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Did
You Know?

Seward Army Air Field in
Smyrna, Tennessee was in operation from 1942 till 1970. The base was
initially built as a training base for the B-17 Flyer Fortress and the
B-24 Liberator bomber.
The base was renamed
Smyrna Air Force Base after the Air Force was created in 1948. On March
25, 1950, it was renamed once more in honor of Major Allan J. Sewart,
Jr., of Nashville. Major Sewart lost his life in a bombing mission over
the Solomon Islands in November, 1942. |
A History of Rutherford County, Tennessee
Rutherford County was created from parts of Davidson, Sumner,
Williamson and Wilson Counties in 1803. The original county
seat was at the old village of Jefferson. Rutherford County
was named in honor of Revolutionary War General Griffith Rutherford.
Rutherford County was once
hunting grounds for the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and
Shawnee nations. The Creek War Trace and Nickajack Trail once
ran through present day Murfreesboro near Black Fox Springs.
The
Stones River, a major tributary of the Cumberland River named for
explorer Uriah Stone around 1767, provided a transportation route
and water source for settlers and power for mills built throughout
the county. Jefferson, a river town now covered by the waters of
Percy Priest Lake, was the first county seat. Centrally located
Murfreesboro gained county seat status in 1811. From 1818 to 1826
Murfreesboro was the capital of Tennessee. Smyrna, LaVergne, and
Eagleville are incorporated towns within the county.
A moderate climate supporting a long growing season, proximity to
Nashville, access to market by water, road, and, by the 1850s, the
Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad, combined to promote an agrarian
base of considerable diversity and wealth. A few holdings exceeded
1,000 acres. Oaklands, established by the Murfree and Maney families
in the 1820s, had 1,500 acres and, as illustrated by the 1850s
Italianate house museum, was a very prosperous estate. The county
now has 200,000 acres of farm land and twenty-two certified Century
Farms (those that have been in the same family for at least one
hundred years). Livestock and grains continue to be the county's
chief agricultural products.
Rutherford County's location between Nashville and Chattanooga made
it a highly contested area during the Civil War. The battle of
Stones River was one of the bloodiest confrontations of the western
theater. To supply the Union advance to the south, General William
Rosecrans ordered the construction of the largest earthworks
fortification built during the war--Fortress Rosecrans. Of the
county's many Civil War stories, none is better known than that of
Smyrna's Sam Davis, who was only twenty-one when captured, tried,
and hanged as a Confederate spy. He is buried in the family cemetery
on the grounds of his home, now a state historic site. Another noted
Confederate scout from Rutherford County was Dewitt Jobe, who also
was executed for spying in 1864.
Education has traditionally been a priority in Rutherford County.
Nineteenth-century schools included Bradley Academy, established
around 1811 and attended by James K. Polk and John Bell, Union
University, Soule College, and Jefferson Academy. The Tennessee
College for Women, completed in 1907, was a landmark of education as
well as Classical Revival architecture. It was followed in 1911 by
the Middle Tennessee Normal School, now Middle Tennessee State
University (MTSU).
Denied formal education for generations, Rutherford County's African
American population took advantage of the schools which opened
across the county in the wake of Reconstruction and in succeeding
decades. Bradley Academy, reopened in the 1880s as a school for
African Americans, became the county's first accredited high school
for blacks.
A county hospital opened in the 1920s, as did a county health
department funded by the Commonwealth Fund of New York. The Alvin C.
York Veterans Administration Hospital is named in honor of
Tennessee's World War I hero and its construction by the Public
Works Administration represented a lasting New Deal legacy to the
county. Sewart Air Force Base, near Smyrna, was a product of the
country's preparations for World War II and remained in military
operation until the 1960s. Today it is a busy commercial airport.
Major employers in the county's history include the Carnation Milk
Plant, Tennessee Red Cedar Wooden Ware Company, Sunshine Hosiery
Mills, General Electric, National Healthcare Corporation,
Bridgestone/Firestone, Ingram Distribution, and Samsonite Furniture
Company. Nissan Motor Manufacturing Corporation, U.S.A., is the
largest private employer in the county.
Rutherford Countians of note include Sarah Childress (Mrs. James K.
Polk); Governor John Price Buchanan and grandson James Buchanan, a
1986 Nobel Prize winner; poet Will Allen Dromgoole; Congressman and
historian James D. Richardson; novelist Mary Noailles Murfree;
writer Andrew Nelson Lytle; sportswriter Grantland Rice; country
music's "Uncle Dave" Macon; Jean Marie Faircloth (Mrs. Douglas
MacArthur); educator and civil rights activist Mary Ellen Vaughn;
and NASA astronaut Rhea Seddon.
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