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Chenault Lane Castalian Springs: 6 ... Rascoe-Harris Farm: July 19, 1996 1135 Liberty Ln. ... 4 mi. S of Gallatin on U.S. 31E (Rozella Way below Plantation Blvd ...
The winning team each year will be presented the Mayor's Cup by the Mayor of Gallatin. On February 6, 2018, the basketball teams for Gallatin wore uniforms celebrating and honoring Union High School. For the 2024 football season, the Gallatin football team will wear uniforms on October 18th to honor the legacy of Union High School.
Volunteer State Community College (Vol State) is a public community college in Gallatin, Tennessee. It is part of the Tennessee Board of Regents. Vol State serves the suburban Nashville community. The main campus of the college is 30 miles (48 km) to the northeast in the Nashville suburb of Gallatin.
From that point to the Gallatin city limit, road bears the name Long Hollow Pike. It goes east as a four-lane undivided highway to have an interchange with I-65 (Exit 97) before entering Sumner County. SR 174 then narrows to a two-lane highway as it leaves Goodlettsville and enters rural areas.
March 6, 1801 (Gallatin, TN) September 11, 1855 (Webberville, TX) Clement C. Dyer: Thomas Earle: G.E. Edwards: John Elam: Robert Elder: Charles Falenash: David Fenter: James Fisher: David Fitzgerald: 1832: Widowed with one son and daughter. The plot of land now sits in modern Fort Bend County. Fitzgerald died in 1832 and willed the land to his ...
The Gallatin Commercial Historic District is the downtown square area of Gallatin, Sumner County, Tennessee. It was listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. The 24 acres (9.7 ha) district included 66 contributing buildings and 22 non-contributing ones. [1] [2]
Nov. 29—A woman was arrested for homicide on Tuesday in Wilson County. Lindsay Harris, 39, was charged with one count of first-degree murder and was taken into custody for the death of her husband.
Rose Mont is a Greek Revival style house built in Gallatin, Sumner County, Tennessee, United States. It was built by Judge Josephus Conn Guild for his family, and completed in 1842. Once the site of the area's largest thoroughbred horse farm with 500 acres (2.0 km 2), it is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Rosemont. [1]