Brief History of Knoxville - Knoxville History Project (2024)

Knoxville: America Concentrated in One Spot

Knoxville isn’t used to the spotlight. For years, the city kept a low profile, happy to defer to its regional attractions, the Smoky Mountains and the area’s large picturesque lakes. Those are major amenities for residents and visitors alike. But like the city itself, now more than two and a quarter century years old, has a rich and surprising history. Although its story reflects its region, in many respects, Knoxville is America, concentrated in one spot.

Knoxville is home to the large flagship campus of the University of Tennessee, one of the nation’s oldest state universities. Besides higher education and research, UT provides a professional theatrical troupe, diverse museums, and a diet of visiting speakers and musical events –not to mention Neyland Stadium.

However, Knoxville’s a good deal more than a college town. Founded by the George Washington administration as the capital of the new Southwestern Territory, Knoxville witnessed the birth of Tennessee and was, for more than 20 years, the 16th state’s first capital.

The long-delayed arrival of railroads in the 1850s made Knoxville important again – just in time for the Civil War, which divided the city along complicated and ever-shifting lines. A weeks-long Confederate siege finally failed in November 1863, with a desperate charge against Union Fort Sanders.

Reborn as an industrial city, friendly to investors from the North and the South, as well as immigrants from several European counties, Knoxville became a city of furnaces and mills, creating products of iron, lumber, grain, and textiles.

The buildings of downtown, many of which date from the Gilded Age, tell the story of a thoroughly American city. Market Square, founded in 1854, has served the same purpose – a farmers’ market—with an array of associated purposes, including residences and evening attractions, for more than 160 years. A few blocks away is the Old City, a preserved 1880s industrial and entertainment district. Between the two is Gay Street, which dates back to the 1790s, but includes East Tennessee’s tallest skyscrapers. It was named one of the Great Places in America by the American Planning Association. Among Gay Street’s attractions is the Museum of East Tennessee History, the Emporium art center – and extraordinary for a city of almost any size, two renovated historic theaters, the Bijou and the Tennessee, representing different eras and busy with live shows every week.

Annual festivals like Rossini Festival, America’s only festival for the Italian Opera composer, and the Big Ears Festival, an international celebration of groundbreaking new music, honors a deeper heritage.

If not as celebrated for music as some other Tennessee cities, Knoxville played an important role in the development of popular music for more than a century. Knoxville’s known as the Cradle of Country Music, due to its role in nurturing the early careers of Roy Acuff, Chet Atkins, Flatt & Scruggs, Dolly Parton, and several other major figures. However, Knoxville is also home to the oldest symphony orchestra in the South. And, through figures like blues innovators Brownie and Stick McGhee and influential harmonists the Everly Brothers, Knoxville played a role in the dawn of rock ‘n’ roll. It even has a bit of a jazz heritage, celebrated with another annual festival.

Along the way, Knoxville yielded several notable authors. As strange as it may seem, English author Frances Hodgson Burnett began her career as a novelist, which eventually rendered classics like The Secret Garden,during her youth in Knoxville. James Agee’s memories of Knoxville inspired composer Samuel Barber’s famous vocal piece, “Knoxville: Summer of 1915” as well as Agee’s own autobiographical novel,A Death in the Family, which won the Pulitzer Prize and has been interpreted in several films. Black Power poet Nikki Giovanni grew up in Knoxville, and remembered it fondly in poetry and memoirs. Another Pulitzer winning novelist, Cormac McCarthy, spent his youth in Knoxville, and set three of his earliest novels here.

Knoxville helped spawn the Great Smoky Mountains National Park movement, and some of that park’s earliest advocates left a legacy here. Ijams Nature Center is an astonishing urban attraction that’s perhaps unique: a diverse sanctuary of 300 acres along the river, embracing reclaimed century-old marble quarries that seem like pristine wilderness.

The Tennessee Valley Authority, founded in 1933 as an internationally famous part of Roosevelt’s New Deal, made Knoxville a center in planning, architecture, and conservation, attracting intellectuals who while they were living here made major contributions to the national environmentalist movement.

Through TVA and nearby Oak Ridge National Lab, Knoxville became a center for energy research which made it seem natural for the energy-themes 1982 World’s Fair. It attracted 11 million people from around the world and left Knoxville with an unisual space which has been reborn as an eclectic public park, with a convention center, art museum, and a specialized high school – and America’s only large bronze statue of Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff.

It’s a long story . There are a lot of those in Knoxville!

by Jack Neely

Taken from the 2016 Knoxville Visitor’s Guide. Pick up a copy of the latest Visitor’s Guide, and local cultural attraction brochures, at the official Visitor Center at 301. S. Gay Street.

