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Wikipedia

Cleveland, Tennessee

Cleveland is the county seat of and largest city in Bradley County, Tennessee.[10] The population was 47,356 at the 2020 census.[11] It is the principal city of the Cleveland metropolitan area, Tennessee (consisting of Bradley and neighboring Polk County), which is included in the Chattanooga–Cleveland–Dalton, TN–GA–AL Combined Statistical Area.

Cleveland
Craigmiles Hall (on the right) in downtown Cleveland
Nickname: 
The City with Spirit
Location of Cleveland in Bradley County, Tennessee.
Cleveland
Location in Tennessee in the United States
Cleveland
Cleveland (the United States)
Coordinates: 35°10′17″N 84°52′16″W / 35.17139°N 84.87111°W / 35.17139; -84.87111
CountryUnited States
StateTennessee
CountyBradley
Founded1835[1]
Incorporated1842[2]
Named forBenjamin Cleveland
Government
 • TypeCity Council
 • MayorKevin Brooks[3]
 • City ManagerJoe Fivas[4]
Area
 • Total30.87 sq mi (79.96 km2)
 • Land30.86 sq mi (79.94 km2)
 • Water0.01 sq mi (0.02 km2)
Elevation860 ft (260 m)
Population
 • Total47,356
 • Density1,534.34/sq mi (592.41/km2)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern (EST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP Codes
37311–37312, 37320, 37323, 37364[8]
Area code423
FIPS code47-15400[9][failed verification]
GNIS feature ID1280705[6]
Websitewww.clevelandtn.gov

Cleveland is the sixteenth-largest city in Tennessee and has the fifth-largest industrial economy, having thirteen Fortune 500 manufacturers.[12][13]

History

Early history

For thousands of years before European encounter, this area was occupied by succeeding cultures of indigenous peoples. Peoples of the South Appalachian Mississippian culture, beginning about 900-1000 CE, established numerous villages along the river valleys and tributaries. In the more influential villages, they built a single, large earthen platform mound, sometimes surmounted by a temple or elite residence, which was an expression of their religious and political system.

This area was later part of a large territory occupied by the Cherokee Nation, an Iroquoian-speaking people believed to have migrated south from the Great Lakes area, where other Iroquoian tribes arose. Their public architecture was known as the townhouse, a large structure designed for the community to gather together. In some cases, these were built on top of existing mounds; in others the townhouse would front on a broad plaza. Their territory encompassed areas of Western North Carolina, western South Carolina, southeastern Tennessee, northeastern Georgia, and northern Alabama.[14]

The first Europeans to reach the area now occupied by Cleveland and Bradley County were most likely a 1540 expedition through the interior led by Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto. Based on their chronicles, they are believed to have camped along Candies Creek in the western part of present-day Cleveland on June 2, 1540.[15] They encountered some chiefdoms of the Mississippian culture in other areas of South and North Carolina, Tennessee and Georgia. Some writers have suggested that the de Soto expedition was preceded by a party of Welshmen, but there is no supporting evidence and historians consider this unlikely.[15]

During and after the American Revolutionary War, more European Americans entered this area seeking land. They came into increasing conflict with the Cherokee, who occupied this territory. The Cherokee had tolerated traders but resisted settlers who tried to take over their territory and competed for resources.[1]

Because of being defeated in repeated attacks by Americans, in 1819 the Cherokee ceded the land directly north of present-day Bradley County (and north of the Hiwassee River) to the U.S. government in the Calhoun Treaty. In 1821 the Cherokee Agency— the official liaison between the U.S. government and the Cherokee Nation— was moved to the south bank of the Hiwassee River in present-day Charleston, a few miles north of what is now Cleveland.[16] The Indian agent was Colonel Return J. Meigs.

By the 1830s, white settlers had begun to move rapidly into this area in anticipation of a forced relocation of the Cherokee and other Southeast tribes. Congress had passed the Indian Removal Act in 1830, under President Andrew Jackson's direction.[1] In 1832, the Cherokee moved the seat of their government to the Red Clay Council Grounds in southern Bradley County. Some Cherokee had already moved to the West, where they were known as Old Settlers until reunification of the Nation. It operated there until the Cherokee removal in 1838, part of the larger forced migration of Cherokee to Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma). This became known as the Trail of Tears. The former Cherokee seat is now preserved within Red Clay State Park.

The removal was initiated by the Treaty of New Echota on December 29, 1835, although the majority of Cherokee leaders had not approved it. In the Spring of 1838, removal operations by the US military began. Headquarters for the removal were established at Fort Cass in Charleston. In preparation, thousands of Cherokees were rounded up and held in internment camps located between Cleveland and Charleston. Two of the largest were at Rattlesnake Springs.[17] Blythe Ferry, about 15 miles (24 km) northwest of Cleveland in Meigs County, was also an important site during the Cherokee removal.[1]

The legislative act on February 10, 1836 that created Bradley County, which was named for Colonel Edward Bradley of Shelby County, Tennessee, authorized the establishment of a county seat. It was to be named "Cleveland" after Colonel Benjamin Cleveland, a commander at the Battle of Kings Mountain during the American Revolution.[1] The legislative body appointed to govern the county was required to meet in nearby Chatata Valley until a site was chosen for the county seat.[18]

By a one-vote majority on May 2, 1836, the commissioners chose "Taylor's Place," the home of Andrew Taylor, as the county seat, due largely to the site's excellent water sources.[18] Taylor, who had married a Cherokee woman and constructed a log cabin on the site next to a spring, had been given a reservation at the site.[19] A permanent settlement had been established there in 1835, and became a favored stopping place for travelers.[20] The other proposed location for the city was a site a few miles to the east, owned by a wealthy Cherokee named Deer-In-The-Water.[19]

Cleveland was formally established as the county seat by the state legislature on January 20, 1838.[21] That year the city was reported to have a population of 400; it was home to two churches (one Presbyterian, the other Methodist), and a private school for boys, the Oak Grove Academy. The city was incorporated on February 4, 1842, and elections for mayor and aldermen were held shortly afterward on April 4 that year.[22]

While the overwhelming majority of early inhabitants of Cleveland earned their living in agriculture, by 1850 the city also had a sizeable number of skilled craftsmen and professional people.[20] On September 5, 1851 the railroad was completed through Cleveland.[23] After copper mining began in the Copper Basin in neighboring Polk County in the 1840s, headquarters for mining operations were established in Cleveland by Julius Eckhardt Raht, a German-born businessman and engineer.[24] Copper was delivered from the basin to Cleveland by wagon, where it was loaded onto trains.[20] The city's first bank, the Ocoee Bank, was established in 1854.[25]

Civil War

While bitterly divided over the issue of secession on the eve of the Civil War, Cleveland, like Bradley County and most of East Tennessee, voted against Tennessee's Ordinance of Secession in June 1861.[26] The results of the countywide vote were 1,382 to 507 in favor of remaining in the Union.[27] Bradley County was represented by Richard M. Edwards and J.G. Brown at the 1861 East Tennessee Convention in Greeneville, an unsuccessful attempt to allow East Tennessee to split from the state and remain part of the Union.[28] Cleveland and Bradley County were occupied by the Confederate Army from June 1861 until the fall of 1863.[29] Despite this occupation, locals remained loyal to the Union, and placed a Union flag in the courthouse square in April 1861, where it remained until June 1862, when it was removed by Confederate forces from Mississippi.[27] Confederate forces also seized control of the copper mines in the Ducktown basin and the rolling mill in Cleveland owned by Raht.[30] Throughout the war both Union and Confederate troops would pass through Cleveland en route to other locations, which led to many brief skirmishes in the area.[31] The most deadly event in Bradley County during the Civil War was a train wreck near the Black Fox community, a few miles south of Cleveland, that killed 270 Confederate soldiers.[32]

Some significant Civil War locations in Bradley County include the Henegar House in Charleston, in which both Union and Confederate generals, including William Tecumseh Sherman, used as brief headquarters; the Charleston Cumberland Presbyterian Church, also in Charleston, which was used by Confederate forces as a hospital;[33] and the Blue Springs Encampments and Fortifications in southern Bradley County, where Union troops under the command of General Sherman camped on numerous occasions between October 1863 and the end of the war.[34] Troops under the command of Sherman also reportedly camped in 1863 near Tasso, a few miles northeast of Cleveland, on multiple occasions.[35]

No large-scale battles took place in and around Cleveland, but the city was considered militarily important due to the railroads. On June 30, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln sent a telegram to General Henry W. Halleck, which read, "To take and hold the railroad at or east of Cleveland, Tennessee, I think is as fully as important as the taking and holding of Richmond."[36] The railroad bridge over the Hiwassee River to the north was among those destroyed by the East Tennessee bridge-burning conspiracy in November 1861.[37]

On November 25, 1863, during the Battle of Missionary Ridge in Chattanooga, a group of 1,500 Union cavalrymen led by Col. Eli Long arrived in Cleveland. Over the next two days they destroyed twelve miles of railroad in the area, burned the railroad bridge over the Hiwassee a second time, and destroyed the copper rolling mill, which Confederate forces had been using to manufacture artillery shells, percussion caps, and other weaponry.[38] This would prove to be a major blow to the entire Confederate army, as approximately 90% of their copper came from the Ducktown mines.[39] The next day Long's troops were attacked by a group of about 500 Confederate cavalrymen led by Col. John H. Kelly, and quickly retreated to Chattanooga.[40]

