Historic Sites and Museums

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The Grove Building is in the heart of historic downtown Loudon surrounded by unique shopping, dining and antiques.
In the 1930's, Julia Pearl Persinger Hart, mother of the current owner of Hart Farm, pieced a Hearts & Gizzards quilt top.
A quilt handed down in the Hunt family is the model for the Carpenter’s Star pattern on the quilt square hanging on the circa-1900 barn. Believed to have been made by the great-grandmother of the present owner,
The owners of the studio had this mural painted to depict the Jefferson City Train Depot downtown. Two volunteers painted it.
The historic Johnson Mill proudly displays the Tennessee Red Tulip.
Knob Creek Museum houses many artifacts of the Sherfey and Krouse families, as well as those of community contributors.
The Lady Farm property dates back to 1860 when the ownerbuilt a two-story, four-room log house and store. These were built near the first permanent Baptist church in Sullivan County, Kendrick’s Creek Baptist Chu
Located in Wartrace
The Fish Block is located on the Lenoir City Hall.
LMU is the home of Abraham Lincoln Museum.
This pattern is copied from a local African American quilt used in the Underground Railroad. The pre-Civil War brick building is home to an antique store.
Come visit the oldest certified Century Farm in Tennessee. See if you can find the Triple Irish Chain on this huge estate.
Recall the bustling times of the Gilded Age under an ornate pressed tin ceiling supported by centuries old timbers or descend the grand staircase to discover a full-service shoe department on Gay Street in Downtown Knoxville.
This sixth generation farm dates back to when Mayfield's homesteaded this land in 1820.
The Museum of Appalachia's history is a proud one, grounded in a profound respect for the tenacity and indomitable character of a region.
The schoolhouse quilt block at the Nathanael Greene Museum was chosen because it pays homage to the fact that the Museum is located in Greeneville's first high school.
This building was originally New Market School. The "twin squares" represent the civic and educational purposes of the building.
See this square at eye level on the front porch of the store. It was originally built in 1901 and is still a working store today.
Isabell Krouse Sherfey, grandmother of the current owner, made the all-cotton quilt from which this unknown pattern is copied.



