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North of Clarksville on Allen-Griffey Rd.; also 2401 and 2409 Allen Griffey Rd. Clarksville: Second set of addresses represents a boundary increase of March 27, 2013: 2: Bethlehem Methodist Church and Cemetery: Bethlehem Methodist Church and Cemetery
) is a bypass of the city of Clarksville, Tennessee, on its south side. [citation needed] It first splits off from the US 41A mainline at 2nd Street and Kraft, following Riverside Drive south, running concurrently with SR 13 and SR 12, along the Cumberland River to an intersection with SR 48 (College Street). It becomes concurrent with SR 48 ...
Greenwood is a neighborhood in the southern part of the city of Clarksville, Tennessee, USA.Located directly south of downtown, Greenwood is often defined as the area delimited by South Riverside Drive to the west, the Mason Rudolph golf course to the east, Ashland City Road (US-41A Bypass/TN-12) to the south, and Crossland Avenue to the north.
Michigan's Biggby Coffee is coming to Clarksville this fall with a trio of Nashville entrepreneurs bring the companies unique taste and community feel
A Shelby restaurant is undergoing a transformation and will be reopening this weekend under a new name and menu. Coach’s Neighborhood Grill, which opened in late 2022, is in the process of ...
Clarksville women saw a need for banking independent of their husbands and fathers who were fighting. In response, the First Women's Bank of Tennessee was established in 1919 by Mrs. Frank J. Runyon. The 1920s brought additional growth to the city. A bus line between Clarksville and Hopkinsville was established in 1922.
It is in Shelby County, Tennessee's largest county in both population and land area. [255] Knoxville, with about 190,000 inhabitants, and Chattanooga, with about 180,000 residents, are the third- and fourth-largest cities, respectively. [253] Clarksville is a significant population center, with about 170,000 residents. [253]
Shelby County was established by European-American migrants in 1819 and named for Isaac Shelby, the former governor of Kentucky who had helped negotiate the land acquisition. [1] From 1827 to 1868, the county seat was located in then called Raleigh, Tennessee (now part of Memphis), on the Wolf River . [ 5 ]