The defeat of Confederate forces in Chattanooga resulted in Union troops regaining control of Cleveland and Bradley County by January 1864, and they retained control for the remainder of the war. Within a few days of the Battle of Missionary Ridge and Long's raid, several Union units, including members of the 9th Indiana Infantry Regiment, arrived in Cleveland.[41] Additional Union troops arrived in the area in the summer of 1864, and between May and October 1864 a Union artillery unit was stationed downtown, with headquarters established at the home of Julius Eckhardt Raht. During this time as many as 20,000 Union troops at a time camped in the fields surrounding the house in preparation for Sherman's Atlanta Campaign.[42] Union troops also established two forts, Fort McPherson and Fort Sedgewick, located at Hillcrest Memorial Gardens and Fort Hill Cemetery, respectively, on the highest points of the ridge south of downtown. They successfully repelled an attempted raid by Confederate Gen. Joseph Wheeler on August 17, 1864.[43]

Most of the Union troops stationed in Bradley County left in the summer of 1864 as part of the Atlanta campaign. From this point, Confederate sympathizers conducted guerrilla attacks against Unionist families in Cleveland and surrounding areas, continuing until after the war was over.[44] Members of the Army of Tennessee attempted to destroy a passing Union train near Tasso in the spring of 1864, which instead resulted in the destruction of a Confederate train.[45] The Civil War resulted in much damage to Cleveland and Bradley County, and much of the area was left in ruins.[46]

Reconstruction and industrial revolution

 
Child workers from Cleveland's Hosiery Mills, 1910. Photo by Lewis Hine.

Despite the devastation of the Civil War, Cleveland recovered quickly and much more rapidly than many cities in the South.[1] During the 1870s, Cleveland had a growth spurt, and became one of the first cities in Tennessee to begin to develop industry.[1] Raht, who had fled to Cincinnati, Ohio during the Civil War, returned to Cleveland in 1866 and reopened the copper mines. By 1878 it produced a total of 24 million pounds of copper.[47] Numerous factories were also established, including the Hardwick Stove Company in 1879, the Cleveland Woolen Mills in 1880, and the Cleveland Chair Company in 1884. By 1890, this industrialization helped the city support nine physicians, twelve attorneys, eleven general stores, fourteen grocery stores, three drug stores, three hardware stores, six butcher shops, two hatmakers, two hotels, a shoe store, and seven saloons.[22]

Reflecting industrial prosperity, the city's iconic Craigmiles Hall was constructed in 1878 as an opera house and meeting hall.[48] It is regarded as the city’s most famous landmark and is one of Tennessee’s most photographed buildings.[49] Behind Craigmiles Hall is a reconstructed bandstand, first built in 1920. The reconstruction was built in 2005 by the Allan Jones Foundation, based on the 1920 blueprints.[50]

The city failed to renew its charter in 1879, with the result that it disincorporated on January 1, 1880.[51] Residents worked to reincorporate the city, and on March 15, 1882, they voted overwhelmingly in favor of recharter.[51] The first city elections under the new charter took place on May 20, 1882.[52] Public amenities were developed in the late 19th century: A mule-drawn trolley system was founded in 1886, and the city received telephone service in 1888.[53] In 1895 the city received electricity and public water.[54][55] During this period, Cleveland's population more than doubled, from 1,812 in 1880 to 3,643 in 1900.[22] Many of the buildings in today's downtown area, now designated as the Cleveland Commercial Historic District, as well as those in the nearby Ocoee Street and Centenary Avenue historic districts, were constructed between 1880 and 1915.

20th century

In 1911 the local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy erected a monument at the intersection of Ocoee, Broad, and 8th streets. This monument was reportedly the first of its kind in East Tennessee.[56] In 1914, the Grand Army of the Republic placed a monument in honor of Union soldiers from Bradley County in Fort Hill Cemetery.[57]

In 1918, the Church of God, a Christian denomination headquartered in Cleveland, established a Bible school that would develop as Lee University. Cleveland's Chamber of Commerce was established in 1925. On March 21, 1931, the city's form of government was changed from mayor-aldermen to city commission.[58]

Bob Jones College, a non-denominational Christian college, relocated to Cleveland in 1933 from Panama City, Florida, where it remained until 1947, when it moved to Greenville, South Carolina.[59] The Reverend Billy Graham attended Bob Jones College in Cleveland for one year beginning in 1936.[60]

Following World War II, several major industries located to the area, and the city entered a period of rapid industrial and economic growth as part of the Post–World War II economic expansion.[22] Major factories constructed in the city during this time included American Uniform Company in 1949, Peerless Woolen Mills in 1955, Mallory Battery in 1961, Olin Corporation near Charleston in 1962, and Bendix Corporation in 1964, as well as a Bowater paper mill in nearby Calhoun in 1954.[61] Despite this massive growth in employment, many African American residents of Cleveland and Bradley County moved away as part of the Second Great Migration, and the number of blacks in Cleveland actually declined between 1940 and 1970, while the city's overall population nearly doubled during this time.[62] During this time and afterwards, Cleveland became one of the largest manufacturing hubs in the Southeastern United States, and this economic expansion continued into the 21st century, with additional major factories locating to the area in the 1970s and 1980s.

In 1966 the Church of God of Prophecy, based in Cleveland, established Tomlinson College north of town, which remained in operation until 1992, when it closed.[63] That same year Cleveland High School was established and schools in Cleveland and Bradley County were integrated.[64] Cleveland State Community College was established in 1967.[65]

In the 1970s and 1980s, the city gained a national reputation for the crime of odometer fraud after 40 people in Bradley County, including multiple owners of car dealerships, were sent to federal prison for the crime.[66] Cleveland was the subject of a November 1983 60 Minutes episode about this crime.[67] The city came to be known as the "Odometer Rollback Capital of the World" to some.[68]

Beginning in the 1950s, the city began to gradually expand to the north as a result of most residential and industrial growth taking place there, but prior to 1987, the city limits of Cleveland did not extend west of Candies Creek Ridge. In 1988, the city began annexing large numbers of adjacent neighborhoods and industrial areas north, northeast, and northwest of the city.[69] These major annexations continued until the late 1990s, and led to the city's land area increasing in size from approximately 18 square miles in 1989 to about 29.5 square miles in 2000.[70] As a result of this growth, the downtown business district is now geographically located in the southern part of the city.[71]

Recent history

In 1993, Cleveland voters approved a referendum changing the city's form of government from a city commission to a council-manager government.[72]

Cleveland officially adopted the nickname "The City with Spirit" in 2012.[73] In 2018 voters approved a referendum allowing for package liquor stores to be located within the city.[74] In 2020, the city completed construction of a public park at the site of Taylor Spring, where the first settlement that became Cleveland was founded.[75]

Geography

Cleveland is located in southeast Tennessee in the center of Bradley County in the Great Appalachian Valley, situated among a series of low hills and ridges roughly 15 miles (24 km) west of the Blue Ridge Mountains and 15 miles (24 km) east of the Chickamauga Lake impoundment of the Tennessee River. The Hiwassee River, which flows down out of the mountains and forms the northern boundary of Bradley County, empties into the Tennessee a few miles northwest of Cleveland. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city had a total land area of 26.9 square miles (69.7 km2) in 2010.[76]

The area's terrain is made up of parallel ridges, including Candies Creek Ridge (also called Clingan Ridge), Mouse Creek/Lead Mine Ridge, and Blue Springs Ridge, which are extensions of the Appalachian Mountains (specifically part of the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians) that run approximately north-northeast through the area.[77][78] Mouse Creek and Blue Springs Ridge have significantly lower elevations within the city of Cleveland than elsewhere in Bradley County, which historically made the area easier to settle.[77][78] Several streams run in the valleys between the ridges including Candies Creek, located west of Clingan Ridge, and South Mouse Creek, between Mouse Creek and Lead Mine Ridge.[79][80] Elevations in the city range from just under 700 feet (210 m) to nearly 1,200 feet (370 m). The Tennessee Valley Divide, the boundary of the Tennessee Valley and Mobile River drainage basins, is located on the southern and eastern fringes of the city, and has prevented the city limits from expanding beyond this point in most locations.

