Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
October 1991 | Volume 42, Issue 6
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
October 1991 | Volume 42, Issue 6
‘When describing his native landscape, one Tennessee statesman liked to say. “Our great state is the multum in parvo of all the lands lying between the ramparts of the Alleghenies and the majestic currents of the mighty Mississippi.” Soon after the Revolutionary War the American frontier pushed west through that densely wooded multum , leaving a lattice of primitive civilization in its wake. Much of the settlement was clustered around Jonesborough, the state’s first municipality, and its traces can still be found there. The town of Jonesborough tucks neatly into the hills of northeastern Tennessee, just west of the Appalachian Mountains. At first the place seems too quiet and compact to accommodate a colorful, sprawling history. Only one street (Main) runs from one end of town to the other, and on either side of it rows of two-story buildings stand like brick soldiers along the sidewalk, displaying the order and symmetry of their Federal-period architecture. Most of these were built between 1820 and 1850, when Jonesborough was a hub on the stage routes and thus a thriving center of commerce. Others were there in 1788, when the twenty-one-year-old Andrew Jackson came to the frontier town to study law. He paraded down Main Street “riding a race horse, with a pair of holstered pistols strapped to the saddle leading a pack horse carrying his personal possessions, whilst trotting behind was a pack of fox hounds,” according to one diarist. The student was outfitted for action. When I arrived in Jonesborough, on the last evening in October, Main Street was animated not by stagecoaches or foxhounds but by a noisy parade of small pirates, witches, Dick Tracys, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Jack-o’-lanterns flickered through the wavy old glass of nineteenth-century storefronts while trick-or-treaters scurried down the street gathering candy. One pair of goblins sneaked up behind a crowd in the park and blanketed town officials with pink Silly String. The prank delighted the victims as well as the audience; this is a place that has always encouraged independent spirits. Northeastern Tennessee was settled in the early 1770s when a group of North Carolinians pushed west over the highland barrier, defying the British Proclamation of 1763 that banned immigration past the Appalachians. They established two communities, one each along the Watauga and Nolichucky rivers. Then, in another audacious move, they teamed up to form the Watauga Association in 1772 and founded an autonomous government. A century later, Theodore Roosevelt remembered the Wataugans as “the first men of American birth to establish a free and independent community on the continent.” Eventually the citizens renamed their territory the Washington District, making it the first American place named after George Washington, and appealed to North Carolina for annexation. They formed a third community, between the two existing ones, to serve as the capital. It was named after Willie Jones, a Carolina statesman