Copyright 2004 * All rights reserved
J.C. (Jim) Tumblin, OD, DOS
3604 Kesterwood Drive, East
Knoxville, Tennessee 37918-2557
(865) 687-1948
TIMELINE
FOUNTAIN HEAD (FOUNTAIN CITY)
(With appropriate milestones in Knoxville and Knox County History)
Bold Type= Fountain City Milestones
Italicized Type= Major Knoxville and Knox County Milestones
|
YEAR |
EVENT |
REFERENCE |
|
1784 |
State of Franklin formed with John Sevier as its first Governor (largely dissolved by 1788) |
FBHC (25, 29), TEHC (337-338, Toomey) |
|
1785 |
Cumberland Road authorized , as the North Carolina General Assembly passes a bill instructing militiamen to "cut and clear a road to Nashville" (now known as Emory Road/Pike) |
HOFC (14-15) |
|
1786 |
White’s Fort established |
THEC (507, Wheeler) |
|
1786 |
James White builds first house in the area that would become Knoxville |
PHKT (21) |
|
1787 |
*Benjamin Hall House built on a rise above the Fountain Head Spring |
HOFC (41), Verify facts: HOFC says the house was 150 years old in 1968, making the date 1818 (41) |
|
1787 |
M enefee’s (Manefee) Station established (a frontier fort on Emory Road in Powell) |
TC -KCT (7), KCT-AHIP (85), FB-HC (338-See Thos. Conner) |
|
1788-89 |
Fort Adair established (the Fort was a supply depot for the Cumberland Guard) |
HOFC (12-14) |
|
1791 |
Knoxville was officially founded (Charles McClung lays out the city in 64 parcels, making Knoxville the first planned city in the west) |
TEOHC (506, Cotham), K! (iii, 30), See also FBHC (32, 339), TC-KCT (Cover) |
|
1792 |
Knox County formed from portions of Greene and Hawkins Counties |
TEOHC (505-507, Cotham), TGR (112). |
|
1792-1794 |
Blount Mansion was built by William Blount , Governor of the Territory of the United States South of the River Ohio (in a many-windowed frame design although other homes of the time were built of squared logs, representing the earliest building of architectural pretensions in Knoxville) |
TIRI (56), KCTC (11-12) |
|
1792 |
First Presbyterian Church (Knoxville’s first church) established |
TB (33) |
|
1793 |
Nicholas Gibbs built this sturdy two-story log house on Emory Road at Tazewell Pike (Harbison’s Cross Roads) once considered the oldest continually-occupied house in the county |
KCTC (77-78), K! (38) (Great-Grandson married Woodrow Wilson’s daughter) |
|
1794 |
Blount College (later the University of Tennessee) opened |
KCTC (53-54) |
|
1795-1797 |
Ramsey House built for Dr. J.G.M. Ramsey by Thomas Hope, Knox County’s first architect |
TIRI (2-3), KCTC (59-60) |
|
1796 |
Tennessee becomes 16th State of the Union |
KCTC (10) |
|
1796 |
John Sevier’s "Plantation" home at Marble Springs built |
KCTC (93-94), PHKT (12) |
|
1802 |
Isaac Anderson opens a school on his farm on Murphy Road |
HOFC (29) |
|
C1805 |
Charles McClung, early surveyor, sited "Statesview" on a hill to take advantage of a wide-ranging landscape, Thomas Hope architect |
TIRI (56) |
|
C1807 |
A new City Jail was built at a cost of $4,569.56 at the corner of Gay and Main Streets on the site of its predecessor |
HOT (810) |
|
C1812 |
James Park house built and was said to have begun for John Sevier (possibly designed by Thomas Hope, architect) |
TIRI (56) |
|
1812-1814 |
Dr. Joseph C. Strong house, an example of Thomas Hope’s architecture (demolished in 1971 for highway construction) |
TIRI (4-5) |
|
1815 |
*Anderson-Gouffon Cemetery established |
HOFC (35) |
|
1817 |
Lamar House-Bijou Theatre became a hotel with the Theatre added in 1909 |
KCTC (21-22) |
|
1825 |
*Fountain City Methodist Church established |
HOFC (43) |
|
C1825 |
Senator John Williams house built (stripped of its appointments, the impressive structure with handmade bricks still stands in 2004) |
