Anchor Man in Operation Long Line
Cemetery School (Black), 1874-1962
Ed Morris Motor Company
1956 Smyrna Lions Club Softball Team
August 1, 1956, The Rutherford Courier
The Year 1982 in Rutherford County
1983, Cathy Goode The following is a month-by-month compilation of news in Rutherford County, Tennessee: JANUARYThe Parker Group of Smyrna announced plans for a $14 million industrial warehouse complex. Perimeter Square will be built in Smyrna at the intersection of J. S. Young Road and Enon Springs Road (ed. J.S.…
Gil Olerud of Gil’s IGA Foodliner receives Award
Sewart Air Force Base – June 1 declared Sewart Day
History buried too long
April 7, 2021, Tayla Courage, The Murfreesboro Post Murfreesboro resident Kenneth Sawyer is raising money to restore the neglected resting place of two Rutherford County families from the Antebellum era buried near his home. Sawyer, an independent truck driver, bought his home in Murfreesboro last August. The day of the…
American Legion Bob Brown Post 16
Ernie Johns, Air Force ROTC Cadet
1970 Map of Smyrna, Tennessee
The McFadden Family Slaves: The story of Hollie McFadden and her family
Robert Lee Jones was First President of Middle Tennessee State Normal School in 1911
Uxor Hill was Renamed Bellwood and Stood Tall as Finest Home in mid-19th century in Murfreesboro
Who was the Rutherford County mortgage innovator?
Frow Chips, March/April, 2021, Greg Tucker, Rutherford County Historian During the first half of the 20th Century, Andrew L. Todd was Rutherford’s most influential businessman, lawyer, educator, farmer, landowner, politician and socialite. See “Rutherford Ramblings” (RCHS 2014), pages 125-8. In or about 1915, Todd developed an innovative proposal to use…
“Unconstitutional” 231 School Had Short History
Frow Chips, March/April, 2021, Greg Tucker, Rutherford County Historian In 1962, eight years after the U. S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that segregated education was unconstitutional, the Rutherford County school system opened a new segregated school facility on U. S. Highway 231 South. The all black faculty taught black students…
The McFadden-Eagleton-Kerr-Wilson-Spain Place
Researched and by Barry Lamb and Carol White, Froe Chip, March/April, 2021 The impressive Greek Revival style home of William Ralph McFadden, formerly located at 632 East Main Street on western corner of Hancock Street, was built for McFadden and his wife, Clementine Brock McFadden, around 1860. Mr. McFadden was…
Primitive Mills are a Cornerstone to the Heritage of our County
‘It’s beyond time’: Effort underway to honor those enslaved at Murfreesboro’s Oaklands Plantation
March 10, 2021, Nancy DeGennaro, Daily News Journal In a far corner of Evergreen Cemetery on Highland Avenue near Murfreesboro Police Department headquarters is an open field. It’s lumpy in some places where the ground is visibly sunken. Beneath that fertile soil are the unmarked graves of at least 30 people once enslaved…
The House of Aldermen
Researched and Written by Barry Lamb, Froe Chip, January/February, 2021 Many of you aficionados of local history are familiar with the home known as the House of Mayors, located at 500 North Spring Street. It was known by that moniker due to the fact that four Murfreesboro mayors resided in…