Tennessee Vacation Guide System
Tennessee History
Tennessee is a U.S. state, one of the 50 states of the United States. It was admitted to the Union on June 1, 1796.
Prehistory
The Icehouse Bottom site, now under Tellico Lake in Monroe County
Mississippian engraved shell, from a Sumner County excavation
Paleo-Indians
are believed to have hunted and camped in what is now Tennessee as
early as 12,000 years ago. Along with projectile points common for this
period, archaeologists have uncovered a 12,000-year old mastodon
skeleton in Williamson County with cut marks typical of prehistoric
hunters.
The most prominent known Archaic period (c. 8000 - 1000
BC) site in Tennessee is the Icehouse Bottom site located just south of
Fort Loudoun in Monroe County. Excavations at Icehouse Bottom in the
early 1970s uncovered evidence of human habitation dating to as early
as 7,500 BC. Other Archaic sites include Rose Island, located a few
miles downstream from Icehouse Bottom, and the Eva site in Benton
County.
Tennessee is home to two major Woodland period (1000 BC
- 1000 AD) sites: the Pinson Mounds in Madison County and the Old Stone
Fort in Coffee County, both built c. 1-500 AD. The Pinson Mounds are
the largest Middle Woodland site in the Southeastern United States,
consisting of at least 12 mounds and a geometric earthen enclosure. The
Old Stone Fort is a large ceremonial structure with a complex
entranceway, situated on what was once a relatively inaccessible
peninsula.
Mississippian-era (c. 1000 - 1600) villages are found
along the banks of most major rivers in Tennessee. The most well-known
of these sites include Chucalissa near Memphis, the Toqua site in
Monroe County, and Mound Bottom in Cheatham County. Excavations at the
McMahan Indian Mounds in Sevier County and more recently at Townsend in
Blount County have uncovered the remnants of fortified villages dating
to 1200.
Protohistory
In the 16th century, three Spanish
exploration expeditions passed through what is now Tennessee. The
Hernando de Soto expedition entered the Tennessee Valley via the
Nolichucky River in June 1540, rested for several weeks at the village
of Chiaha (near modern Douglas Dam), and proceeded southward to the
Coosa chiefdom in northern Georgia. In 1559, the expedition of Tristan
de Luna, which was resting at Coosa, briefly entered the Chattanooga
area to help the Coosa chief subdue a rebellious tribe known as the
Napochies. In 1567, the Juan Pardo expedition entered the Tennessee
Valley via the French Broad River, rested for several days at Chiaha,
and followed a rugged trail to the upper Little Tennessee River before
being forced to turn back.
Chronicles of the Spanish explorers,
while scant, provide valuable information regarding the Tennessee
Valley's 16th-century inhabitants. Most of the valley, including
Chiaha, was part of the Coosa chiefdom's vast sphere of influence.
Inhabitants spoke a dialect of the Muskogean language, and lived in
complex agrarian communities centered around fortified villages.
Cherokee-speaking people lived in the remote reaches of the Appalachian
Mountains, and may have been at war with the Muskogean inhabitants in
the valley. The village of Tali, visited by De Soto in 1540, is
believed to be the Mississippian-period village excavated at the Toqua
site in the 1970s. The villages of Chalahume and Satapo, visited by
Pardo in 1567, were likely predecessors (and namesakes for) the later
Cherokee villages of Chilhowee and Citico, which were located near
modern Chilhowee Dam.
European exploration and settlement
Discovery and interaction with native peoples
Possibly
because of European diseases devastating the Native tribes, which would
have left a population vacuum, and also from expanding European
settlement in the north, the Cherokee moved south from the area now
called Virginia. As European colonists spread into the area, the native
populations were forcibly displaced to the south and west, including
the Muscogee, Yuchi, Chickasaw and Choctaw peoples. From 1838 to 1839,
the US government forced Cherokees to leave the eastern United States.
