Tennessee ( ) is a state located in the Southeastern United States
. It has a population of 6,214,888, making it
the nation's 17th-largest state by population, and covers , making
it the 36th-largest by total land area.
Tennessee is bordered
by Kentucky
and Virginia
to the
north, North
Carolina
to the east,
Georgia
, Alabama
, and
Mississippi
to the south, and Arkansas
and Missouri
to the
west. The Appalachian Mountains
dominate the eastern part of the state, and the
Mississippi River forms the
state's western border. Tennessee's capital and second largest city
is Nashville
, which has a population of 626,144.
Memphis
is the state's largest city, with a population of
670,902. Nashville has the state's largest
metropolitan area, at 1,521,437 people.
The State of Tennessee is rooted in the
Watauga Association, a 1772 frontier
pact generally regarded as the first constitutional government west
of the Appalachians. What is now Tennessee was initially part of
North Carolina, and later part of the
Southwest Territory. Tennessee was
admitted to the Union as the 16th state on June 1, 1796. In the
early 19th-century, Tennessee was home to some of American
history's most colorful political figures, among them
Davy Crockett,
Andrew Jackson, and
Sam Houston. Tennessee was the last state to
leave the Union and join the
Confederacy at the outbreak of
the
U.S. Civil War in 1861, and the first state to be
readmitted to the Union at the end of the war. Tennessee furnished
more soldiers for the Confederate Army than any other state, and
more soldiers for the Union Army than any other Southern state.
Tennessee
has seen some of the nation's worst racial strife, from the
formation of the Ku Klux Klan in
Pulaski
in 1866 to the assassination of Martin Luther King in Memphis in
1968. In the 20th century, Tennessee transitioned from an
agrarian economy to a more diversified economy, aided at times by
federal entities such as the
Tennessee Valley Authority.
In the
early 1940s, Oak Ridge,
Tennessee
was established to house the Manhattan Project's uranium enrichment
facilities, helping to build the world's first atomic
bomb.
Tennessee is the birthplace of
country
music, and has played a critical role in the development of
rock and roll and early
blues music.
Beale Street
in Memphis is considered by many to be the
birthplace of the blues, with musicians such as W.C. Handy
performing in its clubs as early as 1909. Memphis was also home to
Sun Records, where musicians such as
Elvis Presley,
Johnny Cash,
Carl
Perkins,
Jerry Lee Lewis,
Roy Orbison, and
Charlie Rich began their recording careers, and
where rock and roll took shape in the 1950s.
The 1927 Victor recording sessions in Bristol
generally mark the beginning of the country music
genre, and the rise of the Grand Ole Opry
in the 1930s helped make Nashville the center of
the country music recording industry.
Tennessee's major industries include agriculture, manufacturing,
and tourism.
Tobacco,
cotton, and
soybeans are the
state's primary agricultural crops, and major manufacturing exports
include chemicals, transportation equipment, and electrical
equipment.
The Great Smoky
Mountains National Park
, the nation's most visited national park, is
headquartered in the eastern part of the state, and a section of
the Appalachian Trail roughly
follows the Tennessee-North Carolina border. Other major tourist
attractions include Elvis Presley's Graceland
in Memphis and the Tennessee Aquarium in
Chattanooga.
Geography
Tennessee
borders eight other states: Kentucky
and Virginia
to the north; North Carolina
to the east; Georgia
, Alabama
and Mississippi
on the south; Arkansas
and Missouri
on the Mississippi
River to the west. Tennessee ties Missouri as the state
bordering the most other states. The state is trisected by the
Tennessee River.
The highest point in
the state is Clingmans
Dome
at 6,643 feet (2,025 m). Clingmans Dome,
which lies on Tennessee's eastern border, is the highest point on
the
Appalachian Trail. The state
line between Tennessee and North Carolina crosses the summit. The
lowest point is the Mississippi River at the Mississippi state
line.
The
geographical center of the state is located in Murfreesboro
.
The state of Tennessee is geographically and constitutionally
divided into three
Grand
Divisions:
East Tennessee,
Middle Tennessee, and
West Tennessee.Tennessee features six
principal physiographic regions: the
Blue Ridge, the
Appalachian Ridge and Valley
Region, the
Cumberland Plateau,
the
Highland Rim, the
Nashville Basin, and the
Gulf Coastal Plain. Tennessee is home to
the most caves in the United States, with over 8,350 caves
registered to date.
East Tennessee
The Blue Ridge area lies on the eastern edge of Tennessee,
bordering North Carolina.
This region of Tennessee is characterized by
the high mountains and rugged terrain of the western Blue Ridge
Mountains, which are subdivided into several subranges, namely the
Great Smoky Mountains, the
Bald Mountains, the Unicoi Mountains, the Unaka Mountains
and Roan Highlands
, and the Iron
Mountains. The average elevation of the Blue Ridge area
is 5,000 feet (1,500 m) above sea level. Clingmans Dome, the
state's highest point, is located in this region.
The Blue Ridge area
was never more than sparsely populated, and today much of it is
protected by the Cherokee National Forest
, the Great Smoky Mountains National
Park
, and several federal wilderness areas and state
parks.
Stretching west from the Blue Ridge for approximately 55 miles
(88 km) is the Ridge and Valley region, in which numerous
tributaries join to form the Tennessee River in the
Tennessee Valley.