TIRI (56) |
|
1829 |
**Phillip Smith Cabin built (later moved to Beverly Road) |
HOFC (16-17) |
|
C1830s |
Religious camp meetings begin in Fountain Head Park |
HOFC (46-49), HKKC (102) "Early 1800s" |
|
1831 |
Perez Dickinson House built in Italianate and late Federal style, later bought by C.B. Atkin and remodeled in George Barber-style (classic colonial) |
TIRI (8-9) |
|
1834 |
East Tennessee Historical Society founded by Dr. J.G.M. Ramsey |
CFETH (C2002) |
|
1835 |
Cowan, McClung and Co., dry good wholesalers, founded and reorganized in 1859 to include Perez Dickinson |
KT (91), TIRI (58) |
|
1834 |
*Drury P. Armstrong house (Crescent Bend) |
See McNabb, TIRI (57) |
|
1839c |
John Smith house (the first brick house in the community) built near the site of Fort Adair (demolished 1960) |
HOFC (16), TC-KCT (56-57-see photos), |
|
1842-1849 |
The Knox County Courthouse built (probably designed by J.C. Trautwine of Philadelphia with Drury P. Armstrong as the superintendent of construction) (destroyed and replaced) |
Get references |
|
1844 |
Cedars planted along Cedar Lane by James McMillan |
HOFC (40) |
|
1845 |
Smithwood Baptist Church organized |
HOFC (21) |
|
1849 |
Two-story Gouffon Log House built (4900 Tazewell Pike) (Demolished, ) (Verify with _______________) |
HOFC (33), HKKC (109) |
|
C1850 |
Rev. Dr. Inskip’s campground established (the site of national camp meetings which, because of its proximity to the railroad, becomes more popular than the Fountain Head campground which was three miles away) |
HKKC (102), HOFC (50-51) |
|
1850 |
Old Gray Cemetery established |
TB (34) |
|
1851 |
First deed of conveyance of Fountain Head Campground from George E. Weaver to E.F. Sevier, pastor of Fountain Head Methodist Episcopal Church South |
HOFC (46) |
|
1852 |
Knoxville First Presbyterian Church was built in Greek Revival style |
TIRI (58), PHKT (57-see photo) |
|
1853 |
Joseph Mabry and William Swan donate land for Market Square |
KCTC (33-34) |
|
1853 |
"Ebenezer," the Auguste Gouffon house, built off Tazewell Pike in Beverly (demolished in 1990) |
TC-KCT (50-see photo) |
|
1855 |
East Tennessee Virginia and Georgia Railroad reaches Knoxville |
KCTC (37) |
|
C1857 |
*Crawford-Harrill House built |
HOFC (33) |
|
1858 |
ET&G and ET&V Railroads are joined on June 3 at Bulls Gap to permit connecting rail connections from Memphis to New York (Oliver P. Temple delivers the address) |
"The Southern Railway Staton," Duncan, Pope and Tumblin (2003) |
|
1858 |
Joseph A. Mabry, Jr. builds the house now known as the Mabry-Hazen House |
TIRI (58-see photo), Mabry-Hazen House brochure |
|
1859 |
Thomas Smiley (1804-1866) made the earlier surviving outdoor photographs on Knox County subjects |
TC-KCT (i) |
|
1863 |
The Battle of Knoxville (Ft. Sanders) fought on November 29 (General Longstreet’s Army is reported to have retreated toward Virginia on the Tazewell Turnpike) |
KCWRT Website, KCTC (95-96), Conner and Conner (CHS Sequoyah) |
|
1866 |
Gaines M. Harrill (1844-1921) founded Harrill Transfer Co. (Knoxville’s first transfer and hauling company) (Harrill Hills is named for him) |
TC-KCT (24-see photo), get OBIT) (See Rothrock and Deaderick) |
|
1867 |
Tazewell and Jacksboro Turnpike authorized by the Tennessee Legislature (this 8-mile pioneer pike road started at the junction of "Broad street" and Central avenue and was managed by a private commission headed by W.A.A. Conner and Pulaski Hall among others and was sold to Knox County for less than one-third of its cost [$10,000] in 1895 and the toll gate was removed on November 1, 1895) (The road was laid out by Col. Morris, civil engineer for the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railroad and had a deeper bed of macadam than any other in Knox County) |
