Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
ZIP code: 37137. Area code: 931: GNIS feature ID: 1296026 [1] Nunnelly is an unincorporated community in Hickman County, Tennessee, United States.
37137 Pamlico County: 37139 Pasquotank County: 37141 Pender County: 37143 Perquimans County: 37145 Person County: 37147 Pitt County: 37149 Polk County: 37151 Randolph County: 37153 Richmond County: 37155 Robeson County: 37157 Rockingham County: 37159 Rowan County: 37161 Rutherford County: 37163 Sampson County: 37165 Scotland County: 37167 ...
Town Square in Centerville. Hickman County was named for Edwin Hickman, an explorer and surveyor who was killed in an Indian attack at Defeated Creek [7] in 1791.. The county was established in 1807, and named for Hickman at the suggestion of Robert Weakley, a legislator who had been a member of Hickman's surveying party. [1]
A ZIP Code (an acronym for Zone Improvement Plan [1]) is a system of postal codes used by the United States Postal Service (USPS). The term ZIP was chosen to suggest that the mail travels more efficiently and quickly [2] (zipping along) when senders use the code in the postal address.
Area code 864 was created in a division of numbering plan area 803 on December 3, 1995. [1] Projections of 2021 anticipated the requirement of relief from telephone number exhaustion in the Upstate region with a new area code for 2024 or 2025.
Dickson is located in south-central Dickson County at (36.071485, -87.374539 It is bordered to the east by the town of Burns. U.S. Route 70 passes through the north side of the city as Henslee Drive; it leads east 40 miles (64 km) to Nashville and west 62 miles (100 km) to Huntingdon.
In 2012, the government of Trinidad and Tobago approved the introduction of postal codes starting later that same year. In addition to the postal code implementation the country has embarked on a nationwide address improvement initiative adopting the Universal Postal Union (UPU) S-42 international standard of addressing. The UPU is an arm of ...
In 1823, the Tennessee General Assembly established two new counties immediately west of the Tennessee River, Dyer County being one of them.John McIver and Joel H. Dyer donated 60 acres (240,000 m 2) for the new county seat, aptly named Dyersburg, at a central location within the county known as "McIver's Bluff".