Rogersville, Tennessee, United States

History : Founding : Joseph Rogers : A town divided : Cradle of Tennessee journalism : Modern day | Geography | Events | Religion | Media | Rogersville City Park | Crockett Spring Park | Swift Memorial Park | Major highways | Transport : Air

🇺🇸 Rogersville is a town in, and the county seat of, Hawkins County, Tennessee, United States. It was settled in 1775 by the grandparents of Davy Crockett. It is named for its founder, Joseph Rogers. Tennessee's second oldest courthouse, the Hawkins County Courthouse, first newspaper The Knoxville Gazette, and first post office are all located in Rogersville. The Rogersville Historic District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Rogersville is part of the Kingsport–Bristol (TN)–Bristol (VA) Metropolitan Statistical Area, which is a component of the Johnson City-Kingsport-Bristol, TN-VA Combined Statistical Area – commonly known as the "Tri-Cities" region.

History In 1775, the grandparents of Davy Crockett, a future member of the United States Congress from Tennessee and hero of the Alamo, settled in the Watauga colony in the area in what is today Rogersville near the spring that today bears their name. After an American Indian attack and massacre, the remaining Crocketts sold the property to a Huguenot named Colonel Thomas Amis.

In 1780, Colonel Amis built a fort at Big Creek, on the outskirts of the present-day town, with the assistance of fellow Scots-Irish settler John Carter. That same year, about 3.5 miles (5.6 km) above downtown Rogersville, Amis erected a fortress-like stone house, around which he built a palisade for protection against Native American attack. The next year, Amis opened a store, erected a blacksmith shop, and built a distillery. He also eventually established a sawmill and a gristmill. From the first he kept a house of entertainment.

History: Founding In 1785, the State of Franklin organized Spencer County (which includes the area of present-day Hawkins County, Tennessee) and declared the seat of county government to be located at what is today Rogersville. Thomas Henderson was chosen county court clerk and colonel of the militia. William Cocke and Thomas King were elected representatives to the Franklin General Assembly. The remaining county officers are unknown.

In November 1786, North Carolina began once more to contend with the Franklin government for control over the area, and that state's General Assembly passed an act creating Hawkins County. It included within its limits all the territory between Bays Mountain and the Holston and Tennessee rivers on the east to the Cumberland Mountains on the west. The county court was organized at the house of Thomas Gibbons. As had the state of Franklin, North Carolina set the new county seat about the property of Joseph Rogers.

History: Joseph Rogers Joseph Rogers (August 21, 1764 – November 6, 1833) was born near Cook's Town, Ireland, the son of James Rogers and his wife, Elizabeth Brown. He traveled to the area, by then known as the State of Franklin (which had been carved out of far west North Carolina), by 1785. During a stay at a tavern adjacent to Colonel Thomas Amis' home, Rogers met the colonel's daughter, Mary Amis, whom he wed, on October 24, 1786. Her father ceded the lands near Crockett Spring to his son-in-law— the same land that Colonel Amis had purchased from the heirs of David Crockett.

When North Carolina considered where to establish the county seat for its new Hawkins County, Rogers successfully lobbied to have the government located near his home. He volunteered his tavern, which had been established about 1784–85, as the first county courthouse, where it was finally established in 1787. With the help of other local settlers, Rogers laid out a plan for the town, and the town of Rogersville was chartered by the North Carolina General Assembly in 1789. The plan included a public square, deeded to the town government, which would host the town's public well and a county courthouse.

In November 1792, Rogers was appointed the first postmaster at Rogersville. The town's second post office, built by Rogers c. 1815, still stands at the corner of east Main Street and south Hasson Street.

Rogers was the father of fourteen children with Mary. He died on November 6, 1833, at Rogersville, and is buried in Rogers Cemetery. His wife, Mary, died a month later.

History: A town divided In November 1863, during the Civil War, Rogersville was the site of a battle between occupying Federal forces and invading Confederate troops. Union forces had encamped just outside the town. The Confederates, led by Brigadier General William E. Jones, were able to surprise the Union forces and pursue them across the Holston River and into Greene County. The Confederates held the town for the remainder of the war.

