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Pulaski City Historical Markers

Map of Tennessee State Historical Marker Locations in the City of Pulaski
 

Pulaski City Historical Markers

Pulaski Churches
Campbell Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church
Campbell Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church is listed in the National Register of Historic PlacesRural African-American Churches in Tennessee M... [click for more]

Church of the Messiah
Church of the Messiah is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

First Presbyterian Church of Pulaski
First Presbyterian Church of Pulaski is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Original Church of God
Original Church of God is listed in the National Register of Historic PlacesRural African-American Churches in Tennessee MPS... [click for more]

Pulaski Schools
Bridgeforth High School
Though black public education existed in Giles County by 1869, Bridgeforth was the first black high school. Designed by America's first black archite... [click for more]

Martin College
Thomas Martin founded Martin Female College in 1870, to fulfill the wish of his dying daughter for a girls' school in Giles County. Its first presiden... [click for more]

Pulaski Courthouse
Pulaski Courthouse Square Historic District
This District was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 by United States Department of Interior. The Square was laid out in 1811... [click for more]

Pulaski Historic Homes & Houses
Austin Hewitt Home
Austin Hewitt Home is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Batte-Brown-Blackburn House
Batte-Brown-Blackburn House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Brown-Daly-Horne House
Brown-Daly-Horne House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Copeland Whitfield House
Copeland Whitfield House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

George W. Tillery House
George W. Tillery House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Newton White House
Newton White House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Pulaski General Interest
Col. Thomas Kennedy Gordon
Serving under Gen. Andrew Jackson as captain in the War of 1812, he became a lifelong friend of ailing Jackson in Creek War when he said to him, Gener... [click for more]

Donald Grady Davidson (1893~1966) John Crowe Ransom (1888~1974)
Giles County natives Donald G. Davidson and John C. Ransom were influential personages in American Literature. Professors at Vanderbilt University, th... [click for more]

Forrest’s September Raid ~ Sept. 27, 1864
Driving north from Alabama in his bid to cut Sherman's communications, Buford's Division, advance guard of Forrest's Cavalry Corps, met Federal resist... [click for more]

Gabriel McKissack
During the years following the Civil War, Gabriel Moses McKissack (1840-1923) laid the foundation in Giles County for a family building tradition that... [click for more]

Giles County Trail of Tears Memorial
Long time we travel on way to new land...Womens cry... Children cry and men cry... but they say nothing and just put heads down and keep go toward... [click for more]

Hallehurst
Hallehurst is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

John Adams
Born in Nashville, July 1, 1825, he served as an officer of the First Dragoons following graduation from the Military Academy in 1846. Resigning at Se... [click for more]

Maplewood Cemetery
Maplewood Cemetery is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Milky Way Farm
Milky Way Farm is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Old Graveyard
Site of the first graveyard in Pulaski. Used for interments from 1817 until 1888. The first pastor of the local Presbyterian Church is buried here alo... [click for more]

Rattle and Snap Plantation
Designated a National Historic Landmark by the U.S. Department of Interior in 1971. Rattle and Snap was built between 1842 and 1845 by George W. Polk ... [click for more]

Reveille
Reveille is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Sam Davis Avenue Historic District
Sam Davis Avenue Historic District is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Sam Davis
Sam Davis
Born Oct. 6, 1842 Near Smyrna,
Rutherford County Tennessee.

Through a Confederate
Soldie... [click for more]

Seventh Kentucky Mounted Infantry Memorial
Died in the performance of a faithful service.

On the morning of September 27, 1864, the Seventh Kentucky Mounted Infantry, Forrest's Ca... [click for more]

South Pulaski Historic District
This district, including South First, South Second and South Third Streets, was placed on the National Register of Historic places by the United State... [click for more]

The Trail of Tears Interpretive Center
The Trail of Tears Interpretive Center Popularly known as the Rock Church, this beautiful chapel of Gothic architectural design was constructed by nat... [click for more]

The Trail of Tears ~ Nunahi-Duna-Dlo-Hily-I The Trail Where They Cried
center>Nunahi-Duna-Dlo-Hily-I
The Trail Where They Cried

This sculpture is a small piece of theate... [click for more]

The Trail of Tears ~ The Bell Route
The Bell Route
The Trail of Tears

Bell's Route of the Cherokee Trail of Tears in Tennessee, Arkansas, and ... [click for more]

The Trail of Tears ~ The Benge Route
The Benge Route
The Trail of Tears

John Benge's Route of the Cherokee Trail of Tears in Alabama, Tennessee... [click for more]

Walter Hershel Beech
Born in Pulaski, in 1891, Walter Herschel Beech was an aviation pioneer. In 1924 he helped to establish the Travel Air Manufacturing Company in Wichit... [click for more]