This area of
Tennessee is covered by fertile valleys
separated by wooded ridges, such as Bays
Mountain and Clinch
Mountain
. The
western section of the Tennessee valley, where the depressions
become broader and the ridges become lower, is called the
Great Valley.
In this valley are
numerous towns and two of the region's three urban areas, Knoxville
, the 3rd largest city in the state, and Chattanooga
, the 4th largest city in the state.
Middle Tennessee
To the west of East Tennessee lies the
Cumberland Plateau; this area is covered
with flat-topped mountains separated by sharp valleys. The
elevation of the Cumberland Plateau ranges from 1,500 to 1,800 feet
(450 to 550 m) above sea level.West of the Cumberland Plateau
is the
Highland Rim, an elevated plain
that surrounds the
Nashville Basin.
The northern section of the Highland Rim, known for its high
tobacco production, is sometimes called the
Pennyroyal Plateau and is located in
primarily in Southwestern Kentucky. The Nashville Basin is
characterized by rich, fertile farm country and high natural
wildlife diversity.
Middle Tennessee was a common destination of settlers crossing the
Appalachians in the late 1700s and early 1800s.
An important trading
route called the Natchez Trace, first
used by Native Americans, connected Middle Tennessee to the lower
Mississippi River town of Natchez
. Today the route of the Natchez Trace is a
scenic highway called the
Natchez
Trace Parkway.
Some of the last remaining large
American Chestnut trees still grow in this
region and are being used to help breed
blight resistant trees.
West Tennessee
West of the Highland Rim and Nashville Basin is the
Gulf Coastal Plain, which includes the
Mississippi embayment. The
Gulf Coastal Plain is, in terms of area, the predominant land
region in Tennessee.
It is part of the large geographic land area
that begins at the Gulf of
Mexico
and extends north into southern Illinois
. In Tennessee, the Gulf Coastal Plain is
divided into three sections that extend from the
Tennessee River in the east to the
Mississippi River in the west. The
easternmost section, about 10 miles (16 km) in width, consists
of hilly land that runs along the western bank of the Tennessee
River. To the west of this narrow strip of land is a wide area of
rolling hills and streams that stretches all the way to
Memphis; this area is called the Tennessee
Bottoms or bottom land. In Memphis, the Tennessee Bottoms end in
steep bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River. To the west of the
Tennessee Bottoms is the
Mississippi Alluvial Plain, less
than 300 feet (90 m) above sea level. This area of lowlands,
flood plains, and swamp land is sometimes referred to as
the Delta region.
Most of West Tennessee remained Indian land until the
Chickasaw Cession of
1818, when the
Chickasaw ceded their
land between the Tennessee River and the Mississippi River.
The
portion of the Chickasaw Cession that lies in Kentucky is known
today as the Jackson
Purchase
.
Public lands
Areas under the control and management of the
National Park Service include:
Fifty-four state parks, covering some
132,000 acres (534 km²) as well as parts of the Great Smoky Mountains
National Park and Cherokee National Forest
, and Cumberland Gap National Historical
Park
are in Tennessee. Sportsmen and
visitors are attracted to Reelfoot Lake
, originally formed by an earthquake; stumps and other remains
of a once dense forest, together with the lotus bed covering the
shallow waters, give the lake an eerie beauty.
See also: List of
Tennessee state parks
Climate
Most of the state has a
humid
subtropical climate, with the exception of the higher
mountains, which are classified as having a
maritime temperate climate due to cooler
temperatures.
The Gulf of Mexico
is the dominant factor in the climate of Tennessee,
with winds from the south being responsible for most of the state's
annual precipitation. Generally, the state has hot summers
and mild to cool winters with generous precipitation throughout the
year. On average the state receives 50 inches (130 cm) of
precipitation annually. Snowfall ranges from 5 inches
(13 cm) in West Tennessee to over 16 inches (41 cm)
in the higher mountains in East Tennessee.
Summers in the state are generally hot, with most of the state
averaging a high of around 90 °F (32 °C) during the summer months.
Summer nights tend to be cooler in East Tennessee. Winters tend to
be mild to cool, increasing in coolness at higher elevations and in
the east. Generally, for areas outside the highest mountains, the
average overnight lows are near freezing for most of the
state.
While the state is far enough from the coast to avoid any direct
impact from a
hurricane, the location of
the state makes it likely to be impacted from the remnants of
tropical cyclones which weaken over land and can cause significant
rainfall. The state averages around 50 days of thunderstorms per
year, some of which can be quite severe.
Tornadoes are possible throughout the state, with
West Tennessee slightly more vulnerable. On average, the state has
15 tornadoes per year. Tornadoes in Tennessee can be severe, and
Tennessee leads the nation in the percentage of total tornadoes
which have fatalities. Winter storms are an occasional problem—made
worse by a lack of snow removal equipment and a population which
might not be accustomed or equipped to travel in snow—although
ice storms are a more likely occurrence.
