Jackson County

            Jackson County was named in honor of Andrew Jackson and was established in 1801. Gainesboro serves as the county seat. Agriculture and timber has played a prominent role in the county’s history and economy. The county is home to the historic sites of Fort Blount and the nearby old townsite of Williamsburg that were significant frontier forts in the early settlement of the state.  Jackson County has six Century Farms and the oldest is the Cummins Mill Farm, which dates to the 1820s. For more information regarding Jackson County, please go to the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History & Culture website.

For a brief historical sketch of each farm, click on the farm name.

Billingsley Farm

Brown Farm

Carverdale Farm

Clark Farm

Cummins Mill Farm

Kennedy Farm

 

The following map is for a general geographical understanding. It does not provide the specific locations of the farms because of privacy reasons.

Jackson County Map

Map Courtesy of Carole Swann, Tennessee Department of Agriculture

Billingsley Farm

Rupert Billingsley

            William H. and Sarah Billingsley founded the Billingsley Farm at an unknown date prior to the Civil War. The Billingsleys and their six children owned about 250 acres and raised the typical crops of the Plateau region-cattle, swine, corn and wheat. They also grew some cotton. William joined the Confederate army during the Civil War and in his absence a group of Confederate soldiers raided the farm, taking leather and foodstuffs. Returning from the conflict a broken man, seriously ill with typhoid fever, William died in 1865.

            Title to the farm transferred to his children, but little is known about the family’s history for the next 100 years. In 1964, Rupert and Dorothy Billingsley inherited 100 acres of the family land. Today, Rupert and his son John Rupert farm 180 acres and their labor yields tobacco, hay, corn and cattle.

Brown Farm

Jack R. Brown

Betty Brown

In 1896, Hiram Sam Brown established his 100 acre farm near Granville  on land that was a parcel of around 8000 acres settled by Thomas and Nancy Litton Brown in 1800.  Thomas Brown (1773-1867) fought with Andrew Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans.  Hiram Brown’s farm is located just south of the historic Avery Trace and five miles from Ft. Blount.  Married to Barbara A. Brown, the couple had eight children -- James Howard, Bertha, Sallie, Dora, Charlie, Willie, Ethel and Lena.  The family produced cattle, tobacco, sheep and corn.        In 1945, James Howard Brown acquired the farm.  During his ownership, the farm supported livestock, corn, and tobacco.  James Howard and Mary Helen Brown also had eight children.

            Current owners Jack Brown and his wife Betty raised a big family on this farm, too.  Their children are Russell, Randy, Timmy, Tommy, Sammy, Alan, and Angela.  All were involved in the 4-H Club at  Flynns Lick Elementary School.  Beef cattle and hay are the primary products.  A tobacco barn is a reminder that this crop was raised by each generation until 1990.

Carverdale Farm

Joseph S. Moore

Cattle and Pasture

Born in Jackson County in the Wartrace community in 1847, Samuel Sampson Carver joined the Federal Army when he was 17.  He fought throughout the Civil War, receiving his discharge in 1865 and a pension for his service.  Samuel married Amanda West and the couple had seven children.  In 1890, Samuel purchased a 537 acre tract of land near the Liberty community.  The existing farmhouse was remodeled and the family moved into it in 1891.  The Carvers cultivated corn, tobacco and hay and raised horses, sheep, cattle and hogs.  The family has always been active in community churches and Samuel helped to construct the Liberty Church of Christ.  He also donated land and in 1916 built a similar Church of Christ building which still stands today and is attended by the Carvers.  The couple had seven children and their son Joseph Rubin Carver became the next owner of the farm.

Under Joseph’s ownership, the farm continued to produce traditional  livestock and crops.  Married to Lillie Lousettie Fox, the couple lived in the farmhouse and ran a general store that was built on the farm next to Highway 53. They had one daughter, Thelma Ashley Carver and she became the third generation to own the land. Thelma and her husband John H. Donald Moore had two children and they raised corn, tobacco, hay and livestock on the farm. In addition to farming, Donald worked for Purina Feeds during the Great Depression.  With his job and Sam’s pension, the family managed better than many during these bleak years.  Later Donald sold fertilizer with Armour Agriculture Chemical Company, later bought by U. S. Steel.  He served as the first President of the Tennessee FFA when it was organized in 1928.  Thelma is credited with naming the farm “Carverdale” for her family and the fact that the property is located in a dale.