Downtown Cleveland, which roughly coexists with the Cleveland Commercial Historic District, encompasses the business district and consists of private businesses and government office buildings including the Bradley County Courthouse and Courthouse Annex, Cleveland Municipal Building, Cleveland Police and Fire department headquarters, and various other government buildings, primarily the offices of city and county departments. The surrounding residential areas, including the Stuart Heights, Ocoee Street, Centenary Avenue, and Annadale neighborhoods, are sometimes considered part of downtown Cleveland.[71] Northern Cleveland has developed as the location for most of the city's retail shops and private interests.[81] In addition, it is a major residential division, made up of Burlington Heights, Fairview, and Sequoia Grove neighborhoods, and a few major industries.[77] A large industrial area is also located in the northeastern part of the city.[77] The western part of the city is almost entirely residential. Much of it is an extension of the city limits westward to encompass populous middle to upper-class neighborhoods including Hopewell Estates and Rolling Hills.[71] East and South Cleveland consist of lower class residential and industrial areas.[77][78] People living in East Cleveland tend to be less privileged.[81]

Neighborhoods

Several neighborhoods and communities are located within the city.[77][78] These include:

Climate

Since 1908, 28 tornadoes have been documented in the Cleveland area, seven of which struck on April 27, 2011.[82]

Climate data for Cleveland, Tennessee (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1955–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 76
(24)
80
(27)
86
(30)
91
(33)
95
(35)
105
(41)
105
(41)
104
(40)
100
(38)
97
(36)
86
(30)
76
(24)
105
(41)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 67.8
(19.9)
71.7
(22.1)
78.7
(25.9)
84.2
(29.0)
88.4
(31.3)
92.9
(33.8)
94.9
(34.9)
94.4
(34.7)
91.8
(33.2)
84.4
(29.1)
75.8
(24.3)
68.3
(20.2)
96.0
(35.6)
Average high °F (°C) 50.0
(10.0)
54.6
(12.6)
62.7
(17.1)
72.4
(22.4)
79.5
(26.4)
86.1
(30.1)
89.0
(31.7)
88.4
(31.3)
83.0
(28.3)
73.0
(22.8)
61.3
(16.3)
52.6
(11.4)
71.0
(21.7)
Daily mean °F (°C) 39.7
(4.3)
43.6
(6.4)
50.8
(10.4)
59.5
(15.3)
67.5
(19.7)
75.1
(23.9)
78.4
(25.8)
77.6
(25.3)
71.6
(22.0)
60.3
(15.7)
49.0
(9.4)
42.4
(5.8)
59.6
(15.3)
Average low °F (°C) 29.4
(−1.4)
32.6
(0.3)
38.8
(3.8)
46.7
(8.2)
55.6
(13.1)
64.0
(17.8)
67.8
(19.9)
66.8
(19.3)
60.1
(15.6)
47.6
(8.7)
36.7
(2.6)
32.2
(0.1)
48.2
(9.0)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 11.0
(−11.7)
15.2
(−9.3)
20.8
(−6.2)
29.5
(−1.4)
39.6
(4.2)
52.6
(11.4)
59.0
(15.0)
57.6
(14.2)
45.0
(7.2)
30.8
(−0.7)
21.2
(−6.0)
16.6
(−8.6)
8.4
(−13.1)
Record low °F (°C) −16
(−27)
−2
(−19)
0
(−18)
20
(−7)
30
(−1)
37
(3)
49
(9)
47
(8)
30
(−1)
21
(−6)
9
(−13)
−4
(−20)
−16
(−27)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 5.20
(132)
4.88
(124)
5.56
(141)
5.01
(127)
4.58
(116)
4.90
(124)
5.14
(131)
3.84
(98)
4.67
(119)
3.52
(89)
4.85
(123)
5.47
(139)
57.62
(1,464)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 0.2
(0.51)
0.6
(1.5)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.76)
1.1
(2.8)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 12.7 12.7 13.6 11.6 12.0 12.7 12.7 10.2 8.6 9.2 10.3 13.9 140.2
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 0.3 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.9
Source: NOAA[83][84]

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
1860806
18701,658105.7%
18801,87413.0%
18902,86352.8%
19003,85834.8%
19105,54943.8%
19206,52217.5%
19309,13640.1%
194011,35124.2%
195012,60511.0%
196016,19628.5%
197021,44632.4%
198026,41523.2%
199030,35414.9%
200037,19222.5%
201041,28511.0%
202047,35614.7%
U.S. Decennial Census[11][7]

Cleveland is the principal city of the Cleveland Metropolitan Statistical Area, a metropolitan area that covers Bradley and Polk counties[85] and had a combined population of 115,788 at the 2010 census.[86]

2000 census

As of the census[9] of 2000, there were 37,192 people, 15,037 households, and 9,518 families residing in the city.[failed verification] The population density was 1,490.9 inhabitants per square mile (575.6/km2). There were 16,431 housing units at an average density of 658.7 per square mile (254.3/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 89.00% White, 7.01% African American, 0.23% Native American, 0.97% Asian, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 1.29% from other races, and 1.46% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 2.87% of the population.

There were 15,037 households, out of which 28.4% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 46.6% were married couples living together, 13.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 36.7% were non-families. 30.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10.8% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.33 and the average family size was 2.90.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 21.9% under the age of 18, 15.4% from 18 to 24, 27.6% from 25 to 44, 21.2% from 45 to 64, and 13.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 34 years. For every 100 females, there were 89.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 85.0 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $30,098, and the median income for a family was $40,150. Males had a median income of $30,763 versus $21,480 for females. The per capita income for the city was $18,316. About 11.3% of families and 16.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 19.5% of those under age 18 and 14.3% of those age 65 or over.

2010 census

As of the census of 2010,[87] there were 41,285 people, 16,107 households, and 10,063 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,535.3 inhabitants per square mile (592.8/km2). There were 17,841 housing units at an average density of 663.5 per square mile (256.2/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 87.10% White, 7.39% African American, 0.40% Native American, 1.53% Asian, 0.09% Pacific Islander, and 1.69% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 7.52% of the population.

There were 16,107 households, out of which 27.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 43.0% were married couples living together, 14.3% had a female householder with no husband present, and 37.5% were non-families. 30.0% of all households were made up of individuals, and 26.8% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.40 and the average family size was 2.97.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 21.83% under the age of 18, 63.35% ages 18 to 64, and 14.83% over the age of 65. The gender makeup was 52.4% female and 47.6% male. The median female age was 36.5 and the median male age was 32.9

The median income for a household in the city was $36,270, and the median income for a family was $47,104. The per capita income for the city was $21,576. About 15.0% of families and 21.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 25.5% of those under age 18 and 10.3% of those age 65 or over.

2020 census

Cleveland city, Tennessee – Racial and Ethnic Composition
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos may be of any race.
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[88] Pop 2020[89] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 33,612 34,214 81.41% 72.25%
Black or African American alone (NH) 2,975 3,779 7.21% 7.98%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 107 130 0.26% 0.27%
Asian alone (NH) 618 825 1.50% 1.74%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 31 85 0.08% 0.18%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 57 185 0.14% 0.39%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 779 2,830 1.89% 5.34%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 3,106 5,608 7.52% 11.84%
Total 41,285 47,356 100.00% 100.00%

As of the 2020 United States census, there were 47,356 people, 16,669 households, and 10,005 families residing in the city.

Religion

 
Broad Street United Methodist Church

Cleveland is located in a region of the Southern United States known as the Bible Belt.[90] Numerous Protestant Christian denominations are represented in the city, including several Pentecostal groups for which Cleveland serves as the international headquarters. Denominations based in Cleveland include:

There are approximately 200 Protestant churches and one Roman Catholic church in Bradley County. An estimated 39.6 percent of residents have no religious affiliation.[91] Several churches in Downtown Cleveland are of notable architecture, including the Romanesque Revival Broad Street United Methodist Church, the First Presbyterian Church on Ocoee Street, and St. Luke's Episcopal Church, which was built in the Gothic Revival style by architect Peter Williamson. All three are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

 
The mysterious red stains that appear on the marble of the Craigmiles Mausoleum.

Cleveland is home to the famous Craigmiles Mausoleum, located at 320 Broad Street NW, behind St. Luke's Episcopal Church. The mausoleum contains the body of Nina Craigmiles, a seven-year-old who died on October 18, 1871, when a horse buggy in which she was riding was struck by a train. Her father, John Craigmiles, constructed the church and mausoleum in Nina's memory. He named the church St. Luke's because the girl died on St. Luke's Day.[92] Shortly after Nina's body was placed inside the mausoleum, red stains appeared on the marble. Over the years the stained marble has been replaced, but the stains inevitably reappear. Craigmiles commissioned a statue of Nina, which was to be shipped from Europe. It was being transported via the RMS Titanic and sank with the ship.[93]

Economy

 
Old Hardwick Woolen Mills factory building in Cleveland, Tennessee.