Fog is a persistent problem in parts of the
state, especially in much of the Smoky Mountains.
| Monthly
Normal High and Low Temperatures For Various Tennessee Cities
(F) |
|
City |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
Chattanooga |
49/30 |
54/33 |
63/40 |
72/47 |
79/56 |
86/65 |
90/69 |
89/68 |
82/62 |
72/48 |
61/40 |
52/33 |
|
Knoxville |
46/29 |
52/32 |
60/39 |
69/47 |
76/56 |
84/64 |
87/68 |
86/67 |
81/61 |
70/48 |
59/39 |
50/32 |
|
Memphis |
49/31 |
54/36 |
63/44 |
72/52 |
80/61 |
88/69 |
92/73 |
91/71 |
85/64 |
75/52 |
62/43 |
52/34 |
|
Nashville |
46/28 |
51/31 |
61/39 |
70/47 |
78/57 |
85/65 |
89/70 |
88/68 |
82/61 |
71/49 |
59/40 |
49/32 |
| Oak
Ridge |
46/27 |
52/30 |
61/37 |
70/44 |
78/53 |
85/62 |
88/66 |
87/65 |
81/59 |
71/46 |
59/36 |
49/30 |
History
Early history

Mississippian art, carved from
seashell, unearthed in Middle Tennessee.
The area now known as Tennessee was first inhabited by
Paleo-Indians nearly 12,000 years ago. The
names of the cultural groups that inhabited the area between first
settlement and the time of European contact are unknown, but
several distinct cultural phases have been named by archaeologists,
including
Archaic (8000–1000 B.C.),
Woodland (1000 B.C.–1000 A.D.), and
Mississippian (1000–1600
A.D.), whose chiefdoms were the cultural predecessors of the
Muscogee people who inhabited the
Tennessee River Valley prior to Cherokee migration into the river's
headwaters.
The first recorded European excursions into what is now called
Tennessee were three expeditions led by
Spanish explorers, namely
Hernando de Soto in 1540,
Tristan de Luna in
1559, and
Juan Pardo in 1567.
Pardo recorded the name "Tanasqui" from a local Indian village,
which may have evolved to the state's current name. At that time,
Tennessee was inhabited by tribes of
Muscogee and
Yuchi people.
Possibly because of European diseases devastating the Native
tribes, which would have left a population vacuum, and also from
expanding European settlement in the north, the
Cherokee moved south from the area now called
Virginia. As European colonists spread into the area, the native
populations were forcibly displaced to the south and west,
including all Muscogee and Yuchi peoples, the
Chickasaw, and
Choctaw.
The first
British settlement in what is now Tennessee was Fort
Loudoun
, near present-day Vonore
. Fort Loudoun became the westernmost British
outpost to that date. The fort was designed by
John William Gerard de Brahm
and constructed by forces under British Captain Raymond Demeré.
After its completion, Captain Raymond Demeré relinquished command
on 14 August 1757 to his brother, Captain Paul Demeré. Hostilities
erupted between the British and the neighboring
Overhill Cherokees, and a siege of Fort
Loudoun ended with its surrender on 7 August 1760. The following
morning, Captain Paul Demeré and a number of his men were killed in
an ambush nearby, and the most of the rest of the garrison was
taken prisoner.
In the 1760s,
long hunters from Virginia
explored much of East and Middle Tennessee, and the first permanent
European settlers began arriving late in the decade.
During the American
Revolutionary War, Fort Watauga at Sycamore Shoals
(in present-day Elizabethton
) was attacked in 1776 by Dragging Canoe and his warring faction of
Cherokee (also referred to by settlers as the Chickamauga) opposed to the Transylvania Purchase and aligned with
the British Loyalists. The lives of many settlers were
spared through the warnings of Dragging Canoe's cousin
Nancy Ward.
The frontier fort on the banks of the
Watauga River later served as a 1780
staging area for the Overmountain
Men in preparation to trek over the Appalachian
Mountains
, to engage, and to later defeat the British Army at
the Battle of
Kings Mountain
in South
Carolina
.
Eight
counties of western North Carolina
(and now part of Tennessee) broke off from that
state in the late 1780s and formed the abortive State of Franklin. Efforts to
obtain admission to the Union failed, and the counties had
re-joined North Carolina by 1790. North Carolina ceded the area to
the federal government in 1790, after which it was organized into
the
Southwest Territory.
In an
effort to encourage settlers to move west into the new territory of
Tennessee, in 1787 the mother state of North Carolina ordered a
road to be cut to take settlers into the Cumberland
Settlements—from the south end of Clinch Mountain
(in East Tennessee) to French Lick (Nashville
). The Trace was called the “North Carolina
Road” or “Avery’s Trace,” and
sometimes “The Wilderness Road (although it should not be confused
with Daniel Boone's "Wilderness Road"
through Cumberland
Gap
).
Statehood
Tennessee was admitted to the Union in 1796 as the 16th state. The
state boundaries, according to the Constitution of the State of
Tennessee, Article I, Section 31, stated that the beginning point
for identifying the boundary was the extreme height of the Stone
Mountain, at the place where the line of Virginia intersects it,
and basically ran the extreme heights of mountain chains through
the Appalachian Mountains separating North Carolina from Tennessee
past the Indian towns of Cowee and Old Chota, thence along the main
ridge of the said mountain (Unicoi Mountain) to the southern
boundary of the state; all the territory, lands and waters lying
west of said line are included in the boundaries and limits of the
newly formed state of Tennessee. Part of the provision also stated
that the limits and jurisdiction of the state would include future
land acquisition, referencing possible land trade with other
states, or the acquisition of territory from west of the
Mississippi River.
During the administration of
U.S.