Nearly 17,000 Cherokees were forced to march from Eastern Tennessee to
Indian Territory west of Arkansas. This came to be known as the Trail
of Tears, as an estimated 4,000 Cherokees died along the way. In the
Cherokee language, the event is called Nunna daul Isunyi—"the Trail
Where We Cried".
In the days before statehood, Tennesseans
struggled to gain a political voice and suffered for lack of the
protection afforded by organized government. Six counties—Washington,
Sullivan and Greene in East Tennessee and Davidson, Sumner, and
Tennessee in Middle Tennessee—had been formed as western counties of
North Carolina between 1777 and 1788.
After the American
Revolution, however, North Carolina did not want the trouble and
expense of maintaining such distant settlements, embroiled as they were
with hostile tribesmen and needing roads, forts and open waterways. Nor
could the far-flung settlers look to the national government, for under
the weak, loosely constituted Articles of Confederation, it was a
government in name only.
State of Franklin
The westerners'
two main demands—protection from the Indians and the right to navigate
the Mississippi River—went mainly unheeded during the 1780s. North
Carolina’s insensitivity led frustrated East Tennesseans in 1784 to
form the breakaway State of Franklin.
John Sevier was named
governor, and the fledgling state began operating as an independent,
though unrecognized, government. At the same time, leaders of the
Cumberland settlements made overtures for an alliance with Spain, which
controlled the lower Mississippi River and was held responsible for
inciting the Indian raids. In drawing up the Watauga and Cumberland
Compacts, early Tennesseans had already exercised some of the rights of
self-government and were prepared to take political matters into their
own hands.
Such stirrings of independence caught the attention
of North Carolina, which quietly began to reassert control over its
western counties. These policies and internal divisions among East
Tennesseans doomed the short-lived State of Franklin, which passed out
of existence in 1788.
Southwest Territory
When North Carolina
finally ratified the Constitution of the United States in 1789, it also
ceded its western lands, the Tennessee country, to the Federal
government. North Carolina had used these lands as a means of rewarding
its Revolutionary soldiers. In the Cession Act of 1789, it reserved the
right to satisfy further land claims in Tennessee.
Congress
designated the area as the "Territory of the United States, South of
the River Ohio", more commonly known as the Southwest Territory. The
territory was divided into three districts—two for East Tennessee and
one for the Mero District on the Cumberland—each with its own courts,
militia and officeholders.
President George Washington appointed
William Blount as territorial governor. He was a prominent North
Carolina politician with extensive holdings in western lands.
Admission to the Union
In
1795, a territorial census revealed a sufficient population for
statehood. A referendum showed a three-to-one majority in favor of
joining the Union. Governor Blount called for a constitutional
convention to meet in Knoxville, where delegates from all the counties
drew up a model state constitution and democratic bill of rights.
The
voters chose Sevier as governor. The newly elected legislature voted
for Blount and William Cocke as Senators, and Andrew Jackson as
Representative.
Tennessee leaders thereby converted the
territory into a new state, with organized government and constitution,
before applying to Congress for admission. Since the Southwest
Territory was the first Federal territory to present itself for
admission to the Union, there was some uncertainty about how to
proceed, and Congress was divided on the issue.
Nonetheless, in
a close vote on June 1, 1796, Congress approved the admission of
Tennessee as the sixteenth state of the Union. They drew its borders by
extending the northern and southern borders of North Carolina, with a
few deviations, to the Mississippi River, Tennessee's western boundary.
Antebellum years
The Hermitage, plantation home of President Andrew Jackson, now a museum in Davidson County
In
the early years of settlement, planters brought slaves with them from
Kentucky and Virginia. Enslaved African Americans were first
concentrated in Middle Tennessee, where planters developed mixed crops
and bred high quality horses and cattle, as they did in the Inner
Bluegrass region of Kentucky. East Tennessee had more subsistence
farmers and few slaveholders.
