Hundreds of adventures await visitors on the
multi-state Civil War Trails program which now includes
Tennessee and more specifically, Rutherford County. Nine
signs were installed in the county in October and a tenth will
be located at the new Chamber of Commerce building.
Civil War Trails creates driving tours of Civil
War sites, focusing on the untold stories as well as the famous
events, characters and places of the war, and connects them
together throughout the state.
“Being part of this five-state program is a
great opportunity for Rutherford County,” said Mona Herring,
vice president of the Convention and Visitors Bureau. “Not
only will this bring Civil War visitors to our community, but it
will also have us poised and ready to celebrate the
sesquicentennial (150th anniversary) of the Civil War and
the Sons of Confederate Veterans 2012 Annual Reunion.”
Rutherford County’s signs were placed at the
Mary Kate Patterson house in La Vergne; Smyrna Depot and Sam
Davis Home in Smyrna; the Greenway trailheads at Thompson Lane,
Gen. Bragg Headquarters and Old Fort Park; Oaklands Historic
House Museum; Evergreen Cemetery and the Rutherford County
Courthouse. The final sign will be located at the new
Chamber building.
Directional signs and interpretive markers are
now placed at Civil War-related sites across Tennessee and will
be accompanied by guide maps showing the specific routes of
battles and campaigns. The first Tennessee Civil War
Trails brochure will be unveiled in December and Rutherford
County will be included in it.
“I could describe this program in one word,”
said Mitch Bowman, Executive Director of Civil War Trails. “That
word is: Access.” Bowman said the program aims to give
visitors and residents both intellectual and physical access to
our Civil War stories, focusing on appreciation and preservation
of those stories.
Civil War Trails has been in place for 14 years
and currently includes over 800 sites in Virginia, North
Carolina, Maryland, West Virginia and Tennessee. This is
an exciting new opportunity for Civil War buffs, as most of the
sites are first-time interpretations and approximately half are
being opened to the public for the very first time.
“This program will never end,” said Bowman,
stating his commitment to maintenance of the signs, as well as
the plans to continually add new sites as the reasons the
program will stay fresh and exciting. For more
information, visit
www.civilwartrails.org or contact the Chamber of Commerce at
615.893.6565.