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Knoxville
Knoxville
Knoxville
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Knoxville

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The amazing photographs of Knoxville, Tennessee in this book chart the growth of this major metropolitan area in the Southeast, from a small fort to big Southern city.


Though it began as a small fort on the Tennessee River, Knoxville would not know obscurity for long. Founded in 1791, Knoxville became the capital of the new state of Tennessee five years later and rapidly became a major metropolitan area for the southeastern United States. Exportations of raw and natural goods brought wealth and new residents, and soon its main thoroughfare became a window into the growth, development, decline, and rebirth of an all-American city. Then, as now, all roads downtown lead to Gay Street, and everything Knoxville came from it.

Though Knoxville is a decidedly Southern city, it has also taken its place within the American melting pot. Swiss, English, Dutch, Irish, German, Greek, African, and Spanish families have all played major roles in the city's development. For many years, at one small popcorn stand on Gay Street stood Gary Crowder-the meticulous owner of the amazing collection of photographs predominantly featured in Images of America: Knoxville.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 27, 2003
ISBN9781439612446
Knoxville
Author

Ed Hooper

Author Ed Hooper, a local writer, broadcast journalist, and a seventh-generation Tennessean himself, has compiled over 200 black-and-white vintage photographs to tell the story of the early years of Knoxville.

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    Knoxville - Ed Hooper

    INTRODUCTION

    These photographic images show snapshots of a city from its earliest days to its development into a thriving metropolitan area of the 21st century.

    Knoxville has held many nicknames throughout its 213-year history. It began as a small fort on the Tennessee River just below where the French Broad and Holston Rivers meet to form the region’s primary river. The fertile and rich Tennessee Valley immediately became its principal source of revenue as farmers, ranchers, and businessmen transported their goods to the city for shipment over land to the east or down the river to New Orleans.

    Before the move towards statehood, the frontier outpost served as a capitol for the Territorial Land Southwest of the Ohio River and the official residence of Gov. William Blount. The lands that formed the city proper came through grants to settlers given for military service in the American Revolutionary War. William Blount’s local influence and his desired associations with the nation’s leaders led the town to be named for then-United States Secretary of War Henry Knox.

    From its founding in 1791, the land around the city’s most prominent structures—James White’s fort and Gov. William Blount’s home—sprang to life with homes, churches, and businesses. Forging the frontier outpost into a major city was not an accident but a planned driving force for the early Scotch-Irish settlers who had a vision of it becoming America’s principal city west of the Appalachians.

    When President George Washington signed the legislation making Tennessee a state in 1796, Knoxville became its first capitol.

    The street where the Army Blockhouse fort was built to guard against Indian attacks quickly became the primary business district in the city. The road leading to it was called Blockhouse Street, but, as the city grew around it, the name was changed from Court Street to Market Street and, then, to Broad Street. By 1802, merchants and dry good stores were doing a tremendous amount of trade with Baltimore, Maryland’s Gay Street merchants. It was the nearest big city and the most accessible to businesses purchasing wholesale merchandise.

    The city was also starting to become a principal exporter of raw and natural goods that soon attracted new residents, investors, and entrepreneurs. Whether to mimic or reflect the booming business in Knoxville, merchants renamed the city’s main economic roadway Gay Street and that designation has remained for the last 200 years.

    Gay Street has been a window on the growth, development, decline, and rebirth of Knoxville as an American city. The city has always served as a crossroads of sorts for those traveling south, heading west, or deciding to make their home in the Southern Appalachian region. From future King of France Louis Philip’s visit following the Revolutionary War to celebrity statesmen, entertainers, and presidents, Knoxville has played host to some of the greatest names in United States history over the last two centuries.

    The courthouse, federal buildings, churches, homes, and businesses that clustered around the main thoroughfare formed the nucleus of what was a major metropolitan area for the southeastern United States. Now, as then, all roads downtown lead to Gay Street and all things Knoxville come from it.

    It is a decidedly Southern city but different in its cultural development. The Scotch-Irish founders were the dominant ethnic group, but the city became a representation of the American melting pot. Swiss, English, Dutch, Irish, German, Greek, African, and Spanish families’ cultural influences played major roles in the development of Knoxville.

    While the city does boast one of the oldest historical societies in the United States, preserving the history of Knoxville has been a major political issue over the years to residents and officials alike. When a historic home was in danger of being destroyed in 2001 to build a parking lot for a golf course, a massive groundswell of angry residents demanded Knoxville do more than pay lip service to its rich historical past. Mayor Victor Ashe pushed to incorporate into the City Charter an amendment that now requires an annual mayoral state of historic preservation address and requires all property slated for demolition to be studied for its historical value. The amendment was a pioneering move for the city and attracted the attention of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and now other cities across the nation are looking at incorporating a similar law into their charters.

    Photography was slow in coming to the region and photographs of the city proper did

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