Cleveland is considered to be one of the largest industrial and manufacturing hubs in the state of Tennessee, with the number of manufacturers reportedly ranking fifth highest in the state.[12] Goods produced include household cooking equipment, foodstuff, textiles, furniture, storage batteries, pharmaceuticals, industrial cleaning products, photographic processing, industrial and domestic chemicals, and automotive parts.[94] Top employers include Whirlpool, Johnston Coca-Cola, Mars, Inc., Procter & Gamble, Duracell, Peyton's Southeastern, Arch Chemicals, Advanced Photographic Solutions, Renfro Foods, Flowers Bakery, Olin Corporation, Georgia Pacific, Rubbermaid, Exel, Inc., Jackson Furniture, Cleveland Chair Company, Eaton Corporation, Beiersdorf, Lonza, Wacker, Mueller Company, and Polartec.[91] In total, Cleveland contains more than 150 manufacturing firms and thirteen Fortune 500 Companies.[91]

Cleveland is the location for the corporate headquarters of Life Care Centers of America, the largest privately held nursing facility company in the US, founded and owned by Forrest Preston. Check Into Cash Inc., the largest privately held payday loan company in the US, was founded in Cleveland in 1993 by businessman Allan Jones.[95] Hardwick Clothes, the oldest tailor-made clothing maker in America, was founded in 1880 and has been headquartered in Cleveland for its entire history.[96] In addition to corporate businesses, Cleveland has a thriving retail sector, located mostly in the northern part of the city. Bradley Square Mall is a shopping mall with more than 50 tenants.[97]

Tourism

Tourism is a major part of Cleveland's income. Visitors come from all over the country. The Cherokee National Forest in Polk County supports many recreational outdoor activities. The Ocoee and Hiwassee rivers both flow through the forest. Thousands of people raft these rivers annually. The Ocoee River was the site of the canoe slalom events for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. Red Clay State Park is a historical site just north of the Georgia state line. The Cherokee held council here after being driven out of Georgia. The Museum Center at Five Points is a history museum and cultural center that features exhibits on the Ocoee Region and surrounding areas.[98] The Ocoee Regional Nature Center is a state-certified arboretum. It houses over 100 types of trees, plants, flowers, and shrubs.[citation needed]

Arts and culture

 
Photo of Tall Betsy in Fort Hill Cemetery, 1993.

The MainStreet Cleveland Halloween Block Party draws more than 20,000 people to the city every year. The event began in 1988 as a candy handout at the Cleveland Police Department and Centenary Avenue, and has grown to one of the largest events in Cleveland. It features live music, food stands, and a costume contest.[99] In 2015 Cleveland's mayor, Tom Rowland, dubbed the city as the "Halloween capital of the world."[100]

Cleveland is known for Tall Betsy, the official "Halloween goblin of Bradley County". For years, Tall Betsy's Halloween night appearance drew large crowds to Cleveland's Centenary Avenue. The growing crowds inspired MainStreet Cleveland to organize the Halloween Block Party around the event. Local businessman Allan Jones created the modern legend from tales of the Tall Betsy goblin that his grandmother told him as a child. The original legend dates to the 19th century, with print references in the Cleveland Daily Herald as early as 1892. In 1998, Tall Betsy retired after drawing a crowd of over 25,000 people. She returned in 2005 to celebrate her 25th anniversary.[101][102]

The Cleveland Apple Festival, begun in 2002, is an annual family event held on the third weekend of October.[103] This festival offers a juried art and craft show, live bluegrass music, food booths, pony and a hayride, entertainment, contests and children's activities. Unlike many festivals of its kind in the U.S., the Cleveland Apple Festival does not charge for children to participate in activities provided in the children's area. The festival is operated as a 501(c)(3) public charity.

The city song is "The Diplomat", composed by John Philip Sousa. It debuted as conducted by Sousa in a performance in 1906 at the Craigmiles Opera House.[104] In November 2017, the city celebrated its 175th anniversary.[105]

Sports

Cleveland currently has no professional sports teams, but has had two minor league baseball teams: the Cleveland Counts from 1911 to 1913 and the Cleveland Manufacturers from 1921 to 1922. Both of these teams were part of the Appalachian League.[106]

 
Jones Wrestling Center

Cleveland High School has one of the most successful football programs in Tennessee. It has the second-longest winning streak in Tennessee high school football history, with 54 consecutive wins between 1993 and 1996.[107] The Blue Raiders have also won state championships in 1968,[failed verification] 1993, 1994 and 1995.[108]

The Cleveland High and Bradley Central wrestling teams traditionally dominate the state wrestling championships. Since 1994, the Bradley Central Bears have won a total of 27 state championships Traditional category and 14 state championships in the Dual category, winning a state championship every year in the Traditional category between 1993 and 2017.[109] The Cleveland Blue Raiders, based at the state-of-the-art Jones Wrestling Center,[110] have won a total of 26 traditional championships, most recently in 2020. The Blue Raiders have accomplished three-peats twice, from 2011 to 2013 and then again from 2018 to 2021.[111][108]

In 2013, the Cleveland City Council presented a resolution honoring the Cleveland High School wrestling team, and declared February 25 as "Blue Raider Wrestling Day." The Blue Raiders were state champions for the second time in three years after winning the 2013 TSSAA Division I Traditional State Championships and the State Duals Finals. The team was runner-up in both the Duals and State Tournaments in 2012, after claiming the Traditional title in 2011.[112]

Parks and recreation

Several public recreational parks are located within or near Cleveland.[113] They are all maintained by the Cleveland Parks and Recreation department. They allow a variety of activities, and some organized sports teams compete at them. The Cleveland/Bradley County Greenway is an approximately 4.4 mile long greenway path which follows South Mouse Creek from downtown to neighborhoods in the northern part of the city.[114] Other facilities include the Bradley County Park, Kenneth L. Tinsley Park, Greenway Park, Mosby Park, Deer Park, College Hill Recreation Center, Johnston Park, Leonard Fletcher Park, Taylor Spring Park, Cleveland Family YMCA, and the South Cleveland Community Center.

Government

The city of Cleveland operates under a council/manager form of government with an elected mayor and seven council members. Five are elected from single-member districts, and two are elected at-large, as is the mayor.[115] The city council chooses a fellow council member to serve as vice mayor.[115] The city council hires a professional city manager to carry out daily operations. The mayor is Kevin Brooks, who has held that position since September 2018, and the vice mayor is at-large councilman Avery Johnson.[3] The city manager is Joe Fivas, who has held that position since June 2016.[116] Elections are nonpartisan and take place in August of every even year, along with the state primary.

District[115] Councilman[115]
District 1 Marsha McKenzie
District 2 Bill Estes
District 3 Tom Cassada
District 4 David May, Jr.
District 5 Dale R. Hughes
At-large 1 Avery L. Johnson (vice mayor)
At-large 2 Ken Webb

Most of Cleveland is in the 4th congressional district of Tennessee for the U.S. House of Representatives, represented by Republican Scott DesJarlais.[117] A small amount of the city, including East Cleveland and northeast Cleveland, are in the 3rd congressional district, represented by Republican Chuck Fleischmann.[118] Most of Cleveland is part of District 24 of the Tennessee House of Representatives, represented by Mark Hall.[119] A small part of the city is in District 22, represented by Republican Dan Howell.[120] Most of Cleveland is part of District 9 for the Tennessee Senate, represented by Republican Mike Bell.[121] A small portion of the city is in District 10, represented by Republican Todd Gardenhire.[122]

Cleveland and Bradley County have historically been majority-Republican since the Civil War, as has most of East Tennessee. Through much of the 20th century, Middle and West Tennessee were majority Democrat, which Democrats were made up of conservative whites. As a whole, Tennessee was considered part of the Solid South. Both areas had been slave societies, and West Tennessee was dominated by large cotton plantations, whereas East Tennessee was based in yeoman farmers and little slaveholding. Since the Republican Party's founding, only two Democratic presidential candidates have won Bradley County; Southerner Woodrow Wilson in 1912 and Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1936, during the Great Depression.[123]

Education

Cleveland High School, Bradley Central High School and Walker Valley High School are the three public high schools in Bradley County. Cleveland Middle, Ocoee Middle and Lake Forest are the three middle schools. Cleveland City Schools is a school system for students living within the city limits. Several elementary schools serve students within different sub-district divisions. Some schools maintained by Bradley County Schools are also in the city. Tennessee Christian Preparatory School is a Christian college preparatory school located in Cleveland.

The city is also home to Cleveland State Community College, a unit of the Tennessee Board of Regents, as well as Lee University, the second-largest private, four-year university in the state.

Public schools

High schools

Private schools

  • Tennessee Christian Preparatory School
  • Cleveland Christian School
  • Candies Creek Academy
  • Bowman Hills Adventist School
  • Shenandoah Baptist Academy
  • United Christian Academy
  • Vanguard Christian Academy

Higher education

Media

Newspapers

The Cleveland Daily Banner is the town's newspaper. The paper was first published in 1854.[124] Additionally, the Chattanooga Times Free Press, a paper based in Chattanooga, also serves as a primary source of news for Bradley County residents.

Radio

Several radio stations located within Chattanooga and neighboring cities serve Cleveland, along with others licensed to Cleveland, which are listed below:[125]

Call sign Frequency Format
W207C1 (WAYW) 89.3 FM WAY-FM, Contemporary Christian
WSAA 93.1 FM Air 1, Contemporary Christian
WALI 97.1 FM Lite rock
WOOP-LP 99.9 FM Bluegrass
WUSY 100.7 FM Country
W267BI 101.3 FM Talk
WCLE-FM 104.1 FM Adult contemporary
W290CA (WTSE) 105.9 FM Contemporary Christian
WBAC 1340 AM News/Talk
WCLE-AM 1570 AM Talk

Television

Cleveland is served by several TV stations licensed both in the city and neighboring cities. Stations licensed in Cleveland include:

Call sign[126] Channel Network
WPDP-CD 25 ABC, Fox, My Network TV
WTNB-CD 27 Heartland
WFLI-TV 42, 53 The CW, Me-TV

Infrastructure

Transportation

 
Historic Southern Railway Depot.

