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Ooltewah was the county seat of James County, a former Tennessee county that went bankrupt in 1919 and was subsequently incorporated into Hamilton County. The former James County Courthouse located in the square in downtown Ooltewah is the community's major landmark. [5] It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Ooltewah was selected as the county seat. The third courthouse of (the now defunct) James County in Ooltewah. The county went bankrupt in April 1919 and was reincorporated into Hamilton County by a vote of its citizens on December 11, 1919. Few records remain of what was once James County due largely to courthouse fires in 1890 and 1913.
Ooltewah High School (OHS) is a public high school located in Ooltewah, Tennessee, near Chattanooga. ... The event made national news. [7] [8] References
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee said the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency is on the ground assisting victims and assessing the damages. He said he will visit the impacted areas later Friday.
Tennessee State Route 321 runs through the western part of Collegedale, leading north to U.S. routes 11 and 64 just north of Ooltewah and south 5 miles (8 km) to the Georgia state line. As of the 2010 census , the city had a total area of 9.9 square miles (25.6 km 2 ), all of it recorded as land.
A Tennessee man accused in lawsuits of drugging and sexually assaulting dozens of women received a 95-year prison sentence Monday for other types of offenses: the production of child sex abuse ...
Coats grew up in Ooltewah, Tennessee. [3] A 1984 graduate of the University of Missouri with a bachelor of journalism degree, Coats began her career as a reporter at the Irving (Texas) Daily News, [3] later working as a reporter or editor at the Stuart (Fla.) News, The Virginian-Pilot, Norfolk, Wichita (Kansas) Eagle and Sarasota (Fla.) Herald-Tribune, finishing at that paper as executive editor.
Miller Industries is an American tow truck and towing equipment manufacturing company based in the Chattanooga suburb of Ooltewah, Tennessee.Its primary subsidiary, Miller Industries Towing Equipment Inc., manufactures a variety of light- to heavy-duty wreckers, car carriers, and rotators under several brand names, including Century, Vulcan, Chevron, and Holmes.