Sentiment in Rogersville was divided. Many supported the efforts of twenty-six East Tennessee counties seceding from the state (much as the State of Scott had done) and re-joining the Union. Others saw President Lincoln's invasion of Tennessee as an unprecedented invasion of their homes and an incursion by Federal power; these people became strong Confederates. Rogersville was spared destruction during the war. In fact, structures such as the Hale Springs Inn were used by the different occupying armies.

History: Cradle of Tennessee journalism George Roulstone was Tennessee's first printer. He was encouraged to settle in Rogersville by William Blount, the new governor of the Southwest Territory. Roulston printed Tennessee's first newspaper on November 5, 1791. Because Knoxville, the intended seat of the new territorial government, had not yet been established, Roulstone published the first year of his paper near the Rogers tavern. Roulstone called the newspaper The Knoxville Gazette and in October 1792, he moved his press to Knoxville, where he continued to publish the Gazette as well as other papers until his death in 1804. After the Gazette was moved, there was no newspaper in the area until 1813, when John B. Hood began publishing The East Tennessee Gazette at Rogersville. Other papers shortly followed, including The Western Pilot, c. 1815, and The Rogersville Gazette from the same era.

Specialty publications emerged during these early days, including The Rail-Road Advocate, The Calvinistic Magazine, and The Holston Watchman. Numerous other newspapers have been published in Rogersville over the years, most surviving only a short time and having modest circulation. Among them were The Independent, The Rogersville Spectator, The Weekly Reporter, The Rogersville Gazette, Rogersville Press and Times, Holston Journal, Hawkins County Republican, Hawkins County Telephone, and The Rogersville Herald.

Rogersville's longest-lasting newspaper is The Rogersville Review, which began publication as The Holston Review in 1885 by William T. Robertson. A year later, Robertson changed the name to the present banner. The Review's closest competitor in lifespan was The Rogersville Herald, which was published from 1886 to 1932.

The town's printing heritage is chronicled by the Tennessee Newspaper and Printing Museum, located in the town's historic Southern Railway train depot, c. 1890.

History: Modern day In 2020, the Rogersville Town Council acquired a three-acre site of a vacant shopping centre with plans to turn the site into a civic service campus, consisting of a new community centre, town hall, and a concessions area for users of Rogersville town park, which borders the complex site.

Geography Rogersville is located slightly south-west of the centre of Hawkins County. According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 3.4 square miles (8.8 km²), all land. The town is in the valley of Crockett Creek, a south-west-flowing tributary of the Holston River. The elevation of Rogersville is 1,286 feet (392 m). Via U.S. Route 11W (see below), it is 28 miles (45 km) south-west of Kingsport and 65 miles (105 km) north-east of Knoxville.

Rogersville is located in the Ridge and Valley Ecoregion, part of the Appalachian Mountains.

Events • Heritage Days, held each second full weekend in October in downtown Rogersville • Fourth of July Celebration • Rogersville Holiday Festival, includes a Holiday Tour of Homes in the town's Historic District and Yule Log Ceremony on the Courthouse Square

Religion There are no non-Christian congregations in Rogersville. Among Christian churches, congregations are predominantly Baptist. Denominations with congregations currently in Rogersville include: • A.M.E. Zion • Assemblies of the Lord Jesus Christ • Baptist • Christian (Disciples of Christ) • Churches of Christ including non-institutional • Church of God • Church of God in Christ • Episcopal (ECUSA) • Jehovah's Witnesses • Presbyterian (PCUSA) • Roman Catholic • Seventh-day Adventist • United Methodist • United Pentecostal.

Media From Rogersville The following media originates from within or nearby the Town: • The Rogersville Review, founded 1885 • WRGS AM 1370 Radio, founded 1954 (home of Charlie Chase) • WRGS FM 94.5 Radio, founded 2009 • WEYE FM 104.3 Radio, founded 1982, now broadcasting from nearby Surgoinsville; Available to Rogersville • The Kingsport Times-News • The Knoxville News-Sentinel • The Greeneville Sun • WSJK TV-2 (Sneedville), PBS • WCYB TV-5 (Bristol), NBC • WATE TV-6 (Knoxville), ABC • WVLT TV-8 (Knoxville), CBS • WBIR TV-10 (Knoxville), NBC • WJHL TV-11 (Johnson City), CBS • WKPT TV-19 (Kingsport), ABC • WAPK TV-30 (Kingsport), UPN • WEMT TV-39 (Greenville), FOX.