Air

Hardwick Field, also known as Cleveland Municipal Airport, was the principal airport from 1955 to 2013.[127][128] Cleveland Regional Jetport, located approximately two miles east of Hardwick Field opened on January 25, 2013, replacing Hardwick Field.[129] It consists of a 6,200-by-100-foot (1,890 by 30 m) runway.[130]

Rail

Cleveland is served by the Norfolk Southern Railway, which forks in the city and provides logistics for industries.[131]

Into the late 1960s the Southern Railway operated daily passenger trains through Cleveland: the Birmingham Special (New York - Birmingham), Pelican (New York - New Orleans) and Tennessean (Washington - Memphis).[132][133] The last train serving the station was the an unnamed remnant of the Birmingham Special on August 11, 1970.[134]

Roads

The center of Cleveland is at the intersection of U.S. Route 11 and U.S. Route 64. U.S. 11 connects the area with Chattanooga to the south and Athens to the north. The U.S. 11 Bypass (Keith Street) serves as a bypass route for US 11 around downtown, passing approximately 0.5 miles (0.80 km) west of the central business district. U.S. Route 64 connects Cleveland with Murphy, North Carolina, to the east and the Chattanooga area to the southwest. State Route 60 (25th Street) connects Cleveland with Dayton to the northwest and Dalton, Georgia, to the southeast, where the road becomes State Route 71. State Route 74 connects the city to Chatsworth, Georgia to the south. APD-40, made up of the U.S. 64 Bypass and a section of S.R. 60, is part of the Appalachian Development Highway System from where it takes its name, and serves as a beltway around the business district. Parts of this beltway are controlled access. Paul Huff Parkway serves as a major thoroughfare on the northern end of the city. Interstate 75 passes through western Cleveland, connecting the area with Knoxville to the north and Chattanooga to the south. I-75 has three exits in the city.[135]

Principal highways
 
Aerial view of the cloverleaf interchange with APD-40 (US 64 Byp./SR 60) and US 64 (Inman Street, Waterlevel Highway)
 
Paul Huff Parkway crossing Candies Creek Ridge.
Other major roadways
  • Mouse Creek Road
  • Stuart Road
  • Peerless Road
  • Georgetown Road
  •   SR 312 (Harrison Pike)
  • Freewill Road
  • 20th Street NE
  • 17th Street NW
  • Michigan Avenue Road
  • Benton Pike
  • Blue Springs Road
  • McGrady Drive

Public transportation

The Cleveland Urban Area Transit System (CUATS) is a bus service operated by the Southeast Tennessee Human Resource Agency (SETHRA) that operates within the city limits of Cleveland and select parts of Bradley County.[136] The city operates on five fixed routes.[91] A Greyhound bus station is located on Paul Huff Parkway just off of I-75 exit 27.[citation needed]

Public safety

The Cleveland Fire Department is an all-paid professional department. It currently consists of more than 90 highly trained personnel and 6 stations, and serves an estimated 67,000 people. The current chief is Robert Gaylor.[137] The Cleveland Police department currently has more than 90 Certified Police Officers, two Codes Enforcement Officers and 11 full-time civilian employees, along with one part-time civilian employee, 13 School Crossing Guards and eight Animal Control employees. They also maintain a Volunteer Program consisting of a 15-member Public Service Unit and a nine-member Chaplain Unit. The Chief of Police is Mark Gibson.[138]

Healthcare

Cleveland's two hospitals are Bradley Memorial Hospital and Cleveland Community Hospital.[139] Since 2015, both have been operated by Tennova Healthcare.[140] Bradley Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center is a nursing home that serves the county. Bradley County Emergency Medical Services is an emergency medical service (EMS) agency of the county government established in 1972 and consists of three stations, eleven ambulances, and six ancillary vehicles, along with more than 60 full-time employees and more than 25 part-time employees.[141]

Utilities

Cleveland Utilities is a corporate agency owned by the city which provides electric, water, and sewage services to residents of Cleveland and surrounding areas.[142] Cleveland Utilities receives water from the Hiwassee and Tennessee Rivers and a spring in Waterville just southeast of the city, and purchases electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority, which is delivered via two subtransmission substations in the city.[143][144] Wastewater is pumped to a treatment facility on the Hiwassee River in northern Bradley County.[145] Natural gas is provided by Chattanooga Gas, a subsidiary of Southern Company.[146] Other local providers include the Hiwassee Utilities Commission, Ocoee Utility District, and Volunteer Electric Cooperative.[91]

Public works

The Public Works Department performs the most varied actions of all the city departments. It has approximately 51 employees. The department is responsible for the city's fleet operation, sign maintenance and design, and street markings. The current director is Tommy Myers.[147]

Notable people

Sister Cities

See also

Notes

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References

  • Snell, William R. (1986). Cleveland the Beautiful. Williams Printing Company.
  • Lillard, Roy G. (1980). Bradley County. Memphis State University Press. ISBN 0-87870-099-4 – via Internet Archive.
  • Bradley County Historical Society (1992). Reflections Past and Present: A Pictorial History of Bradley County, Tennessee. Taylor Publishing Company.
  • Lillard, Roy G. (1976). History of Bradley County, Tennessee. Bradley County Chapter ETHS.