President Martin Van Buren, nearly 17,000
Cherokees—along with approximately 2,000 black slaves owned by
Cherokees—were uprooted from their homes between 1838 and 1839 and
were forced by the U.S. military to march from "emigration depots"
in Eastern Tennessee (such as Fort Cass
) toward the more distant Indian Territory west of Arkansas.
During this relocation an estimated 4,000 Cherokees died along the
way west. In the
Cherokee
language, the event is called
Nunna daul Isunyi—"the
Trail Where We Cried." The Cherokees were not the only Native
Americans forced to emigrate as a result of the
Indian removal efforts of the United States,
and so the phrase "
Trail of Tears" is
sometimes used to refer to similar events endured by other Native
American peoples, especially among the "
Five Civilized Tribes." The phrase
originated as a description of the earlier emigration of the
Choctaw nation.
Civil War, Reconstruction and Jim Crow
In February 1861, secessionists in Tennessee's state government—led
by Governor Isham Harris—sought voter approval for a convention to
sever ties with the United States, but Tennessee voters rejected
the referendum by a 54–46% margin. The strongest opposition to
secession came from East Tennessee (which later tried to form a
separate Union-aligned
state). Following the Confederate
attack upon Fort Sumter in April and
Lincoln's call for troops from Tennessee and other states in
response, Governor Isham Harris began military mobilization,
submitted an ordinance of secession to the General Assembly, and
made direct overtures to the Confederate government. The Tennessee
legislature ratified an agreement to enter a military league with
the Confederate States on May 7, 1861. On June 8, 1861, with people
in Central Tennessee having significantly changed their position,
voters approved a second referendum calling for secession, becoming
the last state to do so.
Many major battles of the
American
Civil War were fought in Tennessee—most of them Union
victories.
Ulysses S. Grant and the
U.S.
Navy captured control of the Cumberland
and Tennessee rivers in February 1862. They held off the
Confederate counterattack at
Shiloh in April.
Memphis fell to the Union in June, following a
naval battle on the Mississippi River in
front of the city.
Capture of Memphis and Nashville gave the
Union control of the western and middle sections; this control was
confirmed at the Battle of Murfreesboro
in early January 1863 and by the subsequent
Tullahoma
Campaign
.
Confederates held East Tennessee despite the
strength of Unionist sentiment there, with the exception of
extremely pro-Confederate Sullivan County
. The Confederates besieged Chattanooga during
the Chattanooga
Campaign
in early fall 1863, but were driven off by Grant in
November. Many of the Confederate defeats can be
attributed to the poor strategic vision of General Braxton Bragg, who led the Army of Tennessee from Perryville,
Kentucky
to Confederate defeat at Chattanooga.
The last major battles came when the Confederates invaded Middle
Tennessee in November 1864 and were checked at
Franklin, then totally destroyed by
George Thomas at
Nashville in December. Meanwhile the
civilian
Andrew Johnson was appointed
military governor of the state by
President Abraham Lincoln.
When the
Emancipation
Proclamation was announced, Tennessee was mostly held by Union
forces. Thus, Tennessee was not among the states enumerated in the
Proclamation, and the Proclamation did not free any
slaves there. Nonetheless,
enslaved African Americans escaped to Union lines to gain freedom
without waiting for official action. Old and young, men, women and
children camped near Union troops. Thousands of former slaves ended
up fighting on the Union side, nearly 200,000 in total across the
South, and some 30,000 blacks fought for the Confederates.
Tennessee's legislature approved an amendment to the state
constitution prohibiting slavery on February 22, 1865. Voters in
the state approved the amendment in March. It also ratified the
Thirteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution (abolishing slavery
in every state) on April 7, 1865.
In 1864,
Andrew Johnson (a War
Democrat from Tennessee) was elected Vice President under Abraham
Lincoln. He became President after Lincoln's assassination in 1865.
Under Johnson's lenient re-admission policy, Tennessee was the
first of the seceding states to have its elected members readmitted
to the U.S. Congress, on July 24, 1866. Because Tennessee had
ratified the Fourteenth Amendment, it was the only one of the
formerly secessionist states that did not have a military governor
during the
Reconstruction
period.
After the formal end of Reconstruction, the struggle over power in
Southern society continued. Through violence and intimidation
against freedmen and their allies, white Democrats regained
political power in Tennessee and other states across the South in
the late 1870s and 1880s. Over the next decade, the white-dominated
state legislature passed increasingly restrictive laws to control
African Americans. In 1889 the General Assembly passed four laws
described as electoral reform, with the cumulative effect of
essentially disfranchising most African Americans in rural areas
and small towns, as well as many poor whites. Legislation included
implementation of a poll tax, timing of registration, and recording
requirements. Tens of thousands of taxpaying citizens were without
representation for decades into the 20th century. Disfranchising
legislation accompanied
Jim Crow laws
passed in the late 19th century, which imposed segregation in the
state. In 1900, African Americans made up nearly 24% of the state's
population, and numbered 480,430 citizens who lived mostly in the
central and western parts of the state.
In 1897, Tennessee celebrated its centennial of statehood (though
one year late of the 1896 anniversary) with a great
exposition
in Nashville.
A full scale replica
of the Parthenon
was constructed for the celebration, located in
what is now Nashville's Centennial Park
.
20th century
On August 18, 1920, Tennessee became the thirty-sixth and final
state necessary to ratify the
Nineteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution, which provided
women the
right to vote.
Disfranchising voter registration requirements continued to keep
most African Americans and many poor whites, both men and women,
off the voter rolls.
