Medicine Show photos by Ben Shahn
Taken in Huntingdon, Tennessee, 1935
Early History of Huntingdon and Carroll County, Tennessee
Excerpted and edited from Goodspeed’s History of TNThe first settlements in Carroll County were made at McLemoresville
and Buena Vista about the year 1820. The first settlers in the
vicinity of Huntingdon were Samuel Ingram, John Crockett, James H.
Gee, Wm. A. Thompson, Thomas Ross, John Gwin, Robert Murray and
others.
As the organization of the county took place
almost immediately after the first settlements were made, every
person hereinafter named in connection with the organization of the
county and courts were early settlers. Large tracts of the most
valuable lands of the county were entered by the location of North
Carolina military land warrants, and owned by non-residents. Mimucan
Hunt & Co. held such warrants for twenty tracts of land, each
containing 5,000 acres. These lands were all located west of the
Tennessee River and largely in Carroll County.
The Indians left the county about the time the
settlers appeared. But the unbroken forest was then infested with
bears, wolves, panthers, deer, wildcats, the smaller wild animals,
and snakes. It is said that the reputation this country then had in
North Carolina, was "fifty bushels of frogs to the acre, and snakes
enough to fence the land." The wild animals destroyed many of the
domestic animals of the early settlers, but they were hunted and
subdued until all of the more destructive ones have become extinct.
The first bridge built in the county was
McKee’s bridge on the Big Sandy. In 1822, and prior thereto, there
were no mills in the county, and the first settlers had to go to
Humphreys County to get their milling done, and family supplies,
such as salt, coffee, etc, were then brought from Reynoldsburg on
the Tennessee River. The first gristmill in West Tennessee, was
built in Carroll County by Isaac Blount on Blount Creek, on the site
of the mill since owned by Joshua Butler. In March, 1824, Wm. Harris
and Reddick Hillsman obtained leave of the county court to build a
mill on Reedy Creek, and John Stockard was granted leave to build
one on the same creek. Prior to this the same privilege had been
granted to one Green, on Hollow Rock Creek. About the same time R.
E. C. Dougherty built a mill on Clear Creek. James Shields erected
the first cotton-gin in the county, on a place near Buena Vista. The
first will probated in the county was that of David Clark, deceased,
probated in June, 1824. Andrew Neely was the first infant ward and
John S. Neely the first guardian. Wm. Roberts, called Bit Nose Bill,
was the first man married in the county. About 1831 the Huntingdon
turnpike leading to Jackson was constructed.
The raising of cotton was begun by the early
settlers. Tobacco was raised in the northern part of the county. The
people are industrious and generous, primitive in their habits, and
manufacture and wore a great deal of home-made clothing.
Agricultural products of the county included Indian corn, oats,
wheat, hay, cotton, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, and tobacco.
Live stock included horses and mules, cattle, sheep, and hogs.
The first courthouse, built in 1822, was a
small log cabin, without a floor, erected where the present one now
stands, and Nathan Nesbit, chairman of the court of pleas and
quarter sessions, blazed his way through the forest from his
residence, five miles east of Huntingdon, to the county seat,
carrying with him his cross-cut saw, with which he sawed the door
out of the new court house, and entered therein and opened the first
court held at Huntingdon, December 9, 1822. At this term the jurors
of the court brought their provisions with them and camped out. The
town of Huntingdon was surveyed and platted by James H. Gee, under
the supervision of the commissioners appointed to lay out the town.
At the December term, 1823, the name of the
county seat, which up to that time had been called Huntsville, was
changed to Huntingdon. They were anxious to retain the first
syllable, and thereupon James H. Gee, who was a musician as well as
a surveyor, and who was fond of the old tune Huntingdon, suggested
that name and it was adopted. There were 117 lots and the public
square in the original plat of the town.
The first courthouse was sold in 1824 to John
Crockett, who moved it away and used it for a kitchen. It was
replaced that year by a frame house 20x24 feet. This stood until
about 1830, when the third court house, 30x50 feet, was built of
brick. The fourth courthouse was completed in 1844. The rock for the
foundation was hauled from Benton County. The house cost about
$12,000. It was a two story brick structure, with two offices and a
court room on each floor.
The second courthouse was sold to Robert Murray
and moved to his lot east of the public square and used as a
warehouse. The first jail was erected in 1824. It was a small
hewed-log cabin, from which the prisoners frequently escaped. The
poor farm, consisting of 134 acres, was purchased in 1852 from
Thomas Butler. The buildings were improved in 1877 and later, by
removing the old log cabins and erecting in their stead neat frame
cottages. The farm was enlarged in 1886 by the purchase from W. O.
Davis of 104 acres of timber land adjoining it. The inmates of the
poor asylum averaged about thirty in number, and appropriations are
made by the county court for the support of about forty poor persons
who reside with their friends throughout the county. The poor of
Carroll County are well cared for.
The Nashville, Chattanooga, & St., Louis
Railroad was completed through the county soon after the close of
the civil war. It has stations within the county at Hollow Rock,
Huntingdon and McKenzie. The Memphis & Louisville Railroad was
completed through the county in 1860. It has stations within the
county at McKenzie, Trezevant and Atwood.
At the second term of the court of pleas and
quarter sessions, held in June, 1822, William Arnold, Robert Hughes,
Will Stoddart, Archibald C. Hall and Thomas Taylor were admitted and
sworn as attorneys to practice in said court. At the same time
William Arnold produced his commission from the governor and was
sworn as solicitor general of the Thirteenth Solicitorial District.
At the next term of said court, September, 1822, John C. Bowen, John
McBride, Peter Honnell, David Crockett, the famous hunter, and
Hezekiah McVale appeared, and each made oath to the killing of a
certain number of wolves, and were allowed the usual bounty for
destroying those destructive animals.
At the June term, 1823, the fare at taverns was
established as follows: "Breakfast, 25 cents; dinner, 37˝ cents;
supper, 25 cents; lodging, 12˝ cents; whiskey, per half pint, 12˝
cents; per pint, 25 cents; per quart, 37˝ cents; feeding horse, 25
cents; keeping horse per night, 50 cents; night and day, 75 cents;
man and horse per day, $1.50."
Source: HEAVILY EDITED from Goodspeeds History of TN as noted at
Genealogytrails.com. Full text available
here or at Genealogy Trails.
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