Knoxville Journal and Tribune, October 27, 1895 |
|
1868 |
Knoxville’s first City Hall built on Market Square and replaced by a larger building in 1888 |
KCTC (33-34) |
|
1868 |
Hope Brothers Jewelers established on Gay Street |
PHKT (47) (Ftn City?) |
|
C1870 |
*Cowan, McClung and Company building built for one of Knoxville’s leading wholesale dry goods houses (building still standing on Gay Street) |
TIRI (58) |
|
1871 |
Karns Home built on Cedar Lane by John M. Karnes |
HOFC (40) |
|
1872 |
Formal opening of the National Camp Meeting at Inskip with Rev. Dr. Inskip conducting the services (6000 people attended the closing morning service, 3000 the closing evening service, many of whom arrived on the newly constructed railroad) |
HOFC (50) |
|
1872 |
C.M. McGhee House, Joseph E. Baumann, architect |
TIRI (18-19) |
|
1874 |
U.S. Customs House and Post Office completed |
KCTC (25-26) |
|
1875 |
C.J. McClung house built on Main Avenue for C.J. McClung, a partner with his brother Franklin H. McClung and James Cowan in Cowan, McClung and Company, wholesale dry goods house (see second home C1907) (In C 1890 Pres. and Mrs. Grover Cleveland were guests here) |
TIRI (59-see photo), KC-AHIP (208-see photo) (Company on TIRI, p. 58) |
|
1876 |
Because of the yellow fever epidemic in Memphis, many left the stricken city and came to East Tennessee (W.A.A. Conner and George W. Weaver cared for the sick and buried the dead reportedly in the Smithwood Baptist Church Cemetery) |
HOFC (56) |
|
1878 |
U.S. Post Office established on Adair’s Creek |
HOFC (19) |
|
1880 |
Frank H. McClung House built at Church and Locust Streets (J.E. Baumann, architect) (Ellen M. McClung and John W. Green were married here on January 28, 1897) |
TIRI (22-23-see McClung Museum Photo), |
|
1880 |
Beverly Post Office established (closed 1905) |
HOFC (34) |
|
C1882 |
Smithwood School, the first school in Grassy Valley, built on two acres of land donated by John Smith, the grandson of John Adair |
HOFC (23) |
|
1882-1883 |
Elm Grove Methodist Church and Cemetery established |
HOFC (21, 72) |
|
1883 |
Truan House built ("four square" architecture) on Tazewell Pike |
HKKC (109) |
|
1883-1887 |
*Immaculate Conception Catholic Church built in the Ruskinian Gothic style with Baumann Brothers as the architects |
Find photos/text |
|
1884-1885 |
Knox County’s Old Queen Anne Revival Courthouse with Palliser and Palliser of New York as the architects |
TIRI (24-25), KCTC (15-16), PHKT (25-see photo) |
|
1885 |
Fountain Head Campground sold to Fountain Head Improvement Company |
HOFC (52-54), HKKC (102) |
|
1885 |
Fountain Head Improvement Company receives a charter to develop a park and resort with Stephenson and Getaz as the architects for the hotel |
HOFC (52-53) |
|
1885 |
Beverly Station opens as the railroad now skirts Grassy Valley |
HOFC (37) |
|
1885 |
Fountain Head Improvement Company buys the 12-acre campground site from Trustees of Fountain Head Methodist Episcopal Church for $1,025 |
HOFC (50) |
|
1885-1890 |
E.C. Camp’s Greystone Mansion built at a then-astronomical cost of $125,000 |
KCTC (83-84) |
|
1886 |
*Shannondale Presbyterian Church organized |
HOFC (34) |
|
1886 |
Fountain Head Hotel opens (designed by Stephenson and Getaz who built the old Knox County Courthouse) (a hack line brought guests from the end of Knoxville’s horse drawn streetcar line until the Dummy Line was built in 1890) |
HOFC (52), ("Charter" 1885, 102), HKKC (102-103) |
|
1886 |
