Knox County

Knox County was created from parts of Greene and Hawkins counties in 1792 by Governor William Blount during territorial administration. Knoxville is the county seat and is the headquarters of the Tennessee Valley Authority and home to the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. The county also has the oldest historically black college in East Tennessee known as Knoxville College and the home of the historically significant dwelling of Governor Blount, a National Historic Landmark in the county. Knox County has six Century Farms and the oldest is River View Farm that was established in 1801. For more information regarding Knox County, please go to the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History & Culture website.

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

Green Acres Farm

Prater Farm

River View Farm

Shackelford Sons Farm

Spring Meadow Farm

Thompson Farm


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

Knox County Map
Map courtesy of Carole Swann, Tennessee Department of Agriculture


 

Green Acres Farm

Walter L. Carter

            The link between early transportation routes, farm location and the development of local commerce and industry can again be seen in the history of the Green Acres Farm, established by William Carter in 1803. William located his original 200 acres east of the Mascot community, at an advantageous site along the Nashville to Washington, D. C. road. The house that he built for his wife Ann Yale and their nine children also became a stage coach inn for travelers. Family tradition states that Andrew Jackson, on his inaugural trip to Washington in 1829, stayed there. Besides managing the farm and the inn, the Carters also owned an iron foundry in the early 1800s.

            In 1816, Winston Carter and James Madison Carter inherited an 872 acre farm from their parents. Winston later turned over his portion of the property to his brother and moved to Sevier County. James, a stagecoach driver, used his cash income to build a grist mill on the farm. In 1861, he willed the homeplace and land to his son Martin B. Carter, III.

            For the next 91 years, the land continued to pass through generations of the Carter family. The founder’s great great grandsons, Walter and William Carter, jointly inherited 350 acres of the family land in 1952. The farm has since been divided into two separate farms and Walter’s Green Acres Farm now has 240 acres. Walter and his nephew Stephen work the land, specializing in hay, cattle and tobacco production.

Prater Farm

Elsie L. Prater

Prater Farm Barn and Lanscape

The Prater Farm shares a large part of its history with another Knox County property, River View Farm which was certified as a Century Farm in 2005.   These farms are part of over 1000 acres purchased in 1801 by Benjamin Prater.  He and his wife, Nancy Lane, had seven children and raised cattle, corn, and wheat for food, horses for farm labor and transportation, and sheep for food and clothing.  Their son, Samuel, was the next generation to own the farm in 1851, and his son, Alexander, the third generation of the family to farm the land.

             As the Praters continued to farm the land throughout the nineteenth and into the twentieth century, William Hugh Prater acquired the property around 1936.   While the Tennessee Valley Authority flooded much of the region, the family reports that William Hugh Prater, who died at the age of 95 in 2003, loved his land and refused to sell it to TVA.  Under William’s ownership, the farm produced cattle, sheep, hay, wheat, corn and watermelons, goats, tobacco and pigs. He and his wife, Lorene Lox Prater, had three daughters, Elsie, Adriance (Guider), and Martha (Webb). 

Old Log Cabin

In 2002, these siblings, who are the great, great great granddaughters of the Benjamin and Nancy Lane Prater,  acquired about 360 acres of the acreage.  Elsie reports that they  have been active members in the Farm Bureau for many years, and today they raise cattle, milk goats, hay and horses.  A nineteenth century log house, smokehouse, and several barns remain on this farm which their ancestors founded more than two centuries ago.

Photo (Top): Barn and landscape on the Prater Farm.

Photo (Bottom): A Nineteenth-Century Log House.

River View Farm

William Lafayette Williams

Riverview Farm

            Benjamin and Nancy Lane Prater founded the River View Farm, which is four miles west of Concord, in 1801. The Praters owned well over 1000 acres and they produced the traditional farm products of East Tennessee: cattle, corn, and wheat for food, horses for farm labor and transportation, and sheep for food and clothing.

            The parents of seven children, Benjamin and Nancy willed the farm to their son Samuel Prater in 1851. In turn, Samuel, at an unspecified date, deeded the property to his son Alexander L. Prater. The farm continued to be transferred through the hands of different generations of the family for over 100 years. Little else changed in the farm’s history until the era of the Great Depression. By the 1930s, tobacco cultivation had become part of the farming landscape. Then in the 1940s, the Tennesee Valley Authority acquired much of the farm for a reservoir. Today, Fort Loudon Lake covers most of the original River View Farm.