The need to create work for the unemployed during the
Great Depression, a desire for rural
electrification, the need to control annual spring flooding and
improve shipping capacity on the Tennessee River were all factors
that drove the Federal creation of the
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
in 1933. Through the power of the TVA projects, Tennessee quickly
became the nation's largest public utility supplier.
During
World War II, the availability
of abundant TVA electrical power led the
Manhattan Project to locate one of the
principal sites for production and isolation of weapons-grade
fissile material in East Tennessee.
The
planned community of Oak
Ridge
was built from scratch to provide accommodations
for the facilities and workers. These sites are now
Oak Ridge
National Laboratory
, the Y-12 National Security
Complex
, and the East Tennessee Technology
Park.
Despite recognized effects of limiting voting by poor whites,
successive legislatures expanded the reach of the disfranchising
laws until they covered the state. In 1949 political scientist V.
O. Key Jr. argued that "the size of the poll tax did not inhibit
voting as much as the inconvenience of paying it. County officers
regulated the vote by providing opportunities to pay the tax (as
they did in Knoxville), or conversely by making payment as
difficult as possible. Such manipulation of the tax, and therefore
the vote, created an opportunity for the rise of urban bosses and
political machines. Urban politicians bought large blocks of poll
tax receipts and distributed them to blacks and whites, who then
voted as instructed."
In 1953 state legislators amended the state constitution, removing
the poll tax. In many areas both blacks and poor whites still faced
subjectively applied barriers to voter registration that did not
end until after passage of national civil rights legislation,
including the
Voting Rights
Act of 1965.
Tennessee celebrated its bicentennial in 1996.
With a yearlong
statewide celebration entitled "Tennessee 200", it opened a new
state park (Bicentennial Mall
) at the foot of Capitol Hill in Nashville
.
Demographics
The
center of population of
Tennessee is located in Rutherford County
, in the city of Murfreesboro
.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2006, Tennessee has an
estimated population of 6,038,803, which is an increase of 83,058,
or 1.4%, from the prior year and an increase of 349,541, or 6.1%,
since the year 2000. This includes a natural increase since the
last census of 142,266 people (that is 493,881 births minus 351,615
deaths) and an increase from net migration of 219,551 people into
the state.
Immigration from outside
the United States resulted in a net increase of 59,385 people, and
migration within the country produced a net increase of 160,166
people.20% of Tennesseans were born outside
the South, though such people had
been only 13.5% of the total population in 1990. In recent years,
Tennessee has seen an explosion of people relocating from several
northern states, California, and Florida, for the low cost of
living, and the booming healthcare and automobile industries.
Metropolitan Nashville is one of the fastest growing areas in the
country due in part to these very factors.

Tennessee Population Density Map
In 2000, the five most common self-reported ethnic groups in the
state were:
American (17.3%),
African American (16.4%),
Irish (9.3%),
English (9.1%), and
German (8.3%).
6.6% of Tennessee's population were reported as under 5 years of
age, 24.6% under 18, and 12.4% were 65 or older. Females made up
approximately 51.3% of the population.
Religion
The religious affiliations of the people of Tennessee are:
- Christian: 82%
- Other religions: 3%
- Non-religious: 9%
The largest denominations by number of adherents in 2000 were the
Southern Baptist
Convention with 1,414,199; the
United Methodist Church with
393,994; the
Churches of Christ
with 216,648; and the
Roman
Catholic Church with 183,161.
Tennessee is home to several Protestant denominations, such as the
Church of God in Christ, the
Church of God and The
Church of God of Prophecy, both
located in (Cleveland, Tennessee), and the
Cumberland Presbyterian
Church. The
Free Will Baptist
denomination is headquartered in
Antioch, and its main Bible college is in
Nashville. The
Southern
Baptist Convention maintains its general headquarters in
Nashville. Publishing houses of several denominations are located
in Nashville.
The state's small
Muslim, and
Jewish communities are mainly centered in
the metropolitan areas of Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville and
Chattanooga.
Economy
According to U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, in 2005 Tennessee's
gross state product was $226.502 billion, making Tennessee the 18th
largest economy in the nation.In 2003, the
per capita personal income was $28,641,
36th in the nation, and 91% of the national per capita personal
income of $31,472. In 2004, the
median household
income was $38,550, 41st in the nation, and 87% of the national
median of $44,472.
Major outputs for the state include textiles, cotton, cattle, and
electrical power.As proof of interest in beef production, Tennessee
has over 82,000 farms, and beef cattle are found in roughly 59
percent of the farms in the state. Although cotton was an early
crop in Tennessee, large-scale cultivation of the fiber did not
begin until the 1820s with the opening of the land between the
Tennessee and Mississippi Rivers. The upper wedge of the
Mississippi Delta extends into southwestern Tennessee, and it was
in this fertile section that cotton took hold. Currently West
Tennessee is also heavily planted in
soybeans, focusing on the northwest corner of the
state.
Major
corporations with headquarters in Tennessee include FedEx Corporation, AutoZone
Incorporated
and International
Paper, all based in Memphis; Pilot
Corporation and Regal
Entertainment Group, based in Knoxville; Eastman Chemical Company, based in
Kingsport, the North American headquarters of Nissan, based in Franklin
; and the head-quarters of Caterpillar Financial
(the finance division of the well know mining company Caterpillar)
based in Nashville. Tennessee is well-known for the location of
a large manufacturing facility owned by Nissan, and has been since
1982 in Smyrna
.