During the early years of state
formation, there was support for emancipation of slaves, founded in
part on fears by whites of competition with slave labor (who could be
hired out) in the middle and eastern parts of the state. At the
constitutional convention of 1796, free Negroes were given the right to
vote if they met residency and property requirements. Efforts to
abolish slavery were defeated at this convention and again at the
convention of 1834. The convention of 1834 also marked the state's
retraction of suffrage for most free African Americans. By then
slaveholding had expanded markedly in the state, especially in the
Mississippi Delta where cotton planters held large groups of enslaved
African Americans, often numbering in the hundreds.
By 1830 the
number of African Americans had increased from less than 4,000 at the
beginning of the century, to 146,158. This was chiefly related to
development of large plantations and transportation of numerous slaves
to the Cotton Belt in West Tennessee, in the area of the Mississippi
Delta. African American labor created the cotton plantations that
generated so much wealth for the planters. By 1860 the enslaved
population had nearly doubled to 283,019, with only 7,300 free Negroes
in the state. While most of the slaves were concentrated in West
Tennessee, planters in Middle Tennessee also used enslaved African
Americans for labor but had smaller operations and held fewer slaves.
According to the 1860 census, enslaved African Americans comprised
about 25% of the state's population of 1.1 million before the Civil War.
Civil War
The American Civil War, to a large extent, was fought in cities and farms of Tennessee—only Virginia had more battles.
Secession
Most
Tennesseans initially showed little enthusiasm for breaking away from a
nation whose struggles it had shared for so long. There were small
exceptions such as Franklin County, which borders Alabama in southern
Middle Tennessee; Franklin County formally threatened to secede from
Tennessee and join Alabama if Tennessee did not leave the Union.
Franklin County withdrew this threat when Tennessee did eventually
secede. In 1860, Tennesseans had voted by a slim margin for the
Constitutional Unionist John Bell, a native son and moderate who
continued to search for a way out of the crisis.
In February
1861, fifty-four percent of the state’s voters voted against sending
delegates to a secession convention. With the attack on Fort Sumter in
April, however, followed by President Abraham Lincoln’s call for 75,000
volunteers to coerce the seceded states back into line, public
sentiment turned dramatically against the Union.
Thus historian Daniel Crofts reports:
Unionists of all descriptions, both those who became Confederates and
those who did not, considered the proclamation calling for seventy-five
thousand troops "disastrous." Having consulted personally with Lincoln
in March, Congressman Horace Maynard, the unconditional Unionist and
future Republican from East Tennessee, felt assured that the
administration would pursue a peaceful policy. Soon after April 15, a
dismayed Maynard reported that "the President's extraordinary
proclamation" had unleashed "a tornado of excitement that seems likely
to sweep us all away." Men who had "heretofore been cool, firm and
Union loving" had become "perfectly wild" and were "aroused to a
phrenzy of passion." For what purpose, they asked, could such an army
be wanted "but to invade, overrun and subjugate the Southern states."
The growing war spirit in the North further convinced southerners that
they would have to "fight for our hearthstones and the security of
home."
Governor Isham Harris began military mobilization,
submitted an ordinance of secession to the General Assembly, and made
direct overtures to the Confederate government.
In a June 8,
1861, referendum, East Tennessee held firm against separation, while
West Tennessee returned an equally heavy majority in favor. The
deciding vote came in Middle Tennessee, which went from 51 percent
against secession in February to 88 percent in favor in June.
Having
ratified by popular vote its connection with the fledgling Confederacy,
Tennessee became the last state to officially withdraw from the Union.
People
in East Tennessee were firmly against Tennessee's move to leave the
Union; as were many in other parts of the Union, particularly in
historically Whig portions of West Tennessee. The East Tennessee
Convention, which met at Knoxville in May 1861 and at Greeneville in
June 1861, consisted of 29 East Tennessee counties and one Middle
Tennessee county that resolved to secede from Tennessee and form a
separate state aligned with the Union. They petitioned the state
legislature in Nashville, which denied their request to secede and sent
Confederate troops under Felix Zollicoffer to occupy East Tennessee and
prevent secession. Many East Tennesseans engaged in guerrilla warfare
against state authorities by burning bridges, cutting telegraph wires,
and spying.