Fountain City’s first general store built by John Thompson on Jacksboro Pike in Smithwood |
HOFC (19) |
|
1886 |
Bob Taylor (a Democrat) and Alf Taylor (a Republican), brothers and candidates for the governorship, debate in Fountain City Park in their "War of the Roses" campaign attracting a very large crowd |
HOFC (63), HKKC*(102) |
|
1887 |
Knoxville First Baptist Church built on Gay Street (razed in 1924 and congregation moved to Main Street) |
PHKT (56) |
|
1888 |
Fountain Head Improvement Company sold their property to a syndicate of Kentucky capitalists who continued to operate the hotel until 1890 when it was sold |
HOFC (54) |
|
C1888 |
Hotel Avenue constructed |
HOFC (43) |
|
1889 |
Baum’s Greenhouses established and became the largest in the Southeast over a 100 year lifespan (20 greenhouses) |
TC-KCT (10) |
|
1890 |
Fountain Head Railway (The Dummy Line) makes its first run on May 27, 1890 |
HOFC (55-58), See Knoxville Papers (5/1890), see Tumblin "The FHRR" |
|
1890 |
Fountain Head becomes Fountain City with the establishment of a U.S. Post Office (the name change was necessitated to avoid confusion with Fountain Head in Sumner County) |
HOFC (82), (102) |
|
1890 |
The Knoxville and Fountain City Land Company buys 430 acres for $159,000 and the adjoining 14 acres and the hotel for $27,500 (an extensive advertising campaign promoted the development of a new town) |
HOFC (59-62), HKKC (103) |
|
1890 |
*Fountain City Lake impounded (designed and constructed by F.G. Phillips, prominent civil engineer, who also engineered the Fountain Head Railway) |
HOFC (60-61) |
|
1890c |
Park Place (Woodward-Williams) built by Col. J.C. Woodward of Lexington, Kentucky with Baumann Brothers architects as a reputed cost of $20,000 (destroyed in 1980) |
HOFC (59), TIRI (26-27), HKKC (105) |
|
C1890 |
Col. J.C. Woodward builds "Lakeview," a home for his son, on Fountain Road and Cedar Lane overlooking the lake (later occupied by Dr. Gideon H. Morgan) |
HKKC (105-no specifics), FCWMAD Website |
|
1891 |
James M. Karnes House built and Karnes writes his diary there (verify) |
KC/TL (105)) |
|
1893 |
The Knoxville and Fountain City Land Company offered free transportation on the Dummy Line for two years to anyone buying lots in Fountain City during this year of financial panic, |
HOFC (77), FBHC (344) |
|
1893 |
Holbrook Normal College established (Enrollment more than 100) with the help of the Knoxville and Fountain City Land Company (the college building burned in 1900 but was rebuilt) (Became Central High School in 1906) |
HOFC (64-66), KCT-AHIP (97, see photo) |
|
1893 |
Ex-Governor Robert L. Taylor speaks to a crowd of 5000 at the Fountain Head Campground at a picnic sponsored by all Baptist churches in Knoxville (the events included a balloon ascension) |
HOFC (63) |
|
Late 1800s |
Several Victorian homes built along Tazewell Turnpike |
HKKC (107) |
|
1895 |
Tazewell and Jacksboro Turnpike (8-mile macadamized toll road) built in 1867 was sold to the county for $10,000, one-third the cost of building it, by W.A.A. Conner, Pulaski Hall and other road commissioners) |
Knoxville Journal and Tribune, October 27, 1895 |
|
1897 |
Market House erected (burned in 1960) |
PHKT (34) |
|
1898 |
Knox County Bridge built (Now Gay Street Bridge) on the fourth attempt to span the Tennessee River |
PHKT (21) |
|
1899 |
August F. Truan built on Tazewell Pike ( now occupied by Mildred Truan) |
TC-KCT (47) See photo |
|
1900 |
Central business district begins to develop along Hotel Avenue |
HKKC (102) |
|
C1900 |
*Greenwood Cemetery established by Dr. R.N. Kesterson |
HOFC (23) |
|
Early 1900s |
Kesterwood neighborhood developed as several homes built in the early 1900s |