The Tennessee
income tax does not apply
to salaries and wages, but most income from stocks, bonds and notes
receivable is taxable. All taxable dividends and interest which
exceed the $1,250 single exemption or the $2,500 joint exemption
are taxable at the rate of 6%. The state's
sales and
use tax rate for
most items is 7%. Food is taxed at a lower rate of 5.5%, but candy,
dietary supplements and prepared food are taxed at the full 7%
rate. Local sales taxes are collected in most jurisdictions, at
rates varying from 1.5% to 2.75%, bringing the total sales tax to
between 8.5% and 9.75%, one of the highest levels in the nation.
Intangible property is assessed
on the shares of stock of stockholders of any loan company,
investment company, insurance company or for-profit cemetery
companies. The assessment ratio is 40% of the value multiplied by
the tax rate for the jurisdiction. Tennessee imposes an
inheritance tax on decedents' estates that
exceed maximum single exemption limits ($1,000,000 for deaths 2006
and after.)
Tennessee is a
right to work
state, as are most of its Southern neighbors. Unionization has
historically been low and continues to decline as in most of the
U.S. generally.
Transportation
Interstate highways
Interstate 40 crosses the state in a
west-east orientation. Its branch interstate highways include
I-240 in Memphis;
I-440 in Nashville; and
I-140 and
I-640 in Knoxville.
I-26,
although technically an east-west interstate, runs from the North
Carolina border below Johnson City
to its terminus at Kingsport
. I-24 is an
east-west interstate that runs cross-state from Chattanooga to
Clarksville.
In a north-south orientation are highways
I-55,
I-65,
I-75, and
I-81. Interstate 65 crosses the state through
Nashville, while Interstate 75 serves Chattanooga and Knoxville and
Interstate 55 serves Memphis.
Interstate 81 enters the state at Bristol
and terminates at its junction with I-40 near Dandridge
. I-155 is a branch
highway from I-55. The only spur highway of I-75 in Tennessee is
I-275, which is in
Knoxville.
Airports
Major
airports within the state include Nashville
International Airport
(BNA), Memphis International Airport
(MEM), McGhee Tyson Airport
(TYS) in Knoxville, Chattanooga
Metropolitan Airport
(CHA), Tri-Cities Regional Airport
(TRI), and McKellar-Sipes Regional
Airport
(MKL), in Jackson. Because Memphis
International Airport is the major hub for
FedEx Corporation, it is the
world's largest air cargo
operation.
Railroads
Memphis
and Dyersburg,
Tennessee
, are served by the Amtrak
City of New Orleans line on its
run between Chicago,
Illinois
and New Orleans, Louisiana
.
Law and government
Tennessee's governor holds office for a four-year term and may
serve a maximum of two consecutive terms. The governor is the only
official who is elected statewide. Unlike most states, the state
does not elect the
lieutenant governor
directly; the Tennessee Senate elects its Speaker, who serves as
lieutenant governor.
The
Tennessee General
Assembly, the state legislature, consists of the 33-member
Senate and the 99-member
House of
Representatives. Senators serve four-year terms, and House
members serve two-year terms. Each chamber chooses its own speaker.
The speaker of the state Senate also holds the title of
lieutenant-governor. Most executive officials are elected by the
legislature.
The highest court in Tennessee is the state Supreme Court. It has a
chief justice and four associate justices. No more than two
justices can be from the same Grand Division. The Supreme Court of
Tennessee also appoints the Attorney General, a practice that is
not found in any of the other 49 states in the Union. Both the
Court of Appeals and the Court of Criminal Appeals have 12
judges.
Tennessee's current state
constitution was adopted in 1870. The state had two earlier
constitutions. The first was adopted in 1796, the year Tennessee
joined the union, and the second was adopted in 1834. The Tennessee
Constitution outlaws martial law within its jurisdiction. This may
be a result of the experience of Tennessee residents and other
Southerners during the period of military control by Union
(Northern) forces of the U.S. government after the American Civil
War.
Politics
Presidential elections results
| Year |
Republican |
Democratic |
| 2008 |
56.85%
1,479,178 |
41.79% 1,087,437 |
| 2004 |
56.80%
1,384,375 |
42.53% 1,036,477 |
| 2000 |
51.15%
1,061,949 |
47.28% 981,720 |
| 1996 |
45.59% 863,530 |
48.00% 909,146 |
| 1992 |
42.43% 841,300 |
47.08% 933,521 |
| 1988 |
57.89% 947,233 |
41.55% 679,794 |
| 1984 |
57.84% 990,212 |
41.57% 711,714 |
| 1980 |
48.70% 787,761 |
48.41% 783,051 |
| 1976 |
42.94% 633,969 |
55.94% 825,879 |
| 1972 |
67.70% 813,147 |
29.75% 357,293 |
| 1968 |
37.85% 472,592 |
28.13% 351,233 |
| 1964 |
44.49% 508,965 |
55.50% 634,947 |
| 1960 |
52.92% 556,577 |
45.77% 481,453 |
Tennessee politics, like that of most U.S. states, is dominated by
the
Republican and
the
Democratic
Parties. After going for Republican
Dwight D. Eisenhower twice in the 1950s,
Tennessee currently tilts towards the Republican Party, but tends
to be somewhat more moderately conservative than its staunchly
conservative neighbors to the south.