Battles
Third Battle of Chattanooga, November 23–25, 1863
Many
battles were fought in the state—most of them Union victories. Ulysses
S. Grant and the United States Navy captured control of the Cumberland
and Tennessee Rivers in February 1862 and held off the Confederate
counterattack at Shiloh in April of the same year.
Capture of
Memphis and Nashville gave the Union control of the Western and Middle
sections. Control was confirmed at the Battle of Stones River at
Murfreesboro in early January 1863.
After Nashville was captured
(the first Confederate state capital to fall) Andrew Johnson, an East
Tennessean from Greeneville, was appointed military governor of the
state by Lincoln. The military government abolished slavery in the
state and Union troops occupied much of the state through the end of
the war. The long occupation depleted resources and contributed to a
breakdown in the social order in many areas.
The Confederates
continued to hold East Tennessee despite the strength of Unionist
sentiment there, with the exception of pro-Confederate Sullivan County.
The
Confederates besieged Chattanooga in early fall 1863 but were driven
off by Grant in November. Many of the Confederate defeats can be
attributed to the poor strategic vision of General Braxton Bragg, who
led the Army of Tennessee from Shiloh to Confederate defeat at
Chattanooga.
The last major battles came when the Confederates
invaded in November 1864 and were checked at Franklin, then totally
destroyed by George Thomas at Nashville in December.
Reconstruction and Jim Crow
After
the war, Tennessee adopted a constitutional amendment forbidding
property in men February 22, 1865; ratified the Fourteenth Amendment to
the United States Constitution on July 18, 1866; and was the first
state readmitted to the Union on July 24, 1866.
Because it
ratified the Fourteenth Amendment, Tennessee was the only state that
seceded from the Union that did not have a military governor during
Reconstruction.
As in most Southern states, many white citizens
had not accepted the results of the Civil War. Reactions have to be
seen against an environment of wholesale shifts in power, and no group
gives up power willingly. Many whites had not changed their thinking
about allowing freedmen full citizenship and the exercise of suffrage.
They had deprived blacks of education and come to believe the African
Americans could not learn. Tensions ranged from fear of competition
with blacks for jobs in East Tennessee, to concerns by planters in
Middle and West Tennessee about being able to get enough labor for
their farms. Often they did not think African Americans would work
without coercion.
On January 4, 1868, the Nashville Republican
Banner published an editorial calling for a revolutionary movement of
white Southerners to unseat the one-party state rule of the Republican
Party and restore the racial subjugation of the region's blacks. "In
this State," the paper argued, "reconstruction has perfected itself and
done its worst. It has organized a government which is as complete a
closed corporation as may be found; it has placed the black man over
the white as the agent and prime-move of domination; it has constructed
a system of machinery by which all free guarantees, privileges and
opportunities are removed from the people.... The impossibility of
casting a free vote in Tennessee short of a revolutionary movement ...
is an undoubted fact."
In fact there were only two or three
African Americans in the Tennessee legislature during Reconstruction.
Others served as state and city officers. Even with increased
participation on the Nashville City Council, African Americans held
only one-third of the seats.
Whites thus clearly continued to
control the state during Reconstruction. In his race for Congress in
1872, Andrew Johnson addressed African Americans in speaking campaigns
in western counties, saying, "If fit and qualified by character and
education, no one should deny you the ballot." If the freedmen had
generally been "fit by education", they would have been more fit than
many poor whites, who could not pass educational requirements, either,
and were also later disfranchised.
In the 1870s, white elites
worked to reclaim political power, using paramilitary groups against
freedmen and their allies to terrorize them, suppress voting, and
control labor. White Democrats regained power.
