Polk County,Tennessee History
in brief
Polk County,
Tennessee's
72nd county, so named to honor newly-elected Governor James K.
Polk, is located in the extreme southeastern corner of the state, bounded
by both North Carolina and Georgia.
Its 436 square miles contains some of the most scenic beauty in the country,
with beautiful Parksville
Lake, the Ocoee, Conasauga, and Hiwassee Rivers
and 50,865 acres of Cherokee
National
Forest along the lower Unaka Mountain
range.
Polk
County's
known Indian heritage goes back at least 2,000 years to the early woodland
Indians. DeSoto, in 1540, camped near Columbus,
a thriving trading post on the banks of the Hiwassee River.
The treaty of 1819 opened the territory north of the Hiwassee to white settlement and the 1835
Treaty of Removal forced the Cherokees to give up their final portion of land
in Tennessee.
By the petition of some 100 citizens,
Polk
County was created by an act of the
legislature on November 28, 1839,
from parts of Bradley and McMinn. David Ragen,
as Sheriff pro-tem was authorized to hold the first electction, while commissioners James McKamy, William Shields, Samuel Parks, Abraham
Lillard and Jacob Moore were to lay off
the county into seven civil districts.
The county seat was to be named Benton
in hononor of Thomas Hart Benton, Senator from
Missouri. In the February 4, 1840, election, McKamy's stock stand, located on the Old
Federal Road, was the site chosen for the
permanent county seat. The new town was surveyed and laid by James McKamy and John F. Hannah into 223 lots, which
were sold in 1840 for a total of $11,386 -- much of which was never collected.
New officers were duly elected and included John
Shamblin, Sheriff; Abraham Lillard,
trustee; James Parks, county clerk; W.M. Biggs, circuit court
clerk; Sam Kennedy, registrar; with the following Justices of Peace: R.H.
McConnell, Sylvester Blackwell, Zachariah Rose, (first
chairman), John Williams, Stephen Blankenship, Riley Horn,
Andrew Stephenson, W.H. Henry, William Wiggins, Abe McKissac, Alfred Taylor, Ben Ellis, J.W.
Witt, James Ainsworth, and L.L. Trewitt.
During the War Between the States,
Polk
County provided five companies for
the Confederacy and two for the Union Army, as well as 90% of the copper for
the Southern cause. There were no battles fought within the county; however,
the November 29, 1864, raid by notorious bushwhacker and guerilla John P. Gatewood, resulted in at least sixteen murders.
Polk
County's
remote Sylco
Mountains was the site of an unique experiment in social living by Rosine
Parmentier and some of the New
York friends in the1840's. Purchasing around 50,000
acres of land, they encouraged the colonizing of the area by a mixture of
French, German, Italian, Austrian and others. Their grandiose idea of
profitable winemaking apparently found no market, and most of the colonist
left. Those who remained were the Becklers, Miolin, Nocarina, Genollic, Sholtz, Pace
and Chablefamilies, who soon were integrated
into the local community.
Polk County, with a 1990 census population of
13,643, presently has four elementary and two high schools within its
boundaries: Polk County High School, Benton and South Polk Elementary schools
in West Polk; Copper Basin, Ducktown and Turtletown in East Polk. There are approximately 50
churches in the county, all Protestant: mainly Baptist; the remainder
Methodist, Presbyterian, Church of
God,
and Episcopal. The oldest church in the county is Friendship
Baptist Church,
organized around 1826 in the Linsdale area north of
the Hiwassee, which was opened
to white settlers by a 1819 Treaty.
The Tennessee Valley Authority operates three
hydroelectric plants on the Ocoee (one on the Hiwassee)
and owns more than 3,000 acres of land. The U.S. Forest Service owns in excess
of 150,000 acres and operates several recreational sites which provide
picnicking, camping and swimming facilities for local citizens and thousands of
visitors each year.
The Ocoee
River was the site of the 1996
Centennial Olympic canoe/kayak slalom competition, bringing thousands of
visitors to our door. Besides the specially constructed race course and its 300
ft. scale model in new Sugarloaf Mountain State Park, a new Ocoee Whitewater
Center administration building remains as visible and economic reminders of our
part in this historic event.
Agriculture continues to be a major factor in the economy of
Polk
County, with leading products
including poultry, dairy products, cattle, hogs, soybeans, forestry products
and corn. A half-dozen small industries employing around 400 people produce
clothing, furniture, lumber and car mats.