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Media Advisory, University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture, June 13, 2011 “Preservation of Works: Mayor’s Task Force on Historic Preservation”, City of Knoxville, Retrieved November 18, 2012 “Ribbon Cutting held at UT’s Native American Mound Garden”, Cherokee One Feather, June 22, 2011
Entrance to Sequoyah Hills at intersection of Cherokee Boulevard and Kingston Pike. Sequoyah Hills is a neighborhood in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, named for the Cherokee scholar Sequoyah. [1] It is located off Kingston Pike, between the city's downtown and West Knoxville. Initially developed in the 1920s, Sequoyah Hills was one of ...
The Half-Century of Knoxville: Being the Address and Proceedings at the Semi-Centennial Anniversary of the Settlement of the Town, February 10, 1842. To which is added an appendix: containing a number of historical documents. (Printed at the Register Office, Knoxville, Tennessee, 1852). Isenhour, Judith Clayton. Knoxville, A Pictorial History.
Cherokee 1977 Submerged Tomotley: 40MR5 Mississippian, Cherokee 1967, 1973, 1974, 1976 Submerged Toqua: 40MR6 Mississippian, Cherokee 1975-1978 Submerged Citico: 40MR7 Archaic, Mississippian, Cherokee 1967-1968, 1978 Submerged Halfway Town: 40MR8 Cherokee 1970s Submerged Great Tellico/Chatuga: 40MR12 Cherokee Pate Mound: 40MR16 1981 Galyon Farm ...
'Sacred': Cherokee name in, Confederate general out for Tennessee's highest mountain John Bacon and Tyler Whetstone, USA TODAY Updated September 20, 2024 at 12:06 PM
Cherokee burial mound in Knoxville, Tennessee. Bodies that were buried outside were covered with rocks and dirt, and then later covered by other dead bodies, which would also be covered with rocks, dirt, and other bodies. These piles of bodies would eventually form large burial mounds. New burial mounds were started when a priest died. [2]
The root of the name "Tomotley" is unknown, although it is generally believed to have originated before the Cherokee occupation. Ethnologist James Mooney suggested a possible Muscogee Creek origin, pointing out the phonetic similarity to the Creek town of Tama'li, which was located on the Chattahoochee River in Georgia, and Creek occupancy of this area prior to the Cherokee.
January 12, 1965 (Knoxville: Knox: The home of William Blount from 1792 to his death in 1800. A Continental Congressman of the Congress of the Confederation and the Constitutional Convention where he represented North Carolina, Blount then became governor of the Southwest Territory, led Tennessee to statehood, and later served in the US Senate.