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Blountville is a census-designated place (CDP) in and the county seat [5] of Sullivan County, Tennessee. The population was 3,074 at the 2010 census [ 6 ] and 3,120 at the 2020 census. It is the only Tennessee county seat not to be an incorporated city or town.
Montvale Elementary 558 (Knights) 1984; Porter Elementary 665 (Panthers) 1806/1918; Prospect Elementary 425 (Cubs) 2011; Townsend Elementary 131 (Tigers) 1993; Walland Elementary 346 (Indians) 1963; William Blount High School 1,612 (Governors) 1979 Carpenters Middle School 814 (Cougars) 2001 Carpenters Elementary 261 (Cougars) 2006
West Ridge High School is a public high school (grades 9–12) located in Blountville, Tennessee which operates under the administration of Sullivan County Schools. It was founded as a merger of Sullivan South High School, Sullivan North High School, and Sullivan Central High School in 2021. [3]
Sullivan Central High School was a public high school (grades 9–12) located in Blountville, Tennessee under the authority of Sullivan County Schools. It served students from Blountville Middle School and Holston Middle School until it was incorporated into the new West Ridge High School in 2021. [ 2 ]
Sullivan County was created in 1779 from a portion of Washington County, and named for John Sullivan, a Patriot general in the Revolutionary War. [6] Long Island of the Holston in Kingsport was long an important center for the Cherokee, who occupied much of this territory.
Bedford County Virtual Elementary School; The district previously operated East Bedford School and Bedford County Training School for Negroes, the latter previously John McAdams High School and also Harris High School for Negroes. These schools were reserved for black students. In 1967 it merged into Shelbyville Central. [2]
Most of the base housing is in Kentucky, the school was originally on the Kentucky side of the base, and it is operated by the Kentucky District of the U.S. Department of Defense Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary Schools, along with all other schools on Fort Campbell and the schools on the Fort Knox base situated entirely in Kentucky.
Two-lane US 11W looking northeast near Lea Springs; Joppa Mountain, a peak on the Clinch Mountain ridge rises in the distance.. US 11W enters the city limits of Blaine at the Knox–Grainger county border, and transitions from a four-lane divided highway to an undivided five lane with sidewalk facilities providing access to Blaine's central business district and retail areas. [12]