Joseph “Joe” S. Moore, the son of Thelma and John and the great grandson of the founder is the current owner of the farm. Born and raised on the farm, he was given his first Jersey cow at age 7.  Active in 4-H and FFA, he showed both cows and hogs.  Over the years, Joe has received many agricultural distinctions such as being named the Star Farmer of Tennessee in 1952 and was elected the 25th State FFA President in 1953-54.  He was awarded his American Farmer Degree in 19955 and that same years was name the Southern Regional Star Farmer and went on to be chosen as the the Star FFA Farmer of America in 1955.  For that distinction, Time magazine featured a story on Joe, and he was on the cover of that issue.

Joe and his wife Ruth Ann Huffner have been married since 1956 and live in the family homeplace.   In addition to being on the farm, Ann taught in Jackson County schools from 1961 until her retirement in 1995.  They have one son, Samuel Leach Moore, who is married to Tammy Gribble.  Today, the farm produces hay and beef cattle and Joe reports that Steve Letterman manages the day to day operations of the farm.  The farm has many buildings including a log house, a corn crib, a tobacco barn and two storage barns as well as the nineteenth century farmhouse.

 Photo: A view of the Carverdale Farm.

Clark Farm

Coleman Clark

            Two and a half miles north of Gainesboro lies the Clark Farm, which dates to 1853. Richard and Rebecca Hudson, who moved to Tennessee to homestead, founded the farm with 50 acres and later expanded it to one of the county’s largest. They and their eight children raised corn, swine, cattle and mules. Just three years after the establishment of the farm, 500 acres passed to the founders’ daughter Hannah Hudson Davis and her spouse Dickie Davis. Hannah, Dickie and their four children cultivated corn and wheat and looked after herds of swine and beef cattle.

            Upon the death of their parents, the four Davis children divided the farm equally. Elvira Davis Clark, the wife of John Clark, and her brother Henry Davis, who had married the sister of John Clark, inherited one half of the property. F. D. Clark, the father of John and his sister Gainey, purchased the other half of the Davis family land and gave it to his son and son-in-law. The four children farmed the land jointly, producing corn, wheat, oats, tobacco and swine. They also operated a sawmill and sold timber products.

            By 1959, three of the Davis and Clark partners had died and the farm went before a public auction. J. J. Clark, his son Phelps and his son Coleman Clark bought the land, keeping it in the family’s ownership. Phelps and his son Coleman presently farm the property and corn, cattle, hay, tobacco and timber are their agricultural commodities. The Clark Farm contains the farm’s original dwelling, but this building is now used as a tobacco barn.

 

Cummins Mill Farm

William Cummins

            A grist mill operation was a necessity for a prosperous rural settlement. Without a convenient location where their grains could be processed for market, farmers had difficulty even providing flour and meal for their own tables. The 4th District of Jackson County is home to the Cummins Mill Farm, established by John Cummins between 1820 and 1825. He moved to this area of Jackson County to build and operate a grist mill that “served farmers as far as 40 miles away.” At the mill, “wheat and corn were ground; wool was carded into rolls for spinning.” Cummins’ farm land yielded corn, wheat, sugar cane and livestock.

            Married twice, Cummins fathered ten children and his son Morrison Woods Cummins received the farm in 1868. Morrison was an agrarian entrepreneur: mill operator, farmer, coffin maker and self-taught doctor. According to the family, Morrison suggested to his neighbors that “they get a trained doctor for serious injuries, set bones and dresses wounds.” Encouraged by his example, three of Morrison’s six sons became doctors.

            Morrison wed Frances Pate and they raised ten children. In 1887, their son Jubel Herndon Cummins acquired a farm of 459 acres. He, his wife Ginerva Thurman and their six children grew the traditional crops of the Plateau. Jubel owned “the only grain binder and threshing machine for miles around” and by harvesting his neighbor’s crops, he annually supplemented his farming income. The family suffered a serious economic loss when a 1928 flood destroyed the Cummins grist mill.

            In 1938, the current owners obtained about 65 acres of the farm and today they farm 20 acres of the original family land, raising tobacco, soybeans and timber. Mrs. Prehn lives in the family dwelling of yellow poplar, built between 1860 and 1865.

 

Kennedy Farm

Barry R. Kennedy

The Kennedy Farm, located northwest of Gainesboro on Highway 56 was founded in 1883 by John D. Kennedy.  He and his wife Matilda Ann (Kemp) were the parents of three children.  On the 676 acres they grew corn, wheat, and oats, and raised dairy cows, horses, mules, and swine.  J. D. Kennedy and Sons Merchandise Store, the first store in the Gum Springs community, was owned and operated by the family.  Many members of the family and neighbors are buried in a cemetery on the farm. 

John Buford and Peyton Kennedy were the next generation owners. John Buford built the first tobacco barn in the community and Peyton ran a general store in a room of the residence after the original store closed in the early 1900s.

The current owner, Barry Kennedy, acquired the farm in the 1980s.  He raises tobacco, beef cattle, and hay.