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Keith S. Hebert</text>
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                <text>One of the Five Lower Towns established by the Chickamauga Cherokees in 1782 under the leadership of Dragging Canoe. Territorial Governor William Blount reported to the Secretary of War in 1792 that: "Crow Town lies on the north side of the Tennessee [River], half a mile from the river, up Crow Creek, 30 miles below the Suck. [It] is the lowest town in the Cherokee Nation and contained 30 huts in 1790. The Creeks and Northward tribes cross [the river] here."&#13;
&#13;
All of the Five Lower Towns were on the extreme Cherokee frontier. Running Water was near Chattanooga and Nickajack was near Haletown, Tennessee. Long Island Town was twenty miles below the Suck, east of Bridgeport, Alabama. Lookout Mountain Town was near Trenton, Georgia.&#13;
&#13;
Crow Town encompassed an area of several miles by the early 1800s as increasing numbers of Cherokee families settled here. With the creation of Jackson County in 1819, many of the Cherokees moved to the south side of the river - some 19th-century maps placed Crow Town near the southeast end of Snodgrass Bridge which takes Highway 117 across the Tennessee River east of Stevenson. The 1782 site of Crow Town, one-half mile from the confluence of Crow Creek and the original channel of the Tennessee River, was flooded with the closing of the spillway gates at Guntersville Dam in 1939.&#13;
&#13;
(From the Historical Marker erected by the Alabama Historical Commission, sponsored by the Jackson County Historical Association)</text>
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&#13;
Street, O.D. "Cherokee Towns and Villages." Publications of the Alabama Historical Society, Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 1. </text>
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Keith S. Hebert</text>
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                <text>Created by an Act of the Legislature on December 7, 1821, Decatur County was comprised of portions of Madison and Jackson Counties. "Old Woodville," two miles north along County Highway 7, was designated as the County Seat. An 1823-'24 completed survey revealed that it did not contain the constitutionally required number of square miles. The county was abolished by an Act of the Legislature on December 28, 1825, and the territory was returned to Madison and Jackson Counties.</text>
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Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>In 1946, Robert E. Jones, Jr. was elected to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives to fill Alabama's 5th Congressional District seat vacated by John J. Sparkman's election to the U.S. Senate. Elected to 15 consecutive terms, 1946-1976, Congressman Jones became Alabama's longest-serving Representative.  The Robert E. Jones Bridge that spans the Tennessee River east of Scottsboro was dedicated in his honor in September 1985. Congressman Jones is remembered for his ardent support of legislation leading to the expansion of the Tennessee Valley Authority, construction of the nation's interstate highway system, development of the U.S. Space program, protection of the environment, and construction of major public works that included the Kennedy Center of the Performing Arts, the Smithsonian Museum of History and Technology, the National Portrait Gallery, and the Madison Annex to the Library of Congress. He retired to Scottsboro in 1977 where he lived until his death in 1997.&#13;
&#13;
The Jones House was constructed in 1907 in the second subdivision recorded in the Scottsboro City Plat in 1889. The steep Pyramidal-roof, thin wooden columns, large interior chimney, and veranda that surrounds three sides exhibit overtones of the French Colonial Style. The house was purchased in 1909 by Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Jones, Sr. who maintained the residence until the death of Mrs. Jones in 1966. Their children were Rudolph, Cecil, and Ruth Jones, Sydie Jones Snodgrass, and Robert E. (Bob) Jones, Jr., who was born in this house on June 12, 1912.  A graduate of Jackson County High School and the University of Alabama School of Law, Robert E. Jones, Jr. was admitted to the bar on January 20, 1937. After practicing law in Scottsboro, he was elected judge of Jackson County in 1940.  He served in the U. S. Navy from December 1943 to February 1946, in both the Atlantic and Pacific theaters, and as a member of the legal staff of General Douglas MacArthur.&#13;
&#13;
(From the historical marker erected by the Alabama Historical Commission)</text>
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                <text>http://www.alabamahistory.net/jackson-historical-markers.html</text>
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>Planter, tavern operator, newspaper editor, legislator, and land developer, he sought in vain to have the Jackson County Seat moved from Bellefonte to the settlement that bore his name. After his death in 1863, his widow reached an agreement in 1868 with the county government whereby the site for the courthouse and jail was deeded to Jackson County on condition that Scottsboro become the county seat. &#13;
Incorporated by the state legislature on January 20, 1870, the town became an important commercial center and shipping point on the Memphis and Charleston Railroad.&#13;
&#13;
(From the historical marker erected by the Alabama Historical Commission)</text>
