Tennessee - The Volunteer State 2

Tennessee – The Volunteer State

East Tennessee has several important transportation links with Middle and West Tennessee, as well as the rest of the nation and the world, including several major airports and interstates.

Middle Tennessee:

West of the Cumberland Plateau is the Highland Rim, an elevated plain that surrounds the Nashville Basin. The northern section of the Highland Rim, known for its high tobacco production, is sometimes called the Pennyroyal Plateau; it is located primarily in Southwestern Kentucky. The Nashville Basin is characterized by rich, fertile farm country and great diversity of natural wildlife.

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Middle Tennessee

Middle Tennessee was a common destination of settlers crossing the Appalachians from Virginia in the late 18th century and early 19th century.  An important trading route called the Natchez Trace, created and used for many generations by American Indians, connected Middle Tennessee to the lower Mississippi River town of Natchez.  The route of the Natchez Trace was used as the basis for a scenic highway called the Natchez Trace Parkway.

Middle Tennessee is one of the primary state population and transportation centers along with the heart of state government, Nashville.

West Tennessee:

West of the Highland Rim and Nashville Basin is the Gulf Coastal Plain, which includes the Mississippi embayment.  The Gulf Coastal Plain is, in terms of area, the predominant land region in Tennessee.  It is part of the large geographic land area that begins at the Gulf of Mexico and extends north into southern Illinois. In Tennessee, the Gulf Coastal Plain is divided into three sections that extend from the Tennessee River in the east to the Mississippi River in the west.

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West Tennessee

Memphis is the economic center of West Tennessee.

History:

The area now known as Tennessee was first inhabited by Paleo-Indians nearly 12,000 years ago.  The names of the cultural groups that inhabited the area between first settlement and the time of European contact are unknown, but several distinct cultural phases have been named by archaeologists, including Archaic (8000–1000 BC), Woodland (1000 BC–1000 AD), and Mississippian (1000–1600 AD), whose chiefdoms were the cultural predecessors of the Muscogee people who inhabited the Tennessee River Valley before Cherokee migration into the river’s headwaters.

The first recorded European excursions into what is now called Tennessee were three expeditions led by Spanish explorers, namely Hernando de Soto in 1540, Tristan de Luna in 1559, and Juan Pardo in 1567.

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Hernando de Soto

Pardo recorded the name “Tanasqui” from a local Indian village, which evolved to the state’s current name.  At that time, Tennessee was inhabited by tribes of Muscogee and Yuchi people.  Possibly because of European diseases devastating the Indian tribes, which would have left a population vacuum, and also from expanding European settlement in the north, the Cherokee moved south from the area now called Virginia.  As European colonists spread into the area, the Indian populations were forcibly displaced to the south and west, including all Muscogee and Yuchi peoples, the Chickasaw and Choctaw, and ultimately, the Cherokee in 1838.

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