HKKC (109) |
|
1902 |
*Charles J. McClung house built on Black Oak Ridge |
HKKC (104) |
|
1903 |
*Fountain City Elementary School, the first grammar school in Fountain City proper, occupied one floor of the Odd Felloes Hall (Smithwood Grammar School accommodated Fountain City students after it was built in 1882) |
HOFC (23) |
|
1903 |
Southern Railway Station occupied ( Frank P. Milburn architect) |
"History of the Southern Railway Station (1903-2003)" (Duncan, Pope and Tumblin, 2003) |
|
1905 |
Electric Streetcars replace the steam-powered Fountain Head Railway (the Dummy Line) and continued until 1934 when gasoline-powered buses replaced them |
HOFC (58, also see 77) |
|
1905-1910 |
Garden Drive area developed |
HKKC (110) |
|
1905 |
Louisville and Nashville Railroad Station occupied |
KCTC (47) |
|
1906 |
**Central High School established in the building formerly occupied by Holbrook College |
HOFC (68), FBHC (104), KCT-AHIP (97-see photo) |
|
C1907 |
C.J. McClung’s second home, built with Georgian motif and a Palladian window, possibly with George Barber as the architect (located on Laurel Avenue, but destroyed) |
TIRI (62) |
|
1908 |
Fountain City First Baptist Church organized and built on land donated by Rufus Miller (the father of prominent Fountain Citian Mrs. E.E. [Dossie] Cooper) |
HOFC (74) |
|
1908 |
Fountain City Grammar School built on the present-day site of First Baptist Church |
HOFC (23) |
|
1909 |
85 Union Veterans of the Civil War hold their fifth annual reunion in Fountain City Park (September 9) |
TC-KCT (172-see photo) |
|
1910c |
*Savage Gardens established by Arthur Savage |
HKKC (110) |
|
C1910 (Verify) |
*Dempster-Frances House built (note Ionic columns) (once owned and occupied by George R. Dempster, mayor of Knoxville from 1952 to 1955) |
HKKC (110) |
|
1912 |
Fountain City Phone Company established in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C.B. Lee on Essary at Lynnwood (see JS) |
HOFC (84) |
|
1912 |
Sterchi neo-classic style mansion built by James G. Sterchi, head of a chain of furniture stores (Beaver Creek Valley) |
KCT-AHIP (89) See photo |
|
C1913-1914 |
Second floor of Central High School collapsed (but disaster was avoided due to quick action by the faculty) |
HOFC (68) |
|
1913 |
"Canary Cottage" built on Gibbs Drive by Dan Orndorff |
TC-KCT (65) See photo |
|
1914 |
Central Baptist Church of Fountain City organized |
HOFC (74) |
|
1915 |
Smithwood Grammar School built ( the second school built on property deeded by John Smith) (two stories and six rooms) |
HKKC (107) |
|
1915-1917 |
Lawson McGhee Library built on Market at Commerce Street (designed in Chicago Free Style of terra cotta) |
PHMT (33), PHMT (33) (razed in 1971) |
|
1917 |
Dr. H.E. Goetz moved his sanitarium to the Fountain Head Hotel building and practiced there until his death in 1928 |
MMAI (151), see PHKT (64-see photo of earlier sanatorium, check the information) |
|
1917 |
Tolbert (later Franklin) Grocery Store built on Broadway (at Colonial Circle) |
TC-KCT (92) See photo |
|
1919 |
Hassie K. Gresham, a graduate of Holbrook Normal College, becomes principal of Central High School and serves until 1947 |
HOFC (69), (104) |
|
1920 |
Fountain Head Hotel burns (replaced by the Manor House) (Were there other fires at the site?) |
FBHO (344), HKHC (103), HOFC (52-54-no specifics there) |
|
1920-1930 |
*Adair Gardens developed |
HKHC (107), |
|
1921 |
Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection established |
Brochure "Museums of Knoxville" |
|
1922 |
Belcaro built on the crest of Black Oak Ridge by Judge Hugh Lawson McClung, grandson of Charles McClung and great-grandson of James White |
