Marion County Scenes
This page is for photos of places in Marion County, both past and present.
You may add photos here by attaching them to an email sent to me.
Nickajack Cave:
This cave currently is flooded by Nickajack Lake. The water area in the photo once was dry land on
a farm. In the 1960's I remember finding arrowheads all around in front of the cave. This was the
site of some of Marion County's first residents- Cherokee (or the branch called Chickamauga) Indians. It was
the Nickajack Indian Settlement, and it seems several Indians from there assimilated into the "white
man's" world and are ancestors of some of the present-day surnames of Marion County. Proving that for
any one individual is not always possible, but there is at least one incidence of a family Bible record
making the statement, and stories abound in the family lore of several families passed down through
the generations.
Before the cave was
flooded by the new lake, there was a creek coming out of the cave, running to the Tennessee River. There
was dry ground inside the cave, however. Now the cave is flooded and has a fence across it's opening to
keep boaters and all others out, since a protected species of bat was found living in the cave. This
is located on State Highway 156, between New Hope and Ladd's Cove near Nickajack Dam. The cave is in the
civil district known as Shellmound, but Shellmound is on both sides of the Tennessee River
and Nickajack Lake. I think it fitting that this photo be the first one on this "genealogy"
page of the places in Marion County.
This cave is on the south side of Nickajack Lake between New Hope and Ladd's Cove at the foot of Sand
Mountain on TN State Highway 156. The Highway to Bryant, AL and Macedonia Road both begin at highway
156, and are on each side of the Cave area. The Alabama state line is on Sand Mountain no more than
.5 mile behind the cave. The Georgia/Alabama/Tennessee corner is less than 1 mile southeast of the cave.
Orme Train Depot:
This is the old abandoned train depot at Orme. The tracks are gone long ago. The ticket booth
can be seen protruding from the front outside wall like a bay window. A lot of the glass is
broken out of the windows, but luckily that is not so evident from this angle. This depot
was on a railroad line that ran from Chattanooga to Nashville, and was owned by the NC and
St. Louis Railroad. One branch of the tracks ran from the Alabama/Tennessee state line to
Whitwell and on to Pikeville through the Sequatchie valley. Only in recent years was the
track taken up that ran all through Marion County. It paralleled the present-day TN state
highway 28 on its west side. The tracks remain, though replaced with newer track, in the
South Pittsburg area.