            William L. Williams, in 1972 and 1973, acquired 60 acres of the farm, together with a one-fourth interest in another 166 acres of the original family land. He is the founders’ great great great grandson and as of 1976 he raised beef cattle, tobacco and hay on his property.

Photo: The landscape and driveway of the Riverview Farm.

 

Shackelford Sons Farm

Charlotte H. Shackelford
Karen L. Shackelford Hodge
Scott Monroe Shackelford

Aerial View

In 1899, George David Shackelford and his wife Martha E. Hickman Shackelford, purchased 55 acres, the beginning of a farm that would eventually exceed 200 acres and support cattle, hogs, donkeys, horses, and chickens in addition to crops of wheat, corn, and tobacco.  Prior to 1919, a community store located on the farm beside the “buggy road” offered eggs and produce for purchase or barter. 

George and Martha’s son, John Monroe Shackelford, acquired the interests of his seven siblings in 1945.  He and his wife, Nona Maude Sherrod Shackelford, continued to raise wheat, tobacco, beef cattle and corn.   Mrs. Shackelford was an active member of the Carter Home Demonstration Club in the 1940s and 50s.  Their son, John Monroe Shackelford, Jr., participated in 4-H Club and FFA during his school days and became owner of the farm in 1999.  His widow, Charlotte H. Shackelford and her children, Karen L. Shackelford Hodge and Scott Monroe Shackelford, currently own the farm. Scott Monroe Shackelford, great-grandson of the founder operates the 120 acre farm, raising Angus cattle and hay.

Photo: Aerial view of the Shackelford Farm in 2003.

 

Spring Meadow Farm

James T. Bailey

            Bordering the northwest corner of Sevier County and the southwest corner of Jefferson County, Spring Meadow Farm dates to 1842, when Reverend David Adams acquired 42 acres of land. He later expanded his farm substantially by purchasing 170 acres. Married twice, Adams fathered fourteen children and his daughter Amanda Adams Bailey and her husband Joshua Curtis Bailey obtained 100 acres of the original farm in 1867. Joshua raised sheep and practiced general agriculture, producing barley, fruit and dairy commodities. To prevent soil erosion of his land, he planted orchard grass, seeds of which he sold as far west as Arkansas. A trustee for the Methodist Episcopal Church South at Strawberry Plains, he also was a member of the faculty at Strawberry Plains College.

            James T. Bailey, Sr., the founder’s grandson, received title to 126 acres of the family land in 1910. Active in the Strawberry Plains Methodist Church, he “was highly respected in the community” and was “a hard working family man.” James diversified the farm by cultivating tobacco and by beginning a small dairy.

            In 1964, James T. Bailey, Jr., inherited the farm. He presently breeds registered Hereford cattle and grows tobacco, hay and garden vegetables. Like his father and grandfather, James has served in several lay positions at the Strawberry Plains Methodist Church. He also was the president of the Knox County Farm Bureau for 26 years. Married to Kathleen Loftis, he has fathered four children who each share ownership in the farm.

Thompson Farm

James P. Thompson

Aerial View of the Thompson Farm

            Progressive farming ideas and techniques have shaped the Thompson Farm of Knox County into one of the region’s most modern dairy businesses. Boston and Mary Zachary Damewood, who purchased 200 acres of land ten miles north of Knoxville in 1845, began the farm as a general agricultural operation. The parents and their eleven children tilled most of their land in corn, wheat and hay. “In the springtime they drove their cattle to Cades Cove for pasture” and “in the fall they would drive them home again.”

            In 1897, Cleo Damewood inherited the farm from her parents. She married Alex F. Thompson and they raised six children. The family grew corn, barley, wheat and hay and raised swine, cattle, chickens, ducks and geese. Model progressive farmers, the Thompsons “always tried to work with the (agricultural) extension department to try new ideas and share the results of the same. This farm has been a test demonstration farm and many local groups as well as foreign visitors have toured the farm and home.”

            William Paul Thompson, the founders’ grandson, inherited 194 acres of the property in 1942. In 1976, William shared the ownership of the farm with his son James P. Thompson. Managing a large dairy operation, with over 100 Holstein cows, James and his boys also cultivated tobacco, hay and silage. Today, James P. Thompson owns the farm.

Photo: The large dairy complex indicates the Thompson's farming success over the last 100 years.