External links

cleveland, tennessee, cleveland, county, seat, largest, city, bradley, county, tennessee, population, 2020, census, principal, city, cleveland, metropolitan, area, tennessee, consisting, bradley, neighboring, polk, county, which, included, chattanooga, clevela. Cleveland is the county seat of and largest city in Bradley County Tennessee 10 The population was 47 356 at the 2020 census 11 It is the principal city of the Cleveland metropolitan area Tennessee consisting of Bradley and neighboring Polk County which is included in the Chattanooga Cleveland Dalton TN GA AL Combined Statistical Area ClevelandCityCraigmiles Hall on the right in downtown ClevelandSealNickname The City with SpiritLocation of Cleveland in Bradley County Tennessee ClevelandLocation in Tennessee in the United StatesShow map of TennesseeClevelandCleveland the United States Show map of the United StatesCoordinates 35 10 17 N 84 52 16 W 35 17139 N 84 87111 W 35 17139 84 87111CountryUnited StatesStateTennesseeCountyBradleyFounded1835 1 Incorporated1842 2 Named forBenjamin ClevelandGovernment TypeCity Council MayorKevin Brooks 3 City ManagerJoe Fivas 4 Area 5 Total30 87 sq mi 79 96 km2 Land30 86 sq mi 79 94 km2 Water0 01 sq mi 0 02 km2 Elevation 6 860 ft 260 m Population 2020 7 Total47 356 Density1 534 34 sq mi 592 41 km2 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP Codes37311 37312 37320 37323 37364 8 Area code423FIPS code47 15400 9 failed verification GNIS feature ID1280705 6 Websitewww wbr clevelandtn wbr govCleveland is the sixteenth largest city in Tennessee and has the fifth largest industrial economy having thirteen Fortune 500 manufacturers 12 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Civil War 1 3 Reconstruction and industrial revolution 1 4 20th century 1 5 Recent history 2 Geography 2 1 Neighborhoods 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 2000 census 3 2 2010 census 3 3 2020 census 3 4 Religion 4 Economy 4 1 Tourism 5 Arts and culture 6 Sports 7 Parks and recreation 8 Government 9 Education 9 1 Public schools 9 1 1 High schools 9 2 Private schools 9 3 Higher education 10 Media 10 1 Newspapers 10 2 Radio 10 3 Television 11 Infrastructure 11 1 Transportation 11 1 1 Air 11 1 2 Rail 11 1 3 Roads 11 1 3 1 Principal highways 11 1 3 2 Other major roadways 11 1 4 Public transportation 11 2 Public safety 11 3 Healthcare 11 4 Utilities 11 5 Public works 12 Notable people 13 Sister Cities 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit For thousands of years before European encounter this area was occupied by succeeding cultures of indigenous peoples Peoples of the South Appalachian Mississippian culture beginning about 900 1000 CE established numerous villages along the river valleys and tributaries In the more influential villages they built a single large earthen platform mound sometimes surmounted by a temple or elite residence which was an expression of their religious and political system This area was later part of a large territory occupied by the Cherokee Nation an Iroquoian speaking people believed to have migrated south from the Great Lakes area where other Iroquoian tribes arose Their public architecture was known as the townhouse a large structure designed for the community to gather together In some cases these were built on top of existing mounds in others the townhouse would front on a broad plaza Their territory encompassed areas of Western North Carolina western South Carolina southeastern Tennessee northeastern Georgia and northern Alabama 14 The first Europeans to reach the area now occupied by Cleveland and Bradley County were most likely a 1540 expedition through the interior led by Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto Based on their chronicles they are believed to have camped along Candies Creek in the western part of present day Cleveland on June 2 1540 15 They encountered some chiefdoms of the Mississippian culture in other areas of South and North Carolina Tennessee and Georgia Some writers have suggested that the de Soto expedition was preceded by a party of Welshmen but there is no supporting evidence and historians consider this unlikely 15 During and after the American Revolutionary War more European Americans entered this area seeking land They came into increasing conflict with the Cherokee who occupied this territory The Cherokee had tolerated traders but resisted settlers who tried to take over their territory and competed for resources 1 Because of being defeated in repeated attacks by Americans in 1819 the Cherokee ceded the land directly north of present day Bradley County and north of the Hiwassee River to the U S government in the Calhoun Treaty In 1821 the Cherokee Agency the official liaison between the U S government and the Cherokee Nation was moved to the south bank of the Hiwassee River in present day Charleston a few miles north of what is now Cleveland 16 The Indian agent was Colonel Return J Meigs By the 1830s white settlers had begun to move rapidly into this area in anticipation of a forced relocation of the Cherokee and other Southeast tribes Congress had passed the Indian Removal Act in 1830 under President Andrew Jackson s direction 1 In 1832 the Cherokee moved the seat of their government to the Red Clay Council Grounds in southern Bradley County Some Cherokee had already moved to the West where they were known as Old Settlers until reunification of the Nation It operated there until the Cherokee removal in 1838 part of the larger forced migration of Cherokee to Indian Territory present day Oklahoma This became known as the Trail of Tears The former Cherokee seat is now preserved within Red Clay State Park The removal was initiated by the Treaty of New Echota on December 29 1835 although the majority of Cherokee leaders had not approved it In the Spring of 1838 removal operations by the US military began Headquarters for the removal were established at Fort Cass in Charleston In preparation thousands of Cherokees were rounded up and held in internment camps located between Cleveland and Charleston Two of the largest were at Rattlesnake Springs 17 Blythe Ferry about 15 miles 24 km northwest of Cleveland in Meigs County was also an important site during the Cherokee removal 1 The legislative act on February 10 1836 that created Bradley County which was named for Colonel Edward Bradley of Shelby County Tennessee authorized the establishment of a county seat It was to be named Cleveland after Colonel Benjamin Cleveland a commander at the Battle of Kings Mountain during the American Revolution 1 The legislative body appointed to govern the county was required to meet in nearby Chatata Valley until a site was chosen for the county seat 18 By a one vote majority on May 2 1836 the commissioners chose Taylor s Place the home of Andrew Taylor as the county seat due largely to the site s excellent water sources 18 Taylor who had married a Cherokee woman and constructed a log cabin on the site next to a spring had been given a reservation at the site 19 A permanent settlement had been established there in 1835 and became a favored stopping place for travelers 20 The other proposed location for the city was a site a few miles to the east owned by a wealthy Cherokee named Deer In The Water 19 Cleveland was formally established as the county seat by the state legislature on January 20 1838 21 That year the city was reported to have a population of 400 it was home to two churches one Presbyterian the other Methodist and a private school for boys the Oak Grove Academy The city was incorporated on February 4 1842 and elections for mayor and aldermen were held shortly afterward on April 4 that year 22 While the overwhelming majority of early inhabitants of Cleveland earned their living in agriculture by 1850 the city also had a sizeable number of skilled craftsmen and professional people 20 On September 5 1851 the railroad was completed through Cleveland 23 After copper mining began in the Copper Basin in neighboring Polk County in the 1840s headquarters for mining operations were established in Cleveland by Julius Eckhardt Raht a German born businessman and engineer 24 Copper was delivered from the basin to Cleveland by wagon where it was loaded onto trains 20 The city s first bank the Ocoee Bank was established in 1854 25 Civil War Edit While bitterly divided over the issue of secession on the eve of the Civil War Cleveland like Bradley County and most of East Tennessee voted against Tennessee s Ordinance of Secession in June 1861 26 The results of the countywide vote were 1 382 to 507 in favor of remaining in the Union 27 Bradley County was represented by Richard M Edwards and J G Brown at the 1861 East Tennessee Convention in Greeneville an unsuccessful attempt to allow East Tennessee to split from the state and remain part of the Union 28 Cleveland and Bradley County were occupied by the Confederate Army from June 1861 until the fall of 1863 29 Despite this occupation locals remained loyal to the Union and placed a Union flag in the courthouse square in April 1861 where it remained until June 1862 when it was removed by Confederate forces from Mississippi 27 Confederate forces also seized control of the copper mines in the Ducktown basin and the rolling mill in Cleveland owned by Raht 30 Throughout the war both Union and Confederate troops would pass through Cleveland en route to other locations which led to many brief skirmishes in the area 31 The most deadly event in Bradley County during the Civil War was a train wreck near the Black Fox community a few miles south of Cleveland that killed 270 Confederate soldiers 32 Some significant Civil War locations in Bradley County include the Henegar House in Charleston in which both Union and Confederate generals including William Tecumseh Sherman used as brief headquarters the Charleston Cumberland Presbyterian Church also in Charleston which was used by Confederate forces as a hospital 33 and the Blue Springs Encampments and Fortifications in southern Bradley County where Union troops under the command of General Sherman camped on numerous occasions between October 1863 and the end of the war 34 Troops under the command of Sherman also reportedly camped in 1863 near Tasso a few miles northeast of Cleveland on multiple occasions 35 No large scale battles took place in and around Cleveland but the city was considered militarily important due to the railroads On June 30 1862 President Abraham Lincoln sent a telegram to General Henry W Halleck which read To take and hold the railroad at or east of Cleveland Tennessee I think is as fully as important as the taking and holding of Richmond 36 The railroad bridge over the Hiwassee River to the north was among those destroyed by the East Tennessee bridge burning conspiracy in November 1861 37 On November 25 1863 during the Battle of Missionary Ridge in Chattanooga a group of 1 500 Union cavalrymen led by Col Eli Long arrived in Cleveland Over the next two days they destroyed twelve miles of railroad in the area burned the railroad bridge over the Hiwassee a second time and destroyed the copper rolling mill which Confederate forces had been using to manufacture artillery shells percussion caps and other weaponry 38 This would prove to be a major blow to the entire Confederate army as approximately 90 of their copper came from the Ducktown mines 39 The next day Long s troops were attacked by a group of about 500 Confederate cavalrymen led by Col John H Kelly and quickly retreated to Chattanooga 40 The defeat of Confederate forces in Chattanooga resulted in Union troops regaining control of Cleveland and Bradley County by January 1864 and they retained control for the remainder of the war Within a few days of the Battle of Missionary Ridge and Long s raid several Union units including members of the 9th Indiana Infantry Regiment arrived in Cleveland 41 Additional Union