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Hendersonville City Historical Markers

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

Hendersonville City Historical Markers

Hendersonville Churches
Beech Cumberland Presbyterian Church
The first Synod of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church was constituted Oct. 5, 1813, at the church located 6.4 miles northwest on Long Hollow Pike. The... [click for more]

Hendersonville Historic Homes & Houses
Daniel Smith Donelson House
Daniel Smith Donelson House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Leonard B. Fite House
Leonard B. Fite House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Hendersonville General Interest
Ashcrest Farm
Ashcrest Farm is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

Davidson County~Sumner County
Davidson County


Established 1783; named in honor of Brig. Gen. William Lee Davidson of North Carolina. D... [click for more]

Free Hill Road
In 1860, Sumner County's population of African descent consisted of 7,700 slaves. After America's Civil War, emancipated slaves settled on this high h... [click for more]

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

Rock Castle (2)
1 mi. S. Begun 1784, Indian attacks delayed its completion until 1791. Was home of Daniel Smith, captain in Lord Dunmore's War; Colonel in Revolution;... [click for more]

Rock Castle
Located on the shores of Old Hickory Lake in Hendersonville, Rock Castle is two miles south of Gallatin Road (Highway 31-E), off Indian Lake Road.
Shackle Island Historic District
Shackle Island Historic District is listed in the National Register of Historic Places... [click for more]

William Henderson ~ 1752 - circa 1807
Captain William Henderson was a Revolutionary soldier born in Virginia. He and his wife, Lockey Trigg, moved to Sumner County in the late 1790s and la... [click for more]