In 1889 the Tennessee General Assembly passed four acts of
self-described electoral reform that resulted in the disfranchisement
of a significant portion of African American voters as well as many
poor white voters. The timing of the legislation resulted from a unique
opportunity seized by the Democratic Party to bring an end to what one
historian described as the most "consistently competitive political
system in the South."
In the political
campaign of 1888, the Democrats waged a battle unparalleled in
corruption and violence to gain quorum control over both houses of the
legislature. With Republicans unable to stall or defeat antiparty
measures, the disfranchising acts sailed through the 1889 general
assembly, and Governor Robert L. Taylor signed them into law. Hailed by
newspaper editors as the end of black voting, the laws worked as
expected, and African American voting declined precipitously in rural
and small town Tennessee. Many urban blacks continued to vote until
so-called progressive reforms eliminated their political power in the
early twentieth century.
The white, elite-dominated legislature
thus had the power to add more Jim Crow laws and establish state
segregation with provisions that would last until the mid-20th century.
Disfranchising provisions worked against poor whites as well as blacks
for decades. Tennessee became a white-dominated state, with the
Democratic Party in power in the Middle and Western sections; the
Eastern section retained Republican support based on its Unionist
leanings before and during the war.
Centennial
In 1897, the state celebrated its centennial of statehood (albeit one year late) with a great exposition in Nashville.
The
Tennessee Centennial Exposition was the ultimate expression of the
Gilded Age in the Upper South—a showcase of industrial technology and
exotic papier-mâché versions of the world’s wonders. The Nashville
Parthenon, a full-scale replica of Athens' Parthenon, was built in
plaster, wood and brick. Rebuilt of concrete in the 1920s, it remains
one of the city's attractions. During its six-month run at Centennial
Park, the Exposition drew nearly two million visitors to see its
dazzling monuments to the South’s recovery.
Governor Robert
Taylor observed, “Some of them who saw our ruined country thirty years
ago will certainly appreciate the fact that we have wrought miracles.”
Tennessee
provided the most celebrated American soldier of the First World War:
Alvin C. York of Fentress County, Tennessee. York was a former
conscientious objector who, in October 1918, subdued an entire German
machine gun regiment in the Argonne Forest.
Besides receiving
the Medal of Honor and assorted French decorations, York became a
powerful symbol of patriotism in the press and Hollywood film.
Women's rights
Tennessee
became the focus of national attention during the campaign for women’s
voting rights. Like the temperance movement, women’s suffrage was an
issue with its roots in middle-class reform efforts of the late 19th
century.
The organized movement came of age with the founding of
the Tennessee Equal Suffrage Association in 1906. Despite a determined
(and largely female) opposition, Tennessee suffragists were moderate in
their tactics and gained limited voting rights before the national
question arose.
In 1920, Governor Albert Roberts called a
special session of the General Assembly to consider ratification of the
Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Leaders
of the rival groups flooded into Nashville to lobby the General
Assembly. In a close House vote, the suffrage amendment won passage
when an East Tennessee legislator, Harry Burn, switched sides after
receiving a telegram from his mother encouraging him to support
ratification.
Tennessee thereby became the pivotal state to approve the Nineteenth Amendment.
Women
immediately made their presence felt by swinging Tennessee to Warren
Harding in the 1920 presidential election. It was the first time since
1868 that the state had voted for a Republican presidential candidate.
Scopes Trial
Further national attention came Tennessee’s way during the trial of John T. Scopes, also called the Scopes Trial.
In
1925, the General Assembly, as part of a general education bill, passed
a law that forbade the teaching of evolution in the public schools.
Some local boosters in Dayton, Tennessee concocted a scheme to have
Scopes, a high school biology teacher, violate the law and stand trial
as a way of drawing publicity and visitors to the town.
Their
plan worked all too well, as the Rhea County Courthouse was turned into
a circus of national and even international media coverage. Thousands
flocked to Dayton to witness the high-powered legal counsel: William
Jennings Bryan for the prosecution, and Clarence Darrow for the
defense, argue their case.
