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Tennessee Historic Sites






Tennessee Historic Sites

Tennessee Historic Sites
Below is a list of Tennessee Historic Sites. Find detailed information on the Historic Site entries by clicking on their links.

Create an online Tennessee vacation itinerary
You can use WeGoPlaces.com to plan your Tennessee vacation itinerary! To begin, select from our list of Tennessee tourist attractions, activities, accommodations, events, restaurants or Tennessee vacation & visitor information entries. Click the "Add" button to add individual entries to your online Tennessee vacation itinerary.

Explore All Of Tennessee's Regions
You can find Tennessee tourist attractions and activities in all of Tennessee's regions: Chattanooga, Clarksville, Gatlinburg, Jackson, Knoxville, Memphis, Murfreesboro, Nashville, Pigeon Forge, Sevierville and Other.

Featured Tennessee Tourist Attractions and Activities
Please visit our Tennessee featured listings - South Pacific at Orpheum Theatre - Memphis, Mamma Mia at Tennessee Theatre, Alice in Chains at Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Auditorium, The Color Purple at Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Auditorium and Vanderbilt Commodores Baseball at Hawkins Field.

Featured Listing

Tennessee Tourism
Shiloh National Military Park
Shiloh, Tennessee USA



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Crockett Tavern Museum
Site of the boyhood home of Davy Crockett

Category:     Morristown Historic Site near Sevierville, Tennessee
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Description of this Sevierville area Attraction: Crockett Tavern Museum has been open for 51 years as a tourist attraction in Morristown, TN. The building is on the site of the boyhood home of frontierman and politician David Crockett. The log cabin structure is a replica of the tavern operated by Davy's parents, John & Rebecca Crockett in the 1790's. The original home of the Crockett's was used as a smallpox hospital during War Between the States and burned thereafter. The Hamblen County Chapter - Association for the Preservation of Tennessee Antiquites (APTA) operates the museum. The APTA is a statewide preservation organization organized in 1951.
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Davy Crockett Cabin/Museum
Replica of Davy Crockett's last home and Grave of his mother

Category:     Rutherford Historic Site near Jackson, Tennessee


Description of this Jackson area Attraction: This 36 x 24 ft. two-story log building is built from 1820 - 30 vintage logs from the Crockett Family and other pioneer homes. It houses 1800's furniture, tools, and artifacts as well as pictures, books, letters, etc. related to Col. David Crockett's life in this neighborhood from 1821 until late 1835. He served in the U. S. Congress while he lived here. The grave and monument of his mother, Rebecca Hawkins Crockett is on the grounds. Picnic tables on lawn and in adjacent park.
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Emerald Hill Mansion
Beautiful 1820's Farmhouse

Category:     Clarksville Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Clarksville Attraction: This building began as a farmhouse in the 1820's and has undergone two major renovations in 1900 and 1909. The mansion contains many of its original furnishings, and serves as the home for the Pace Alumni Center at Emerald-Hill--Alumni Relations and Development Offices of Austin Peay State University. The mansion is currently closed for renovation.
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Historic Blackburn farmstead & pionneer museum
Educational historic site

Category:     Hohenwald Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Tennessee Attraction: Two buildings on the National Register of Historic Places. The first Lewis County Court met here in 1843. The initial Grand Jury deliberated in the corn crib. On display within are many artifacts of nineteenth century domestic material culture. The house also served as the first Lewis County Post Office.
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Historic Collinsville
A living-history museum

Category:     Southside Historic Site near Clarksville, Tennessee


Description of this Clarksville area Attraction: A living-history museum featuring 15 restored log homes and outbuildings, Historic Collinsville is situated on 40 rolling acres with picnic areas and walking trails. Structures date from 1830 to 1870. All structures include authentic furnishings.
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Historic Rock Castle
First stone house built in Mid-Tn. by Gen. Dan Smith C. 1790

Category:     Hendersonville Historic Site near Nashville, Tennessee


Description of this Nashville area Attraction: A magnificient hand hewn limestone home, first in Middle Tenn., built by Gen. Daniel Smith, a Revolutionary War officer from Va.C.1790, situated on a pictuesque 18 acre site overlooking Old Hickory lake in Hendersonville Tn. Also on the property is the plantation Smoke House and five generation family cemetery.
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L & N Train Station
Historic Train Station

Category:     Clarksville Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Clarksville Attraction: Built in 1890, the L & N Train Station was the scene for the Monkees' hit, Last Train to Clarksville. Once one of the busiest locations in Clarksville with soldiers and civilians arriving and departing daily, the facility is now open for public and private use.
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Montgomery County Courts Complex
Reconstructed Courthouse