While the Republicans control slightly more than half of the state,
Democrats have strong support in the cities of Memphis and
Nashville and in parts of Middle Tennessee and in West Tennessee
north and east of Memphis The latter area includes a large rural
African-American population.
Historically, Republicans had their greatest strength in East
Tennessee prior to the 1960s. Tennessee's
1st /
2nd congressional
districts based in East Tennessee are one of the few ancestrally
Republican districts in the South; the 1st has been in Republican
hands continuously since 1881, and the 2nd district has been held
continuously by Republicans since 1873.
In contrast, long disfranchisement of African Americans and their
proportion as a minority (16.45% in 1960) meant that white
Democrats generally dominated politics in the rest of the state
until the 1960s. The GOP in Tennessee was essentially a sectional
party. Former Gov.
Winfield Dunn and
former U.S. Sen.
Bill Brock wins in 1970
built the Republican Party into a competitive party for the
statewide victory. Tennessee has selected governors from different
parties since 1966.
In the
2000
presidential election, Vice President
Al
Gore, a former
U.S.
Senator from Tennessee,
couldn't carry his home state. The majority of voters support for
Republican
George W. Bush increased in 2004, with his margin of
victory in the state increasing from 4% in 2000 to 14% in 2004.
Southern
Democratic
nominees (e.g.,
Lyndon B. Johnson,
Jimmy
Carter,
Bill Clinton) usually fare
better in Tennessee, especially among split-ticket voters outside
the metropolitan areas. However in the 2008 presidential election
John McCain, the
Republican candidate won
Tennessee by a large margin, 58% to 42% to the Democratic candidate
Barack Obama.
Tennessee sends nine members to the
US House of
Representatives, of whom there are five Democrats and four
Republicans. Lieutenant Governor
Ron
Ramsey is the first Republican speaker of the state Senate in
140 years. In 2008 elections, the Republican party gained control
of both houses of the Tennessee state legislature for the first
time since Reconstruction. Now considered as 30% of the state's
electorate are independents.
The
Baker v. Carr (1962) decision of the US Supreme
Court
, which established the principle of one man, one vote, was based on a lawsuit
over rural-biased apportionment of seats in the Tennessee
legislature. This significant ruling led to an increased
(and proportional) prominence in state politics by urban and,
eventually, suburban, legislators and statewide officeholders in
relation to their population within the state.
The ruling also
applied to numerous other states long controlled by rural
minorities, such as Alabama
.
Law enforcement
The State of Tennessee maintains two dedicated law enforcement
entities, the
Tennessee Highway
Patrol and the
Tennessee Wildlife Resources
Agency (TWRA), as well as the
Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation (TBI) and the
Tennessee State Parks
department.
The Highway Patrol is the primary law enforcement entity that
concentrates on highway safety regulations and general non-game
state law enforcement and is under the jurisdiction of the
Tennessee Department of Safety. The TWRA is an independent agency
tasked with enforcing all wild game, boating, and fisheries
regulations outside of state parks. The TBI maintains
state-of-the-art investigative facilities and is the primary
state-level criminal investigative department. Tennessee State
Park Rangers are responsible for all
activities and law enforcement inside the Tennessee State Parks
system.
Local law enforcement is divided between County Sheriff's Offices
and Municipal Police Departments. Tennessee's Constitution requires
that each County have an elected Sheriff. In 94 of the 95 Counties
the Sheriff is the chief law enforcement officer in the County and
has jurisdiction over the county as a whole. Each Sheriff's Office
is responsible for warrant service, court security, jail operations
and primary law enforcement in the unincorporated areas of a county
as well as providing support to the Municipal Police Departments.
Incorporated municipalities are required to maintain a Police
Department to provide police services within their corporate
limits. The three Counties in Tennessee to adopt Metropolitan
governments have taken different approaches to resolving the
conflict that a Metro government presents to the requirement to
have an elected Sheriff. Nashville/Davidson County split law
enforcement duties and authority between the Metro Sheriff and the
Metro Police Chief. In this instance the Sheriff is no longer the
chief law enforcement officer for Davidson County. The Davidson
County Sheriff's duties focus on warrant service and jail
operations. The Metropolitan Police Chief is the chief law
enforcement officer and the Metropolitan Police Department provides
primary law enforcement for the entire county. Lynchburg/Moore
County took a much simpler approach and abolished the Lynchburg
Police Department when it consolidated and placed all law
enforcement responsibility under the Sheriff's Office. Trousdale
County, although the smallest county in Tennessee, adopted a system
similar to Nashville's that retains the Sheriff's Office but also
has a Metropolitan Police Department.
Important cities and towns
The
capital is Nashville
, though Knoxville
, Kingston
, and Murfreesboro
have all served as state
capitals in the past. Memphis
has the largest population of any city in the
state, but Nashville has had the state's largest metropolitan area since circa 1990;
Memphis formerly held that title. Chattanooga
and Knoxville
, both in the eastern part of the state near the
Great Smoky Mountains, each has approximately one-third of the
population of Memphis or Nashville. The city of Clarksville
is a fifth significant population center, some
45 miles (70 km) northwest of Nashville. Murfreesboro
is the sixth-largest city in Tennessee, consisting
of some 100,500 residents.
| Major cities
Secondary cities
|
Image:Chattanooga, Tennessee.jpg|Chattanooga Image:VisitorCenter.jpg|Clarksville Image:Cleveland-tennessee-ocoeestreet1.jpg|Cleveland Image:Knoxville TN skyline.jpg|Knoxville Image:Memphis skyline from the
air.jpg|Memphis Image:Main Street in Morristown, Tennessee,
From the Skywalk.JPG|Morristown Image:Swanson building 9743.JPG|Murfreesboro Image:Nashvilleskyline.jpg|Nashville
|
Education
Colleges and universities
Sports
Professional teams
Tennessee is also home to Bristol
Motor Speedway
which features NASCAR
Sprint Cup racing two weekends a year, routinely selling out
more than 160,000 seats on each date.