Please visit our partner, Visit Knoxville’s website for further local history links, including Jack Neely’s regular history and culture Blog.

For a much more in-depth history of Knoxville, pick up a copy of KHP’s Historic Knoxville: The Curious Visitor’s Guide to its Stories and Places on our online store or at a local store including the East Tennessee History Center, Union Avenue Books, Mast General Store, Rala in the Old City, etc.

Please help the Knoxville History Project expand this Archive by making a donation to today.

For more information, or to learn about how you can contribute stories, photographs, and ephemera to this archive through KHP’s community engagement initiative, Knoxville Shoebox, please call 865-337-7723 or email us at paul@knoxhistoryproject.org

Brief History of Knoxville - Knoxville History Project (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of Knoxville? ›

Knoxville was settled in 1791 and established in 1792. The City of Knoxville was incorporated in 1815. Knoxville was named after Henry Knox, President Washington's War Secretary. William Blount selected the name for the City of Knoxville.

What are people from Knoxville called? ›

Famous Knoxvillians - City of Knoxville.

Was Knoxville TN Union or Confederate? ›

Knoxville was always divided. Confederates controlled the city from 1861 to fall of 1863. Confederate troops and prominent Rebel citizens then fled before the advancing Union army. Federals took over in September 1863.

What is the streaking capital of the world? ›

Proving it's a diverse and dichotomous place, Knoxville has been called "The Streaking Capital of the World" and "The Underwear Capital of the World." The former, coined by newsman Walter Cronkite, has to do with a mass streaking incident that occurred in the 1970s, the latter a reference to the undergarment textiles ...

Why is Knoxville called scruffy city? ›

The nickname "Scruffy City" originated from skepticism about Knoxville's ability to successfully host a World's Fair. Knoxville was described as a "scruffy little city" in a critical news article about the idea for the fair's location from the Wall Street Journal.

What is the richest part of Knoxville Tennessee? ›

Q: What is the richest part of Knoxville? A: With an average home price of close to $650,000, the neighborhood of Sequoyah Hills is considered one of the richest parts of Knoxville.

What do you call someone from Knoxville? ›

The residents of Tennessee call themselves Tennesseans.

Is Knoxville a white city? ›

Population & Diversity

In 2022, there were 4.52 times more White (Non-Hispanic) residents (138k people) in Knoxville, TN than any other race or ethnicity. There were 30.6k Black or African American (Non-Hispanic) and 8.07k Two+ (Non-Hispanic) residents, the second and third most common ethnic groups.

Was there slavery in Knoxville? ›

While Knoxville was far less dependent on slavery than the rest of the South, most of the city's leaders, even those who opposed secession, were pro-slavery at the onset of the Civil War.

Is Tennessee still a Confederate state? ›

After the war, the state legislature ratified the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution on July 18, 1866, and was the first state readmitted to the Union on July 24, 1866.

What was Tennessee's name before it became Tennessee? ›

Tennessee became the 16th state in American history in 1796. Before becoming a state, the American government called the land the Territory South of the River Ohio. The Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek, and other Southeastern Indians had their own names for their towns and villages in the area.

Which side of the Civil War was Tennessee in? ›

However, when the American Civil War finally broke out in 1861, Tennessee, like other states in the upper South, voted for secession and joined the new Confederate States of America (Confederacy). Only Virginia saw more fighting than Tennessee during the war.

What city was the capital of Tennessee for one day? ›

On September 21, 1807, Kingston was Tennessee's state capital for one day. The Tennessee General Assembly convened in Kingston that day due to an agreement with the Cherokee, who had been told that if the Cherokee Nation ceded the land that is now Roane County, Kingston would become the capital of Tennessee.

Was there slavery in Knoxville, Tennessee? ›

It was also a fact that a number of the early settlers here did not believe in slavery. Statistics show that when the city was founded, there were 163 slaves in a total population of 3,619.

What was the capital of Tennessee before Knoxville? ›

When Tennessee was admitted to the Union on June 1, 1796, as the 16th state, Knoxville was its first capital. Over the next thirty years, the seat of government alternated between Kingston, Nashville, Knoxville, and Murfreesboro, before being moved to Nashville in 1826.

What was the first house in Knoxville? ›

About the Fort

The birthplace of Knoxville, Knoxville's first home founded in 1786. The Fort is one of the most visited historical sites in Knoxville. It is a museum home highlighted by the original 1786 residence of James White the founder of Knoxville.

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