KCT-AHIP (98-See photos), HKKC (104) (Find MPC Survey & UT Special Coll.) |
|
1922 |
*Ridgeview II built for John W. Green by Barber and McMurry architects featuring a blind arch and a rusticated doorway with extensive gardens |
TIRI (63) |
|
1922 |
Lynnhurst Cemetery established |
HOFC (24) |
|
1923 |
Fountain City Bank established |
HOFC (85) |
|
1923 |
Lynnhurst Cemetery builds a dam and pond |
HKKC (107) |
|
1924 |
Monument dedicated at the site of Fort Adair by Bonny Kate Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution |
HOFC (13, 15) |
|
1926 |
Knoxville Railway and Light Company proposes to subdivide the Fountain Head Park into lots (Judge John W. Green brought suit to prevent the destruction of the park, the case went to the State Supreme Court and the citizens of Fountain City were upheld) |
HOFC (78) |
|
1927 |
Travels of a Lawyer published by John W. Green (Knoxville) |
|
|
1927 |
Tennessee Terrace Hotel (Andrew Johnson Hotel later, now the Board of Education Building) built with Baumann and Baumann as the architects |
TIRI (64} |
|
1928 |
Bedford Oaks built on Kesterwood Road by Dr. R.N. Kesterson who developed Greenwood Cemetery at |
HKKC (109, no date or specifics) (See cornerstone) |
|
1929 |
Former site of the Fountain Head Railway Depot sold to A. L. Mynatt by Knoxville Power and Light Company |
HOFC (78) |
|
1928 |
Tennessee Theatre opened |
KCTC (23-24) |
|
1929 |
**First Fountain City Library established in a room in the Odd Fellows Hall on Hotel Avenue at Holbrook (John W. Green headed the fund-raising campaign) |
HOFC (80-81) |
|
1930 |
Other Travels of a Lawyer published by John W. Green (Knoxville) |
|
|
1931 |
Knox County Water Company (1941-1951) was formed and was replaced by the Fountain City Utilities Board (1951-1966) in 1951 (M.L. Brickey was General Manager) |
HOFC (88-89) |
|
1931-1934 |
United States Post Office and Federal Building built on Main Avenue with Baumann and Baumann as architects ( |
TIRI (52-53 |
|
1932 |
The Tennessee Public Service Company conveyed ownership of the Park to the trustees of the Fountain City Park Commission , Judge John W. Green, Chairman |
HOFC (78) |
|
1932 |
Henley Street Bridge built at a cost of 1 million dollars (Mayor Dempster insisted on four lanes) |
PHKY (22) |
|
1933 |
Harrill Hills developed |
HOFC (34) |
|
1937 |
**Second Fountain City Library built at a cost of $3000 with Judge John W. Green heading the campaign |
HOFC (80) |
|
1941 |
Fountain City Bank and businesses at the site of the Dummy Line Station burn to the ground (November 13) |
HOFC (86) |
|
1943 |
Dr. Claudius M. Capps (Tazewell Pike) published The Blue and the Gray (An Anthology of Civil War Poetry) which sold thousands of copies, others books and numerous musical scores.. |
FCWMAD Website |
|
1944 |
Fountain City Lions Club granted permission to build their clubhouse in the park in exchange for maintenance of the park and playground equipment (expanded in 1951 and ____ after a fire destroyed a large part of the building) |
HOFC (78-79) |
|
1945 |
Fountain City sewer system replaced septic tanks |
HOFC (88) |
|
1947 |
Fountain City Library becomes an extension of the Knox County system |
HOFC (80) |
|
1947 |
Bench and Bar of Knox County-A History of Knoxville Lawyers published by John W. Green (Archer and Smith, Knoxville) |
|
|
1947 |
Lives of the Judges of the Supreme Court of Tennessee published by John W. Green (Archer and Smith, Knoxville). |
|
|
1948 |
Fountain City Bank moves from Broadway and Hotel to a location on Broadway near Cedar Lane |
HOFC (86) |
|
1950 |