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>Street, O.D. "Cherokee Towns and Villages." Publications of the Alabama Historical Society, Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 1. </text>
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                <text>In a W.P.A. narrative, Thomas Cole recounted his time as a slave on the plantation of Dr. Robert Coles in western Jackson County.  Thomas Cole was born in 1845 and ran away to join the Union army in 1861.  After seeing combat at Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain, Chickamauga, and Orchard Knob he returned to Chattanooga where he worked as a switchman until his health failed.  He then moved to Corsicana, Texas to live with his daughter.</text>
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                <text>Cole, Thomas. “Ex-Slave Stories (Texas),” Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936-38. Texas Narratives Vol. 16, part 1, 225-235. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Coles, R.T. and Jeffrey D. Stocker (ed.) &lt;em&gt;From Huntsville to Appomattox: R.T. Coles's History of 4th Regiment, Alabama Volunteer Infantry, C.S.A., Army of Northern Virginia&lt;/em&gt;. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 1996.</text>
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>Sauta, Jackson County, Native Americans, language, Sequoyah, George Guess, George Gist</text>
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                <text>Sauta was a small Cherokee village established about 1784 on the north side of the Tennessee River near its confluence with North Sauty Creek. The August 13, 1828, issue of the Cherokee Phoenix newspaper includes a letter from an acquaintance of Sequoyah relating the story of Sequoyah's creation of the Cherokee syllabary. According to the story, several young men at Sauta were discussing their awe of white men's ability to pass language across vast distances via written words on paper. Sequoyah is said to have told the men that he could easily create a written language and his response was met with ridicule. Inspired by this event, Sequoyah completed the Cherokee syllabary.  A similar story is recounted by Samuel Lorenzo Knapp from his 1828 interview of Sequoyah in Washington D.C.  Many myths surround the life of Sequoyah and the creation of the Cherokee syllabary, but the timing and nature of these sources lend credence to this story.</text>
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                <text>Abram, Susan M. "Sequoyah." Encyclopedia of Alabama. May 21, 2009; http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-2159 [accessed August 11, 2016]  &#13;
&#13;
Chambless, Ann B.  "Early Cherokee Village of Sauta."  Jackson County Chronicles 20, no. 1 (January 2008): 6.&#13;
&#13;
Chambless, Ann B.  "Sequoyah."  Jackson County Chronicles 25, no. 4 (October 2013): 3-6. &#13;
&#13;
G.C. "Invention of the Cherokee Alphabet."  Cherokee Phoenix 1, no. 24 (August 13, 1828): 2, col. 1a-2a. &#13;
&#13;
Foreman, Grant.  Sequoyah.  Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2012.  &#13;
&#13;
Street, O.D. "Cherokee Towns and Villages." Publications of the Alabama Historical Society, Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 1.  Montgomery, AL, 1901. &#13;
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                <text>Print by McKenney and Hall from Birmingham Public Library Tutwiler Collection of Southern History and Literature</text>
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                  <text>Alabama Cultural Resource Survey&#13;
Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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                  <text>Auburn University&#13;
University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>General William Rosecrans' Headquarters (Alston-Rosser House, "Little Brick")</text>
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                <text>Stevenson, Jackson County, Civil War, William Rosecrans, James A. Garfield, Ulysses S. Grant, National Register of Historic Places</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="37590">
                <text>Secrist, Phil.  "The General's Headquarters (Rosecrans' Headquarters)."  &lt;em&gt;National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination Form&lt;/em&gt;.  Jackson County Historical Society, Marietta, Georgia, February 1, 1978.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://npgallery.nps.gov/nrhp/GetAsset?assetID=ae9c19b8-578e-4c8e-90e4-c5e464f41768" target="_blank"&gt;http://npgallery.nps.gov/nrhp/GetAsset?assetID=ae9c19b8-578e-4c8e-90e4-c5e464f41768&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;"Union Army Headquarters" Historical Marker.  Alabama Historical Association.  Myrtle Place, Stevenson, Alabama.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="37591">
                <text>Northeast Alabama Community College Archives and Special Collections</text>
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                <text>built c. 1855, occupied by Rosecrans August 18 - September 4, 1863</text>
