County seats can move, as we’ve seen at least 18 times
Published 8:18 am Wednesday, January 8, 2020
By BILL CAREY
Every county has a town where its courthouse is located and its government is administered. Since no one alive can remember the last time a county moved its county seat, a person might assume that it hasn’t happened very much in Tennessee history.
In fact, it has happened at least 18 times. By my count, the following counties have all moved their county seats: Bledsoe, Hamilton, Hardin, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Jackson, Lewis, Marion, McMinn, McNairy, Morgan, Obion, Overton, Perry, Rhea, Rutherford and Shelby.
Some of these examples take people by shock. A friend who lives in Morgan County reacted with surprise when I told him that Montgomery, not Wartburg, was his county’s original seat (He had never heard of Montgomery!) Not a lot of folks in Rutherford County can tell you that Jefferson (which no longer exists) was the county seat before Murfreesboro. Many are surprised to learn that neither Memphis nor Chattanooga were county seats during the Civil War.
As best I can tell there were four possible reasons county seats were moved. One is because of a shift in commercial traffic from the river to the railroad. A classic example of this was when the county seat of Rhea County was moved from the riverside community of Washington to a stop on the railroad called Dayton.
Another reason is because new counties were carved out of old ones, resulting in a situation where a county seat was no longer centrally located. This is why the county seat of Hickman County, once Vernon, was moved to a centrally located community called (are you ready for this?) Centerville.
Perry County used to lie on both sides of the Tennessee River, and its county seat was Perryville. When Decatur County was created on the west site and Perry on the east, Linden became the new county seat.
The third reason county seats were moved was because one town or city got so large that it was obvious that the courthouse should be moved. That’s why Raleigh ceased to be the county seat of Shelby County and Harrison ceased to be the county seat of Hamilton County.
The final reason county seats were moved is because the location of the main road across the county moved. In Tennessee’s early days, the main crossing of Stone’s River was at a place called Jefferson, which is where the river breaks into tributaries. People eventually found that it was more efficient to cross the river using a ferry at a more convenient location, and Jefferson declined.
Despite all these reasons, I can’t explain why some counties resisted the pressure to move their county seats. Since some counties moved their county seats to the bustling railroad town, why didn’t Dickson County move its county seat from Charlotte to Dickson? Why didn’t Washington County move its county seat from Jonesborough to Johnson City?
I don’t know, and never will.
I do know one thing: Every time a county seat was moved, it was a big stink. People who owned homes and businesses in the county seat didn’t appreciate it when home and business owners from a rival town got the courthouse moved. Most of the time, the loss of the courthouse meant the end of the town. If you don’t believe me, feel free to look for the long-forgotten and abandoned communities of Jefferson, Vernon, Newburg or Monroe. Also, there are apparently some people in Troy who are still annoyed that the Obion county seat got moved to Union City!
In April 1890, the county commission of McNairy County decided by a single vote to move the county seat from Purdy to Selmer (perhaps the only time in American history that a county seat was moved from one place named with a southern accent to another). The reporter pointed out that this was only the latest saga in a controversy which has started 21 years earlier. “Your correspondent would like to suggest, as a matter of economy, that counties wishing to remove their county seats to railroads would act wisely to investigate the history of McNairy County,” he wrote in the April 10, 1890 Nashville Tennessean.
(Bill Carey is the founder and executive director of www.tnhistoryforkids.org. In 2004, Carey founded Tennessee History for Kids, a non-profit organization that helps public school teachers cover social studies in general and Tennessee history in particular. THFK produces a website (www.tnhistoryforkids.org) as well as videos, lessons, online quizzes and low-priced “textbooklets” which are tailor-made for the social studies curriculum. It also holds teacher inservices all over the state.)