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Knoxville

New Summerfield, Cherokee County

Marker Text

In 1854 Thomas Norman (1812-1859), a native of Tennessee, sold 2/3 interest in a 30-acre tract to William A. Pope and Archibald Carmichael. They sold town lots for Knoxville and in 1856, they gave 3/4 acre for a community church. Soon mercantile stores, a mill, distillery, blacksmith shop and a new school opened. Knoxville never had a saloon although all the stores sold whiskey. In 1872 the International Railroad Company opened the Palestine-Troup line. Businesses moved to Troup and Knoxville declined. The Knoxville cemetery is all that remains.

Marker Details

Address
Location Description about 7 miles north of New Summerfield off SH 10 down CR 4706
Marker # 6834
Dedicated 1979
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code settlements; ghost towns
Latitude, Longitude 32.097964, -95.08602

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