Tennessee was ridiculed in the
northeast and West Coast press as the “Monkey State,” even as a wave of
revivals defending religious fundamentalism swept the state. The trial
was also given the name "Monkey Trial" by the same reporters.
The
legal outcome of the trial was inconsequential: Scopes was convicted
and fined $100, a penalty later rescinded by the state court of
appeals. The law itself remained on the books until 1967. More
important was the law’s symbolic importance. It was an expression of
the anxiety felt by Tennessee’s rural people over the threat which they
believed modern science posed to their traditional religious culture.
Country music birthplace
The Ryman Auditorium, home of the "Grand Ole Opry" in Nashville
Ironically,
at the very time that Tennessee’s rural culture was under attack by
sophisticated, urban critics, its music found a national audience.
In
1925, WSM, a powerful Nashville radio station, began broadcasting a
weekly program of live music which soon was dubbed the "Grand Ole
Opry." Such music came in diverse forms: banjo-and-fiddle string bands
of Appalachia, family gospel singing groups, and country vaudeville
acts like that of Murfreesboro native Uncle Dave Macon.
Still
the longest-running radio program in American history, the Opry used
the new technology of radio to tap into a huge market for "old time" or
"hillbilly" music.
Two years after the Opry’s opening, in a
series of landmark sessions at Bristol, Tennessee, field scout Ralph
Peer of the Victor Company recorded Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter
Family to produce the first nationally popular rural records.
Tennessee
thus emerged as the heartland of traditional country music — home to
many of the performers as well as the place from which it was broadcast
to the nation.
The Great Depression and TVA
The need to
create work for the unemployed during the Great Depression, the desire
for rural electrification, and the desire to control the annual spring
floods on the Tennessee River drove Federal creation of the Tennessee
Valley Authority, the nation's largest public utility, in 1933.
TVA
had an impact on the lives of nearly all Tennesseans. The agency was
created mainly through the persistence of Senator George Norris of
Nebraska. Headquartered in Knoxville, it was charged with the task of
planning the total development of the Tennessee River Valley. TVA
sought to do this by building hydroelectric dams, constructing 20
between 1933 and 1951, as well as electricity-producing coal-fired
power plants.
Inexpensive and abundant electrical power was the
main benefit that TVA brought to Tennessee, particularly to rural areas
that previously did not have electrical service. TVA brought
electricity to about 60,000 farm households across the state.
By
1945, TVA was the largest electrical utility in the nation, a supplier
of vast amounts of power whose presence in Tennessee attracted large
industries to relocate near one of its dams or steam plants. This
incentive contributed to important economic development in the state.
World War II and progress
World
War II brought relief to Tennessee by employing ten percent of the
state’s populace (308,199 men and women) in the armed services. Most of
those who remained on farms and in cities worked on war-related
production, since Tennessee received war orders amounting to $1.25
billion.
Tennessee military personnel served with distinction
from Pearl Harbor to the final, bloody assaults at Iwo Jima and
Okinawa, and 7,000 died in combat during the war. In 1942–43, Middle
Tennessee residents played host to 28 Army divisions that swarmed over
the countryside on maneuvers preparing for the D-Day invasion.
Tennesseans
participated in all phases of the war—from combat to civilian
administration to military research. Cordell Hull served twelve years
as Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Secretary of State and became one of the
chief architects of the United Nations, for which he received the Nobel
Peace Prize.
Industrial expansion
War-based industries hummed
with the labor of a greatly enlarged workforce. A giant shell-loading
plant was built at Milan, as well as the Vultee Aircraft works in
Nashville; TVA projects also expanded in East Tennessee. Approximately
33% of the state’s workers were female by the end of the war.
Especially
significant for the war effort was Tennessee’s role in the Manhattan
Project, the military’s top secret project to build an atomic weapon.
