Macon and Trousdale Counties
in central Tennessee
New! 42
Page Booklet
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Early days in Macon
County and Trousdale County, TN, are recalled in this 42-page
spiral bound booklet primarily excerpted from the rare 1887 book:
History of Tennessee, originally published by Goodspeed Publishing
Co. The booklet is printed on 60# paper with the print enlarged
for easier reading. A vinyl sheet has been added to protect the
front cover.
The first 15 pages
of the booklet are devoted to the history of the two counties, while
most of the balance contains biographies of prominent residents,
some of which include insights into local history.
Towns
mentioned in the booklet include: MACON
COUNTY -- Lafayette (county seat), and Red Boiling Springs; TROUSDALE
-- Hartsville (county seat) and Hartsville-Trousdale.
Among the many subjects
included are: a physical description
of each county, agriculture, earliest settlers and settlements,
establishment of each county, names of many early county officials;
county buildings; the town of LaFayette and its various businesses,
schools and churches; the town of Hartsville and its various businesses,
churches, lodges, etc.; the Civil War, including the occupation
of Hartsville by Federal troops and an attack by Gen. John Morgan;
Education, including the Hartsville Female Institute; and other
items of interest.
Biographies
include the following names:
Macon
-- Nathaniel M. Adams, M.N. Alexander, Dr. E.H. Bratton, Pryor W.
Carter, Samuel W. Carter, Dr. Benton Cothron, Jacob Eller, J.H.
Forgason, W.J. Gray, T.H. Gregory, S.C. Harlin, William C. Johnson,
Dr. William G. Key, Dr. M.L. Kirby, George McKinnis, William B.
Mooningham, Dr. F.M. Puttie, I.L. Roark, H.C. Smith, Rev. J.L. Talman,
George Walton, Jesse West, V.M. Whitley, J.T. Wootten; Trousdale
-- J.A. Andrews, Col. D.L. Goodall, W.M. Hammock, W.W. Jenkins,
E.P. Lowe Jr., J.H. Neely, and J. W. Rankin.
The final part of
the booklet contains a brief excerpt from Counties of Tennessee
by Austin P. Foster, and an excerpt from Tennessee, a Guide to
the State, compiled and written by the Federal Writer's Project
of the WPA in 1939.
Wouldn't this
make a unique gift?
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