Name origin
Monument near the ancient site of Tanasi in Monroe County
The
earliest variant of the name that became Tennessee was
recorded by Captain Juan
Pardo, the Spanish
explorer, when he and his men passed through a
Native
American village named "Tanasqui" in 1567 while traveling
inland from South
Carolina
.
In the
early 1700s, British traders encountered a Cherokee town named
Tanasi
(or "Tanase") in present-day Monroe
County, Tennessee
. The town was located on a river of the same
name (now known as the Little Tennessee River
), and appears on maps as early as 1725.
It is
not known whether this was the same town as the one encountered by
Juan Pardo, although recent research suggests that Pardo's
"Tanasqui" was located at the confluence of the Pigeon River and
the French Broad River, near modern Newport
.
The meaning and origin of the word are uncertain. Some accounts
suggest it is a
Cherokee modification of an
earlier
Yuchi word. It has been said to mean
"meeting place", "winding river", or "river of the great bend".
According to
James Mooney, the name
"can not be analyzed" and its meaning is lost.
The modern spelling,
Tennessee, is attributed to
James Glen, the governor of South Carolina, who
used this spelling in his official correspondence during the 1750s.
The spelling was popularized by the publication of
Henry Timberlake's "
Draught of the Cherokee Country" in 1765. In
1788, North Carolina created "
Tennessee County", the third
county to be established in what is now Middle Tennessee.
(Tennessee County was the predecessor to
current-day Montgomery County
and Robertson County
). When a
constitutional
convention met in 1796 to organize a new state out of the
Southwest Territory, it adopted
"Tennessee" as the name of the state.
Nickname
Tennessee is known as the "Volunteer
State", a nickname earned during the War of
1812 because of the prominent role played by volunteer soldiers
from Tennessee, especially during the Battle
of New Orleans
.
State symbols
State symbols include:
See also
References
- U.S. Census Largest US Counties By
Population
- U.S. Census Population Estimates for 2008 -
Metropolitan Areas
- John Finger, Tennessee Frontiers: Three Regions in
Transition (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press,
2001), pp. 46-47.
- Tennessee's Civil War Heritage Trail.
Retrieved: 25 November 2009.
- Bobby Lovett, Beale Street. Tennessee Encyclopedia of
History and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 25 November 2009.
- Michael Bertrand, Sun Records. Tennessee Encyclopedia of
History and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 25 November 2009.
- Charles Wolfe, Music. Tennessee Encyclopedia of History
and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 25 November 2009.
- Ted Olson and Ajay Kalra, "Appalachian Music: Examining Popular
Assumptions". A Handbook to Appalachia: An Introduction to the
Region (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press,
2006), pp. 163-170.
- Donald Winters, Agriculture. Tennessee Encyclopedia of
History and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 25 November 2009.
- James Fickle, Industry. Tennessee Encyclopedia of History
and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 25 November 2009.
- Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Official site.
Retrieved: 25 November 2009.
- [1]
- "Archaeology and the Native Peoples of Tennessee".
University of Tennessee, Frank H. McClung Museum. Retrieved on
December 5, 2007.
- Stanley Folmsbee, Robert Corlew, and Enoch Mitchell,
Tennessee: A Short History (Knoxville, Tenn.: University
of Tennessee Press, 1969), p. 45.
- Carter (III), Samuel (1976). Cherokee sunset: A nation
betrayed: a narrative of travail and triumph, persecution and
exile. New York: Doubleday, p. 232.
- Disfranchising Laws, The Tennessee Encyclopedia of
History and Culture, Accessed 11 Mar 2008
- Historical Census Browser, 1900 US Census,
University of Virginia, accessed 15 Mar 2008
- [2]
- American Religious Identification Survey
(2001). Five percent of the people surveyed refused to answer.
- The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life
-
http://www.thearda.com/mapsReports/reports/state/47_2000.asp
- [3]
- [4] USDA 2002 Census of Agriculture, Maps and
Cartographic Resources.
- [5]
- Court of Criminal Appeals
- Map - Tennessee 2000 Election Mapper
- Tennessee by County - GCT-PL. Race and Hispanic or
Latino 2000 U.S. Census Bureau
- Tennessee: McCain Leads Both Democrats by Double
Digits Rasumussen Reports, April 6, 2008
- Charles Hudson, The Juan Pardo Expeditions: Explorations of
the Carolinas and Tennessee, 1566-1568 (Tuscaloosa, Ala.:
University of Alabama Press, 2005), 36-40.
- [6]
- [7]
- Mooney, pg. 534
- Other sources differ on the origin of the state nickname;
according to the Columbia Encyclopedia, the name refers to volunteers
for the Mexican-American War.
Further reading
External links