troops arrived in the area in the summer of 1864 and between May and October 1864 a Union artillery unit was stationed downtown with headquarters established at the home of Julius Eckhardt Raht During this time as many as 20 000 Union troops at a time camped in the fields surrounding the house in preparation for Sherman s Atlanta Campaign 42 Union troops also established two forts Fort McPherson and Fort Sedgewick located at Hillcrest Memorial Gardens and Fort Hill Cemetery respectively on the highest points of the ridge south of downtown They successfully repelled an attempted raid by Confederate Gen Joseph Wheeler on August 17 1864 43 Most of the Union troops stationed in Bradley County left in the summer of 1864 as part of the Atlanta campaign From this point Confederate sympathizers conducted guerrilla attacks against Unionist families in Cleveland and surrounding areas continuing until after the war was over 44 Members of the Army of Tennessee attempted to destroy a passing Union train near Tasso in the spring of 1864 which instead resulted in the destruction of a Confederate train 45 The Civil War resulted in much damage to Cleveland and Bradley County and much of the area was left in ruins 46 Reconstruction and industrial revolution Edit Child workers from Cleveland s Hosiery Mills 1910 Photo by Lewis Hine Despite the devastation of the Civil War Cleveland recovered quickly and much more rapidly than many cities in the South 1 During the 1870s Cleveland had a growth spurt and became one of the first cities in Tennessee to begin to develop industry 1 Raht who had fled to Cincinnati Ohio during the Civil War returned to Cleveland in 1866 and reopened the copper mines By 1878 it produced a total of 24 million pounds of copper 47 Numerous factories were also established including the Hardwick Stove Company in 1879 the Cleveland Woolen Mills in 1880 and the Cleveland Chair Company in 1884 By 1890 this industrialization helped the city support nine physicians twelve attorneys eleven general stores fourteen grocery stores three drug stores three hardware stores six butcher shops two hatmakers two hotels a shoe store and seven saloons 22 Reflecting industrial prosperity the city s iconic Craigmiles Hall was constructed in 1878 as an opera house and meeting hall 48 It is regarded as the city s most famous landmark and is one of Tennessee s most photographed buildings 49 Behind Craigmiles Hall is a reconstructed bandstand first built in 1920 The reconstruction was built in 2005 by the Allan Jones Foundation based on the 1920 blueprints 50 The city failed to renew its charter in 1879 with the result that it disincorporated on January 1 1880 51 Residents worked to reincorporate the city and on March 15 1882 they voted overwhelmingly in favor of recharter 51 The first city elections under the new charter took place on May 20 1882 52 Public amenities were developed in the late 19th century A mule drawn trolley system was founded in 1886 and the city received telephone service in 1888 53 In 1895 the city received electricity and public water 54 55 During this period Cleveland s population more than doubled from 1 812 in 1880 to 3 643 in 1900 22 Many of the buildings in today s downtown area now designated as the Cleveland Commercial Historic District as well as those in the nearby Ocoee Street and Centenary Avenue historic districts were constructed between 1880 and 1915 20th century Edit In 1911 the local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy erected a monument at the intersection of Ocoee Broad and 8th streets This monument was reportedly the first of its kind in East Tennessee 56 In 1914 the Grand Army of the Republic placed a monument in honor of Union soldiers from Bradley County in Fort Hill Cemetery 57 In 1918 the Church of God a Christian denomination headquartered in Cleveland established a Bible school that would develop as Lee University Cleveland s Chamber of Commerce was established in 1925 On March 21 1931 the city s form of government was changed from mayor aldermen to city commission 58 Bob Jones College a non denominational Christian college relocated to Cleveland in 1933 from Panama City Florida where it remained until 1947 when it moved to Greenville South Carolina 59 The Reverend Billy Graham attended Bob Jones College in Cleveland for one year beginning in 1936 60 Following World War II several major industries located to the area and the city entered a period of rapid industrial and economic growth as part of the Post World War II economic expansion 22 Major factories constructed in the city during this time included American Uniform Company in 1949 Peerless Woolen Mills in 1955 Mallory Battery in 1961 Olin Corporation near Charleston in 1962 and Bendix Corporation in 1964 as well as a Bowater paper mill in nearby Calhoun in 1954 61 Despite this massive growth in employment many African American residents of Cleveland and Bradley County moved away as part of the Second Great Migration and the number of blacks in Cleveland actually declined between 1940 and 1970 while the city s overall population nearly doubled during this time 62 During this time and afterwards Cleveland became one of the largest manufacturing hubs in the Southeastern United States and this economic expansion continued into the 21st century with additional major factories locating to the area in the 1970s and 1980s In 1966 the Church of God of Prophecy based in Cleveland established Tomlinson College north of town which remained in operation until 1992 when it closed 63 That same year Cleveland High School was established and schools in Cleveland and Bradley County were integrated 64 Cleveland State Community College was established in 1967 65 In the 1970s and 1980s the city gained a national reputation for the crime of odometer fraud after 40 people in Bradley County including multiple owners of car dealerships were sent to federal prison for the crime 66 Cleveland was the subject of a November 1983 60 Minutes episode about this crime 67 The city came to be known as the Odometer Rollback Capital of the World to some 68 Beginning in the 1950s the city began to gradually expand to the north as a result of most residential and industrial growth taking place there but prior to 1987 the city limits of Cleveland did not extend west of Candies Creek Ridge In 1988 the city began annexing large numbers of adjacent neighborhoods and industrial areas north northeast and northwest of the city 69 These major annexations continued until the late 1990s and led to the city s land area increasing in size from approximately 18 square miles in 1989 to about 29 5 square miles in 2000 70 As a result of this growth the downtown business district is now geographically located in the southern part of the city 71 Recent history Edit In 1993 Cleveland voters approved a referendum changing the city s form of government from a city commission to a council manager government 72 Cleveland officially adopted the nickname The City with Spirit in 2012 73 In 2018 voters approved a referendum allowing for package liquor stores to be located within the city 74 In 2020 the city completed construction of a public park at the site of Taylor Spring where the first settlement that became Cleveland was founded 75 Geography EditCleveland is located in southeast Tennessee in the center of Bradley County in the Great Appalachian Valley situated among a series of low hills and ridges roughly 15 miles 24 km west of the Blue Ridge Mountains and 15 miles 24 km east of the Chickamauga Lake impoundment of the Tennessee River The Hiwassee River which flows down out of the mountains and forms the northern boundary of Bradley County empties into the Tennessee a few miles northwest of Cleveland According to the United States Census Bureau the city had a total land area of 26 9 square miles 69 7 km2 in 2010 76 The area s terrain is made up of parallel ridges including Candies Creek Ridge also called Clingan Ridge Mouse Creek Lead Mine Ridge and Blue Springs Ridge which are extensions of the Appalachian Mountains specifically part of the Ridge and Valley Appalachians that run approximately north northeast through the area 77 78 Mouse Creek and Blue Springs Ridge have significantly lower elevations within the city of Cleveland than elsewhere in Bradley County which historically made the area easier to settle 77 78 Several streams run in the valleys between the ridges including Candies Creek located west of Clingan Ridge and South Mouse Creek between Mouse Creek and Lead Mine Ridge 79 80 Elevations in the city range from just under 700 feet 210 m to nearly 1 200 feet 370 m The Tennessee Valley Divide the boundary of the Tennessee Valley and Mobile River drainage basins is located on the southern and eastern fringes of the city and has prevented the city limits from expanding beyond this point in most locations Downtown Cleveland which roughly coexists with the Cleveland Commercial Historic District encompasses the business district and consists of private businesses and government office buildings including the Bradley County Courthouse and Courthouse Annex Cleveland Municipal Building Cleveland Police and Fire department headquarters and various other government buildings primarily the offices of city and county departments The surrounding residential areas including the Stuart Heights Ocoee Street Centenary Avenue and Annadale neighborhoods are sometimes considered part of downtown Cleveland 71 Northern Cleveland has developed as the location for most of the city s retail shops and private interests 81 In addition it is a major residential division made up of Burlington Heights Fairview and Sequoia Grove neighborhoods and a few major industries 77 A large industrial area is also located in the northeastern part of the city 77 The western part of the city is almost entirely residential Much of it is an extension of the city limits westward to encompass populous middle to upper class neighborhoods including Hopewell Estates and Rolling Hills 71 East and South Cleveland consist of lower class residential and industrial areas 77 78 People living in East Cleveland tend to be less privileged 81 Neighborhoods Edit Several neighborhoods and communities are located within the city 77 78 These include Annadale Burlington Heights North Cleveland Windwood Fairview Sequoia Grove Hopewell partial Centenary Avenue Ocoee Street Brentwood Estates 20th Street NE Parker Street District Blythe Oldfield Rolling Hills Laurel Ridge Climate Edit Since 1908 28 tornadoes have been documented in the Cleveland area seven of which struck on April 27 2011 82 Climate data for Cleveland Tennessee 1991 2020 normals extremes 1955 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 76 24 80 27 86 30 91 33 95 35 105 41 105 41 104 40 100 38 97 36 86 30 76 24 105 41 Mean maximum F C 67 8 19 9 71 7 22 1 78 7 25 9 84 2 29 0 88 4 31 3 92 9 33 8 94 9 34 9 94 4 34 7 91 8 33 2 84 4 29 1 75 8 24 3 68 3 20 2 96 0 35 6 Average high F C 50 0 10 0 54 6 12 6 62 7 17 1 72 4 22 4 79 5 26 4 86 1 30 1 89 0 31 7 88 4 31 3 83 0 28 3 73 0 22 8 61 3 16 3 52 6 11 4 71 0 21 7 Daily mean F C 39 7 4 3 43 6 6 4 50 8 10 4 59 5 15 3 67 5 19 7 75 1 23 9 78 4 25 8 77 6 25 3 71 6 22 0 60 3 15 7 49 0 9 4 42 4 5 8 59 6 15 3 Average low F C 29 4 1 4 32 6 0 3 38 8 3 8 46 7 8 2 55 6 13 1 64 0 17 8 67 8 19 9 66 8 19 3 60 1 15 6 47 6 8 7 36 7 2 6 32 2 0 1 48 2 9 0 Mean minimum F C 11 0 11 7 15 2 9 3 20 8 6 2 29 5 1 4 39 6 4 2 52 6 11 4 59 0 15 0 57 6 14 2 45 0 7 2 30 8 0 7 21 2 6 0 16 6 8 6 8 4 13 1 Record low F C 16 27 2 19 0 18 20 7 30 1 37 3 49 9 47 8 30 1 21 6 9 13 4 20 16 27 Average precipitation inches mm 5 20 132 4 88 124 5 56 141 5 01 127 4 58 116 4 90 124 5 14 131 3 84 98 4 67 119 3 52 89 4 85 123 5 47 139 57 62 1 464 Average snowfall inches cm 0 2 0 51 0 6 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 76 1 1 2 8 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 