Rogersville City Park Located in the eastern part of the town, the Rogersville City Park is owned and operated by the town of Rogersville. It is bounded by U.S. Route 11W on the north-west, Park Boulevard on the north-east, and East Main Street on the south.

The park has four children's playgrounds, two outdoor basketball courts, four outdoor tennis courts, numerous picnic shelters, three large, lighted pavilions (two with restroom facilities), an amphitheatre, a lighted stage area, six lighted baseball/softball fields, the town's soccer fields, a duck pond, a fitness trail, and two walking trails. It is home to the Rogersville City Pool, the home pool of the Rogersville Flying Fish Swim Association, which is open to the public from Memorial Day to the start of classes in the City school system in August.

The park is the site of a traveling midway carnival in the late spring and early fall and hosts more than fifty thousand people annually during the Rogersville Fourth of July celebration.

The town-sponsored festival of lights is hosted at the Park, where the Department of Parks & Recreation illuminates several thousand holiday lights and exhibits.

Crockett Spring Park Located in downtown Rogersville, the Crockett Spring Park is a joint project of the town and the Rogersville Heritage Association. The park is the site of Rogersville's first settlement, and the tavern and home built by founder Joseph Rogers is preserved on the site. The park encompasses the Rogers Cemetery, where Joseph and Mary Rogers and the grandparents of Davy Crockett are buried.

The site of Rogersville's first public swimming pool is here, as is the gazebo built to commemorate the bicentennials of both the town (1989) and the state (1996). This public park is maintained by the Rogersville Parks and Recreation Department and the auspices of the Rogersville Tree Board.

Swift Memorial Park Rogersville was home to an African-American college, Swift College, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and Swift Park, located off North Hasson Street in the central part of the town, commemorates the legacy of that institution. In addition, the park boasts picnic shelters, two playgrounds, and basketball courts.

Major highways • US 11W, Lee Highway; • Primary state highways: ◦ SR 70, Trail of the Lonesome Pine; ◦ SR 66; • Secondary state highways: ◦ SR 1, Memphis to Bristol Highway; ◦ SR 347.

Transport: Air The Hawkins County Airport is a county-owned public-use airport located six nautical miles (7 mi, 11 km) north-east of the central business district of Rogersville.

America/New_York/Tennessee 
<b>America/New_York/Tennessee</b>
Image: Adobe Stock digidreamgrafix #67355802

Rogersville has a population of over 4,671 people. Rogersville also forms the centre of the wider Hawkins County which has a population of over 56,721 people. It is also a part of the larger Johnson City-Kingsport-Bristol Metropolitan Area. Rogersville is situated near Rogersville.

To set up a UBI Lab for Rogersville see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Rogersville is: 97,-36.417

Locations Near: Rogersville -83,36.4167

🇺🇸 Greeneville -82.817,36.167 d: 32.3  

🇺🇸 Kingsport -82.568,36.545 d: 41.2  

🇺🇸 Johnson City -82.367,36.333 d: 57.5  

🇺🇸 Elizabethton -82.233,36.333 d: 69.3  

🇺🇸 Bristol -82.183,36.583 d: 75.3  

🇺🇸 Bristol -82.183,36.6 d: 75.8  

🇺🇸 Waynesville -82.983,35.483 d: 103.8  

🇺🇸 Asheville -82.55,35.583 d: 101.1  

🇺🇸 Knoxville -83.917,35.961 d: 96.6  

🇺🇸 Abingdon -81.976,36.71 d: 97.1  

Antipodal to: Rogersville 97,-36.417

🇦🇺 Bunbury 115.637,-33.327 d: 18283.4  

🇦🇺 Mandurah 115.721,-32.529 d: 18248.5  

🇦🇺 Rockingham 115.717,-32.267 d: 18239  

🇦🇺 City of Cockburn 115.833,-32.167 d: 18224.9  

🇦🇺 Vincent 115.834,-31.936 d: 18215.7  

🇦🇺 Wanneroo 115.803,-31.747 d: 18210.7  

🇦🇺 Perth 115.857,-31.953 d: 18214.3  

🇦🇺 Guildford 115.973,-31.9 d: 18202  

🇦🇺 Midland 116.01,-31.888 d: 18198.3  

🇦🇺 Albany 117.867,-35.017 d: 18128.5  

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