonds
Mecklenburg Place
Medal of Honor 17th Michigan Volunteer Regiment
Memorial for Cofounders of Campbell Station
Menifee Station
Mr. Anderson's Log College
Native American Settlement
Neyland Stadium
Nicholas Gibbs
Nicholas Gibbs Homestead
Norris Freeway
Odd Fellows Cemetery
Old Gray Cemetery
Old Knox County Courthouse
Old Mechanicsville
Patrick Sullivan's Saloon
Pleasant Forest Church & Cemetery
Ramsey House
Ramsey House
Ramsey House Plantation
Riverdale School
Robert Birdwell
Robert Reynolds
Rotary Club of Knoxville
Roy Acuff & Hank Williams
Ruth Cobb Brice
Ruth Cobb Brice
Sarah Hawkins
Savage Garden
Sawyer's Fort
Settlement of the Frontier
Seven Islands Methodist Church
Signing of the Treaty of Holston
Site of Blount College
Site of First Block House
Site of Fort Adair
Site of John H. Crozier Home
Speedway Circle
St. Clair Cobb
St. James Hotel
St. John's Lutheran Church
States View
Staub's Theatre
Steamboat Times on the French Broad
Sultana Monument
Sutherland Avenue McGhee Tyson Airport
Tennessee Ernie Ford
Tennessee Theater
The 1863 Siege of Knoxville
The Assault Upon Fort Sanders
The Baker-Peters-Rogers House
The Battle of Campbell Station
The Campbell Station Inn
The Everly Brothers
The Historic Village of Concord
The Historic Village of Concord
The Knoxville Girl
The Midday Merry-Go-Round
The Old Cumberland Presbyterian Meeting House
The Southern Railway Station
The Tennessee Barn Dance
The U.S. Veterans Memorial
This street is dedicated to the memory of Sergeant Lillard Earl Ailor
Town of Farragut & Farragut Folklife Museum
Treaty of the Holston
Uncle Dave Macon
UT RecSports Complex
Vinnies Italian Restaurant
Wait Field
War Dog Memorial
War on the Home Front
West Wing of Federal Lines
White's Mill
William E. Peters House
William Francis Yardley
The county is named after Henry Knox, a Revolutionary War general and Secretary of War under President George Washington. Established in 1792, Knox County initially covered a vast area that included parts of present-day Tennessee, Kentucky, and North Carolina. The county seat was initially located at Southwest Point (present-day Kingston), but it was relocated to its current location in Knoxville in 1793.
In the 19th century, Knox County experienced significant growth and development. It became a prominent hub for trade and transportation, with the completion of the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad in 1855. The county also played a notable role in the Civil War, with Knoxville serving as a strategic objective for both Union and Confederate forces. The Battle of Fort Sanders in 1863, a Union victory, marked a turning point in the region.
After the Civil War, Knox County continued to prosper and expand. The development of the Tennessee Valley Authority in the 1930s brought economic opportunities and infrastructure improvements to the area. The county also became a center for education, with the establishment of the University of Tennessee in the 1790s and the University of Tennessee Medical Center in the 1950s.
Today, Knox County is a vibrant and diverse community, known for its thriving arts scene, outdoor recreational activities, and strong sense of community. The county's rich history is preserved through various museums, historical landmarks, and annual events that celebrate its past. Knox County continues to grow and evolve while retaining its distinctive Southern charm and unique heritage.
Brief timeline of the history of Knox County, Tennessee:
- Prehistory - The region now known as Knox County was inhabited for thousands of years by Native American tribes, including the Cherokee and Creek nations.
- 1775 - The area was settled by European pioneers, including James White, who established White's Fort, the first permanent settlement in what is now Knoxville.
- 1791 - The Territory of the United States South of the River Ohio, which included the area now known as Knox County, was organized. William Blount was appointed as the governor.
- 1796 - The State of Tennessee was admitted to the Union, and Knox County was one of the original counties established within the new state.
- 1803 - The capital of Tennessee was moved from Knoxville to Nashville.
- 1830s - The construction of the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad began, connecting Knoxville to the rest of the region.
- 1861-1865 - Knox County, like the rest of Tennessee, was divided during the American Civil War. The county was occupied by both Union and Confederate forces at various times.
- 1897 - The City of Knoxville was officially chartered as a city.
- 1933 - The Great Smoky Mountains National Park was established, including parts of Knox County.
- 1982 - The World's Fair was held in Knoxville, attracting millions of visitors.
- Today - Knox County is a thriving county with a diverse economy, beautiful natural surroundings, and a rich cultural heritage.
This timeline provides a condensed summary of the historical journey of Knox County, Tennessee.