Research and production work for the first A-bombs were conducted at
the huge scientific/industrial installation at Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
The Oak Ridge community was entirely a creation of the war: it grew
from empty woods in 1941 to a city of 70,000 (Tennessee’s fifth
largest) four years later.
Changes to poll tax disfranchisement
Disfranchising
legislation of the late 19th century had affected poor whites as well
as African Americans. Despite vows to overturn them, "successive
legislatures expanded the reach of the disfranchising laws until they
covered the state... County officers regulated the vote by providing
opportunities to pay the tax (as they did in Knoxville), or conversely
by making payment as difficult as possible. Such manipulation of the
tax, and therefore the vote, created an opportunity for the rise of
urban bosses and political machines. Urban politicians bought large
blocks of poll tax receipts and distributed them to blacks and whites,
who then voted as instructed."
Abuses of the poll tax continued
to resist efforts by reformers for change in the 1930s and 1940s. In an
odd turn of events, in 1943 legislators managed to rescind the poll
tax, but the Tennessee Supreme Court declare that action
unconstitutional.
It was not until 1953 that a new
constitutional convention finally removed provisions for the poll tax.
Hundreds of thousands of citizens, both black and white, were
disfranchised by its abuses during the decades since its passage.
Continued abuses under segregation and disfranchisement of African
Americans provided reasons for young activists to continue in the Civil
Rights Movement.
Civil Rights Movement and King assassination
Tennessee
played an important and prominent role in the struggle for
African-American civil rights. Many national civil rights leaders, such
as Rosa Parks and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. received training in
methods of nonviolent protest at the Highlander Folk School in
Monteagle, Tennessee. The methods which Gandhi had used were taught
here.
In the spring of 1960, after decades of segregation,
Tennessee's Jim Crow laws were challenged by an organized group of
Nashville college students from Fisk University, American Baptist
Theological Seminary, and Vanderbilt University. The students, led by
Jim Farmer, John Lewis, and ministers of local African-American
churches, mastered methods of non-violent protest in anticipation of a
planned and concerted effort to desegregate Nashville's downtown lunch
counters through a series of sit-ins. Although many were harassed and
beaten by white vigilantes and arrested by the Nashville police, none
of the students retaliated with violence.
The Nashville sit-ins
reached a turning point when the house of Z. Alexander Looby, a
prominent African-American attorney and leader, was bombed. Although no
one was killed, thousands of protesters spontaneously marched to
Nashville City Hall to confront Mayor Ben West. The mayor had offered
only weak half-measures and vacillated toward segregation. Meeting the
mass of protesters outside city hall, West informally debated with them
and concluded by conceding that segregation was immoral. The bombing,
the march, and Mayor West's stunning statement helped convince downtown
lunch counters to desegregate. Although segregation and Jim Crow were
by no means over, the episode served as one of the first successful
events of nonviolent protest, and as a significant example to the rest
of the nation.
The leadership, activism and moral arguments of
African Americans in the Civil Rights Movement across the South gained
passage of the national Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights
Act of 1965. African Americans regained ordinary civil rights and the
power to exercise their voting rights. Voting rights for all were
protected by provisions of the Voting Rights Act.
In contrast to
the successes of the movement in Tennessee, the 1968 assassination of
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in Memphis was perceived as symbolic of
hatreds in the state. King was in the city to support a strike by black
sanitary public works employees of AFSCME Local 1733. The city quickly
settled the strike on favorable terms to the employees.
African-American communities and admirers of King across the nation
were shaken to grief and despair by the murder. Riots and civil unrest
erupted in African-American areas in numerous cities across the
country, resulting in widespread injuries and millions of dollars in
property damages.
Bicentennial
Tennessee celebrated its
bicentennial in 1996 after a yearlong statewide celebration entitled
"Tennessee 200" by opening a new state park—the Bicentennial Mall—at
the foot of Capitol Hill in Nashville.


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