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                <text>The structure known locally as "Little Brick" was built about 1855 during the railroad construction boom in Stevenson, Alabama.  The property was purchased prior to the Civil War by Michigan native Walter Rosser who was in Stevenson working as a railroad engineer.  The nature of design indicates that Rosser may have built the structure himself.  It is believed that a man named Thomas Osbourne lived in the home until it was commandeered by General William Rosecrans to be used as a headquarters during the Civil War.  Little Brick's location on a side street, away from the bustling depot and downtown area fit with the general's needs.  It was here that Rosecrans worked diligently on plans for the Chattanooga campaign from his arrival on August 8, 1863 until his September 4, 1863 departure.  At Little Brick, Rosecrans met with two men who would become President of the United States, his Chief of Staff James A. Garfield and General Ulysses S. Grant.  General William T. Sherman was in the area at the time and it is possible he came to Little Brick, as well.  After the war Rosser returned to Stevenson and reclaimed his property, and it remained in the Rosser family for over a century.  The structure has fallen into ruins and the property is now owned by the city of Stevenson.  </text>
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                <text>photo by Jimmy Emerson</text>
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>"Alabama Agriculture," Constance Ortmayer (1940) </text>
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                <text>&lt;span&gt;Constance Ortmayer was born in New York City in 1902 and graduated from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts at Vienna, Austria. She returned to the United States in 1932 and was teaching art at Rollins College in Florida when she was commissioned to complete two bas relief sculptures for the post offices at Arcadia, Florida and Scottsboro, Alabama.The Arcadia relief was completed in 1939. The Scottsboro relief, &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Alabama Agriculture&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt;, was completed in 1940. Ortmayer said of the Scottsboro piece, "Three phases of cotton growing from the theme of the central panel. On the right the cultivation of the crop is symbolized by the young man working with a hoe among the new plants. Opposite a young woman is depicted picking ripened bolls, and for the background, the processing and shipping of cotton is represented by the bales and the strong figure of a second young worker standing between them. Both of the flanking panels interpret the growing of corn. The young man and woman shown on the right are examining the fruit on the ripened stalks and the couple on the left are represented as workers who have harvested the new crop." The Treasury Section of Fine Arts, who commissioned the piece, wrote of the work, "In a sculpture characterized by clean, flowing lines, Miss Ortmayer gives an exceptionally effective representation of the youthful strength and grace that each new generation brings to the agriculture of the South."&lt;/span&gt;
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                <text>Blake Wilhelm</text>
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                <text>Carolyn Murray Greer, "One of Our Best, Most Respected Citizens," Remembering the Shoals, https://rememberingtheshoals.wordpress.com/2011/02/27/one-of-our-best-most-respected-citizens (accessed December 6, 2015).</text>
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                  <text>Historic Houses: Watercolor Renderings by API Architecture Students</text>
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                <text>Residence of Dean Hare</text>
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                <text>Architectural drawings; Watercolors; Houses; Dwellings; Doors &amp; doorways; Windows; Shutters; Porches; Columns;  Roofs; Chimneys; Men; Women; Trees; Landscapes (Representations)</text>
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                <text>This image is a watercolor painting of the residence of Dean Hare in Auburn, Alabama by Thomas H. Brugh sometime between 1917 and 1942. The painting shows the front exterior of the home with its double doors, windows, shutters, columned porch, steps, peaked roof, and chimneys flanked by trees and landscaping. There is a couple in period costume coming down the walk. It is placed within framing art showing its architectural features including those of the main entrance. The framing art includes the floor plan and various scales. In the lower right corner, there is an Alabama Polytechnic Institute School of Architecture stamp, the handwritten inscription "First Medals," and the artist's signature block which reads: "Thomas H. Bruch, Ala. Poly. Inst. Arch. 476, a measured drawing, residence of Dean Hare, Auburn, Ala." The painting is in excellent condition and is encapsulated.</text>
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                <text>Auburn University Libraries. Special Collections and Archives Dept. Architecture, School of -- Architectural Renderings Student Projects</text>
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                <text>Auburn University Libraries</text>
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                <text>This image is the property of the Auburn University Libraries and is intended for non-commercial use. Users of the image are asked to acknowledge the Auburn University Libraries. For information about obtaining high-resolution copies of this and other images in this collection, please contact the Auburn University Libraries Special Collections &amp; Archives Department at archive@auburn.edu or (334) 844-1732.</text>
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                <text>Auburn -- Lee County -- Alabama</text>
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