LAWRENCE COUNTY
On October 21, 1817, the Tennessee
General Assembly created Lawrence County from territory acquired by treaty
with the Chickasaw Indians. A section of Hickman County and a small portion
of Giles County were included in its boundaries. Local government was established
in 1818.
Both the county and the county seat
were named in honor of Captain James Lawrence, U.S. Naval hero of the War
of 1812. Lawrenceburg, the county
seat, was sited near the center of the county, but an important consideration
in determining its location was the presence of Jackson's Military Road
on the eastern border of the town. As a major thoroughfare from Natchez,
Mississippi, to Nashville, the Military Road played a significant role
in the economic development of the county; in April 1821 the road was relocated
through the center of town.
Davy Crockett served as one of the
first commissioners and justices of the peace in Lawrence
County. In the four or five years he lived in the area, he operated
a water-powered gristmill, a powder mill, and a distillery. Today David
Crockett State Park is situated on the site of the frontiersman's land.
The park attracts tourists from across the United States, especially during
the annual David Crockett Days.
In addition to the county seat, a
number of smaller towns and communities dot the landscape, including Summertown,
Henryville, Ethridge,
Leoma, Loretto,
St. Joseph, West
Point, and Iron City. The
past vitality of these towns was associated with their proximity to Jackson's
Military Road or the mining of iron ore.
A number of citizens of the county
have achieved regional and national prominence. George Henry Nixon, Confederate
officer and politician, was the person most responsible for bringing the
railroad to Lawrence County. James Jackson Pennington, a well-known local
inventor, patented a working model of an "Aerial Bird," a flying machine
similar to a zeppelin, in 1877. Thomas H. Paine, lawyer, politician, and
educator, was appointed state superintendent of public instruction in the
1880s by Governor William B. Bate, and in 1899 he became Tennessee commissioner
of agriculture.
Lawrence County has long been known
for its gospel singers. One person in particular, James D. Vaughan, transformed
Lawrenceburg into the undisputed
capital of gospel music in America. The James D. Vaughan Music School attracted
students from across the South. The James D. Vaughan Publishing Company
printed gospel music books and operated branch offices in South Carolina,
Mississippi, and Texas.
Throughout the nineteenth century
and well into the twentieth century successive migrations brought settlers
to Lawrence County from other
southern states and foreign nations. Initially Lawrence County was settled
largely by people migrating from the Carolinas. Wealthier farmers brought
slaves, although Lawrence County never had a large percentage of slave-owning
farmers. Farmers among the early immigrants planted cotton while entrepreneurs
built sawmills, gristmills, and cotton mills or mined the iron ore. Mining
expanded with the arrival of the railroad in 1883.
In the early 1870s a large number
of German Catholics arrived in Lawrence County in search of better land.
They included many skilled tradesmen and settled in such communities as
Loretto and St. Joseph. A third migration between 1908 and 1915 brought
families from Cullman, Winston, and Morgan Counties in Alabama to southern
Middle Tennessee. Most of these twentieth century settlers were cotton
growers or timbermen. Cotton continued to play a major economic role in
Lawrence County until the late 1960s.
Certainly one of the more interesting
migrations into Lawrence County was that of the Amish in 1944. Bringing
with them their strong religious and cultural beliefs, these immigrants
established their community in the area around Ethridge. Their rejection
of war and worldly pleasure and their reluctance to incorporate the conveniences
of industrial society have made them a source of interest to local residents
and visitors to the area. Their skills as farmers and craftsmen receive
widespread admiration.
In the mid-twentieth century the
relocation of the Murray Ohio Manufacturing Company, one of the world's
largest producers of bicycles and lawnmowers, to Lawrence County refocused
the county's economy toward industrial production. In 2001 Murray had three
thousand employees. Dozens of smaller factories, manufacturing a wide variety
of items including automobile windshields, windshield wipers, kitchen countertops,
fishing lures, clothing, printed packaging, church pews, and caskets followed
Murray Ohio into the county.
The population of Lawrence County
in the 2000 census was 39,926. Thirteen public schools and four private
schools serve over seven thousand students. Columbia State Community College
maintains a branch in Lawrenceburg. County government operates under the
county executive and a board of eighteen commissioners. The city government
of Lawrenceburg is made up of a mayor and four commissioners. The Lawrenceburg
Town Square is a National Register-listed historic district while the Natchez
Trace Parkway passes through the western portion of the county.
Kathy Niedergeses, Lawrence County
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