Category:     Clarksville Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Clarksville Attraction: A combination of both new construction and redevelopment following a devastating 1999 tornado, the Montgomery County Courthouse, Courts Center and Millennium Plaza serve as the community’s centerpiece. Beyond the splendid architecture, the complex also represents the community’s rebound from a natural disaster. Adorning the corridors of both buildings are 150 photographs illustrating the history and heritage of Montgomery County.
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Oaklands Historic House Museum
An elegant mansion caught in the crossfire of the Civil War

Category:     Murfreesboro Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Murfreesboro Attraction: Oaklands, the plantation home of the Maney family, is the only historic house museum in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. The story of Oaklands and the Maney family reflects a time of prosperity in the antebellum south, as well as the hardships suffered during the Civil War. Oaklands began as a two-room brick house built between 1815 and 1820 by Dr. James Maney (1790-1872) and his wife, Sally Hardy Murfree Maney (1793-1857), who migrated to this area from North Carolina. Dr. and Sally Maney added onto the house twice, once in the 1820s and again in the 1830s. After Sally ’s death in 1857, Dr. Maney passed management of Oaklands to his eldest son Lewis (1823-1882), and his wife Rachel Adeline Cannon (1826-1911), daughter of former Tennessee governor (1835-1839) Newton Cannon. Lewis and Adeline added the front façade in the Italianate style by 1860, making Oaklands one of the most elegant homes in Middle Tennessee. During the Civil War, Oaklands was the scene of a battle and a presidential visit. On July 13, 1862, Confederate cavalrymen under Nathan Bedford Forrest surprised and defeated Federal forces camped on the front grounds of Oaklands as part of a raid on Union-occupied Murfreesboro. The Maney family watched the fighting from the tall windows of the mansion. Union Colonel William Duffield of the 9th Michigan Infantry Regiment was seriously wounded in the engagement, and taken into the house for treatment. He remained at Oaklands for one month to recover. In December 1862, Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederacy, stayed at Oaklands as an honored guest of the Maneys. Davis came to Murfreesboro to visit Gen. Braxton Bragg’s army camped in town and to get a better idea of the military situation in the Western Theatre. He and several of his generals dined in the parlor of Oaklands. After the Maneys left Oaklands in 1884, it passed through a succession of owners. After the last owner left in 1954, the mansion sat vacant and neglected for several years and was sold to the city of Murfreesboro in 1958. When the city’s plans to demolish Oaklands as part of an urban renewal project became known, a group of concerned local women mobilized to save the mansion and formed the Oaklands Association in 1959. The city agreed to give the house and 1/3-acre to the Association for the purpose of establishing a museum. The house was opened to the public in 1962. Oaklands survived the Civil War and the wrecking ball, and is one of Murfreesboro’s most treasured landmarks. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974 and welcomes thousands of visitors each year.
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Parkers Crossroads Civil War Battlefield Park
Historic Civil War Battlefield Park

Category:     Wildersville Historic Site near Jackson, Tennessee
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Description of this Jackson area Attraction: Parkers Crossroads is the site of battle fought Dec. 31, 1862 between the forces of Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest and Union General Jeremiah C. Sullivan. This 1400 acre historic battlefield is interpreted by both driving and walking tours. Tour brochure available at visitors center. Most trails are wheelchair accessible. An audio tour is available. Dedicated in 2006, the Park currently consists of 300 acres. The visitors center is located 1/2 mile south of Interstate 40 on Hwy 22. The Park hosts special events year round. Please check the web site or contact the visitors center for up coming events.
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Poston Building
Beautiful 1870's advertisment

Category:     Clarksville Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Clarksville Attraction: The Poston Building, built in 1842 by John Poston, is a group of three buildings under one roof. The building is one of several in the downtown area where advertising from the 1870s designed for river traffic is still visible.
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Smith-Trahern Mansion
A Masterpiece that overlooks the Cumberland River

Category:     Clarksville Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Clarksville Attraction: Built in 1858 by wealthy tobacconist Christopher Smith, this masterpiece overlooks the Cumberland River. Constructed during the troubled Pre-Civil War era, the home reflects the transition between Greek Revival and Italianate styles, which were so popular at that time. The home boasts grand hallways, an exquisite curved staircase, and a "widow's walk" on the roof. In March 1988, that Mansion was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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Wilma Rudolph Statue
An American Olympic Athlete

Category:     Clarksville Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Clarksville Attraction: To honor one of America's most outstanding Olympic athletes and her legacy, a bronze statue of Clarksville native Wilma Rudolph was hand-crafted in her likeness. The statue can be viewed at the southern end of the Cumberland RiverWalk at the base of the Pedestrian Overpass.
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Veterans' Museum
A Museum Located on a WWII B-17 Training Base.

Category:     Halls Historic Site in Tennessee


Description of this Tennessee Attraction: This Museum houses exhibits from WWI through Iraq with emphasis on WWII and The Dyersburg Army Air Base. Its theme includes the effects of the war years on area citizens and the local economy.
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