Law and Lawyers (Sketches of Federal Judges of Tennessee) published by John W. Green (McCowat-Mercer, Jackson). |
|
|
1951 |
Knox County Water Company (1941-1951) replaced by the Fountain City Utilities Board (1951-1966) (M.L. Brickey continued as General Manager) |
HOFC (88-89) |
|
1945 |
The Tennessee Legislature authorized the formation of the Fountain City Sanitary District to construct waste water sewers (the sewers were installed in 1951) (There were 400 subscribers in the beginning and 6796 when the city assumed the services in 1966) |
HOFC (88) |
|
1961-1963 |
Frank H. McClung Museum established with the residual of the joint estate of Judge John W. Green and his wife, Ellen McClung Green, estimated at $750,000 to $1,000,000, dedicated June 1, 1963. |
Frank H. McClung Museum leaflet, Museums of Knoxville; Knoxville Journal, May 30, 1957. |
|
1962 |
Fountain City annexed into City of Knoxville (until annexed it was thought to be the largest unincorporated city in the United States) |
HOFC (88, 96), HKKC (102) |
|
1964 |
**Third Fountain City Library built with Barber and McMurry as the architects |
HOFC (80) |
|
1964 |
Historic Spots of Knox County, Tennessee published by Nannie Lee Hicks |
Simon Harris Chapter (DAR) |
|
1968 |
The John Adair Section of Knox County, Tennessee (later called The History of Fountain City) published, Nannie Lee Hicks, author |
Nocturne Garden Club |
|
1971 |
*Central High School occupies a new building on Essary and Jacksboro |
HOFC (71) |
|
1975 |
*Fountain City Park National Bank (now First American Bank) opened on Lynnwood Drive and Essary |
HOFC (87) |
|
1976 |
The John Adair Section of Knox County, Tennessee published (later called The History of Fountain), Nannie Lee Hicks, author |
Bicentennial Edition (JKP) |
|
1980 |
New Fountain City Post Office built on Lynwood Drive (formerly Jackson Avenue) |
HOFC (82) |
|
1982 |
East Tennessee Historical Society moves to the Customs House |
TCFETH |
|
1986 |
A History of Fountain City (formerly called The John Adair Section of Knox County, Tennessee) published, Nannie Lee Hicks, author |
Fountain City Town Hall |
|
1986 |
**Fountain City Lake completely renovated by the City of Knoxville with funds provided by the State and Federal Governments |
HOFC (60-62) |
|
2000 |
A History of Fountain City published, Nannie Lee Hicks, author |
Millennium Edition, Fountain City Town Hall |
|
2004 |
*New Fountain City Library (Essary and Stanton) built |
*Still Present, **Still present but moved to a new location
Filename: timelne3.doc (1/10/04, 1/11/04, 1/17/04, 1/18/04)
Bibliography:
CFETH= The Campaign for East Tennessee History: ETHS (2002)
FBHC= French Broad-Holston Country: Mary U. Rothrock, Editor (1946-1972)
HKKC= Historic Knoxville and Knox County: Russ Manning and Sondra Jamieson (1990)
HOFC= History of Fountain City: Nannie Lee Hicks (2000)
HOT= History of Tennessee, W.A. Goodspeed (1887)
HOV= Heart of the Valley: Lucille Deaderick, Editor (1976)
K!=Knoxville!, Betsey Creekmore (1991)
KCTC= Knox County, Two Centuries (1792-1992) (circa 1992)
KCT-AHIP= Knox Couty Tennessee (A History in Pictures), Betsey Creekmore (1988)
KT=Knoxville, Tennessee: Andrew Morrison (1891)
MMAI= Medical Men and Institutions (1789-1957): S.J. Platt and M.L. Ogden (1969)
PHMT= Postcard History-Knoxville, Tennessee: Elena Zimmereman (1998)
TC-KCT= Two Centuries of Knox County, Tennessee, McClung Historical Collection (1992)
TGR= Tennessee Genealogical Research: George W. Schweitzer (1988)
THEC= The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture: Carroll Van West, Editor-in-Chief (1998)
TIRI= Tradition, Innovation & Romantic Images: William R. McNabb (1991)