12 7 12 7 13 6 11 6 12 0 12 7 12 7 10 2 8 6 9 2 10 3 13 9 140 2Average snowy days 0 1 in 0 3 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 9Source NOAA 83 84 Demographics EditHistorical population CensusPop Note 1860806 18701 658105 7 18801 87413 0 18902 86352 8 19003 85834 8 19105 54943 8 19206 52217 5 19309 13640 1 194011 35124 2 195012 60511 0 196016 19628 5 197021 44632 4 198026 41523 2 199030 35414 9 200037 19222 5 201041 28511 0 202047 35614 7 U S Decennial Census 11 7 Cleveland is the principal city of the Cleveland Metropolitan Statistical Area a metropolitan area that covers Bradley and Polk counties 85 and had a combined population of 115 788 at the 2010 census 86 2000 census Edit As of the census 9 of 2000 there were 37 192 people 15 037 households and 9 518 families residing in the city failed verification The population density was 1 490 9 inhabitants per square mile 575 6 km2 There were 16 431 housing units at an average density of 658 7 per square mile 254 3 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 89 00 White 7 01 African American 0 23 Native American 0 97 Asian 0 03 Pacific Islander 1 29 from other races and 1 46 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 2 87 of the population There were 15 037 households out of which 28 4 had children under the age of 18 living with them 46 6 were married couples living together 13 0 had a female householder with no husband present and 36 7 were non families 30 4 of all households were made up of individuals and 10 8 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 33 and the average family size was 2 90 In the city the population was spread out with 21 9 under the age of 18 15 4 from 18 to 24 27 6 from 25 to 44 21 2 from 45 to 64 and 13 9 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 34 years For every 100 females there were 89 5 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 85 0 males The median income for a household in the city was 30 098 and the median income for a family was 40 150 Males had a median income of 30 763 versus 21 480 for females The per capita income for the city was 18 316 About 11 3 of families and 16 1 of the population were below the poverty line including 19 5 of those under age 18 and 14 3 of those age 65 or over 2010 census Edit As of the census of 2010 87 there were 41 285 people 16 107 households and 10 063 families residing in the city The population density was 1 535 3 inhabitants per square mile 592 8 km2 There were 17 841 housing units at an average density of 663 5 per square mile 256 2 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 87 10 White 7 39 African American 0 40 Native American 1 53 Asian 0 09 Pacific Islander and 1 69 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 7 52 of the population There were 16 107 households out of which 27 1 had children under the age of 18 living with them 43 0 were married couples living together 14 3 had a female householder with no husband present and 37 5 were non families 30 0 of all households were made up of individuals and 26 8 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 40 and the average family size was 2 97 In the city the population was spread out with 21 83 under the age of 18 63 35 ages 18 to 64 and 14 83 over the age of 65 The gender makeup was 52 4 female and 47 6 male The median female age was 36 5 and the median male age was 32 9The median income for a household in the city was 36 270 and the median income for a family was 47 104 The per capita income for the city was 21 576 About 15 0 of families and 21 1 of the population were below the poverty line including 25 5 of those under age 18 and 10 3 of those age 65 or over 2020 census Edit Cleveland city Tennessee Racial and Ethnic Composition NH Non Hispanic Note the US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos may be of any race Race Ethnicity Pop 2010 88 Pop 2020 89 2010 2020White alone NH 33 612 34 214 81 41 72 25 Black or African American alone NH 2 975 3 779 7 21 7 98 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 107 130 0 26 0 27 Asian alone NH 618 825 1 50 1 74 Pacific Islander alone NH 31 85 0 08 0 18 Some Other Race alone NH 57 185 0 14 0 39 Mixed Race Multi Racial NH 779 2 830 1 89 5 34 Hispanic or Latino any race 3 106 5 608 7 52 11 84 Total 41 285 47 356 100 00 100 00 As of the 2020 United States census there were 47 356 people 16 669 households and 10 005 families residing in the city Religion Edit Broad Street United Methodist ChurchCleveland is located in a region of the Southern United States known as the Bible Belt 90 Numerous Protestant Christian denominations are represented in the city including several Pentecostal groups for which Cleveland serves as the international headquarters Denominations based in Cleveland include Church of God and its affiliated school Lee University Church of God of Prophecy The Church of God Charleston Tennessee The Church of God for All Nations The Church of God Jerusalem Acres The Church of God under the leadership of Bishop James C NaborsThere are approximately 200 Protestant churches and one Roman Catholic church in Bradley County An estimated 39 6 percent of residents have no religious affiliation 91 Several churches in Downtown Cleveland are of notable architecture including the Romanesque Revival Broad Street United Methodist Church the First Presbyterian Church on Ocoee Street and St Luke s Episcopal Church which was built in the Gothic Revival style by architect Peter Williamson All three are listed on the National Register of Historic Places The mysterious red stains that appear on the marble of the Craigmiles Mausoleum Cleveland is home to the famous Craigmiles Mausoleum located at 320 Broad Street NW behind St Luke s Episcopal Church The mausoleum contains the body of Nina Craigmiles a seven year old who died on October 18 1871 when a horse buggy in which she was riding was struck by a train Her father John Craigmiles constructed the church and mausoleum in Nina s memory He named the church St Luke s because the girl died on St Luke s Day 92 Shortly after Nina s body was placed inside the mausoleum red stains appeared on the marble Over the years the stained marble has been replaced but the stains inevitably reappear Craigmiles commissioned a statue of Nina which was to be shipped from Europe It was being transported via the RMS Titanic and sank with the ship 93 Economy Edit Old Hardwick Woolen Mills factory building in Cleveland Tennessee Cleveland is considered to be one of the largest industrial and manufacturing hubs in the state of Tennessee with the number of manufacturers reportedly ranking fifth highest in the state 12 Goods produced include household cooking equipment foodstuff textiles furniture storage batteries pharmaceuticals industrial cleaning products photographic processing industrial and domestic chemicals and automotive parts 94 Top employers include Whirlpool Johnston Coca Cola Mars Inc Procter amp Gamble Duracell Peyton s Southeastern Arch Chemicals Advanced Photographic Solutions Renfro Foods Flowers Bakery Olin Corporation Georgia Pacific Rubbermaid Exel Inc Jackson Furniture Cleveland Chair Company Eaton Corporation Beiersdorf Lonza Wacker Mueller Company and Polartec 91 In total Cleveland contains more than 150 manufacturing firms and thirteen Fortune 500 Companies 91 Cleveland is the location for the corporate headquarters of Life Care Centers of America the largest privately held nursing facility company in the US founded and owned by Forrest Preston Check Into Cash Inc the largest privately held payday loan company in the US was founded in Cleveland in 1993 by businessman Allan Jones 95 Hardwick Clothes the oldest tailor made clothing maker in America was founded in 1880 and has been headquartered in Cleveland for its entire history 96 In addition to corporate businesses Cleveland has a thriving retail sector located mostly in the northern part of the city Bradley Square Mall is a shopping mall with more than 50 tenants 97 Tourism Edit Tourism is a major part of Cleveland s income Visitors come from all over the country The Cherokee National Forest in Polk County supports many recreational outdoor activities The Ocoee and Hiwassee rivers both flow through the forest Thousands of people raft these rivers annually The Ocoee River was the site of the canoe slalom events for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta Red Clay State Park is a historical site just north of the Georgia state line The Cherokee held council here after being driven out of Georgia The Museum Center at Five Points is a history museum and cultural center that features exhibits on the Ocoee Region and surrounding areas 98 The Ocoee Regional Nature Center is a state certified arboretum It houses over 100 types of trees plants flowers and shrubs citation needed Arts and culture Edit Photo of Tall Betsy in Fort Hill Cemetery 1993 The MainStreet Cleveland Halloween Block Party draws more than 20 000 people to the city every year The event began in 1988 as a candy handout at the Cleveland Police Department and Centenary Avenue and has grown to one of the largest events in Cleveland It features live music food stands and a costume contest 99 In 2015 Cleveland s mayor Tom Rowland dubbed the city as the Halloween capital of the world 100 Cleveland is known for Tall Betsy the official Halloween goblin of Bradley County For years Tall Betsy s Halloween night appearance drew large crowds to Cleveland s Centenary Avenue The growing crowds inspired MainStreet Cleveland to organize the Halloween Block Party around the event Local businessman Allan Jones created the modern legend from tales of the Tall Betsy goblin that his grandmother told him as a child The original legend dates to the 19th century with print references in the Cleveland Daily Herald as early as 1892 In 1998 Tall Betsy retired after drawing a crowd of over 25 000 people She returned in 2005 to celebrate her 25th anniversary 101 102 The Cleveland Apple Festival begun in 2002 is an annual family event held on the third weekend of October 103 This festival offers a juried art and craft show live bluegrass music food booths pony and a hayride entertainment contests and children s activities Unlike many festivals of its kind in the U S the Cleveland Apple Festival does not charge for children to participate in activities provided in the children s area The festival is operated as a 501 c 3 public charity The city song is The Diplomat composed by John Philip Sousa It debuted as conducted by Sousa in a performance in 1906 at the Craigmiles Opera House 104 In November 2017 the city celebrated its 175th anniversary 105 Sports EditCleveland currently has no professional sports teams but has had two minor league baseball teams the Cleveland Counts from 1911 to 1913 and the Cleveland Manufacturers from 1921 to 1922 Both of these teams were part of the Appalachian League 106 Jones Wrestling CenterCleveland High School has one of the most successful football programs in Tennessee It has the second longest winning streak in Tennessee high school football history with 54 consecutive wins between 1993 and 1996 107 The Blue Raiders have also won state championships in 1968 failed verification 1993 1994 and 1995 108 The Cleveland High and Bradley Central wrestling teams traditionally dominate the state wrestling championships Since 1994 the Bradley Central Bears have won a total of 27 state championships Traditional category and 14 state championships in the Dual category winning a state championship every year in the Traditional category between 1993 and 2017 109 The Cleveland Blue Raiders based at the state of the art Jones Wrestling Center 110 have won a total of 26 traditional championships most recently in 2020 The Blue Raiders have accomplished three peats twice from 2011 to 2013 and then again from 2018 to 2021 111 108 In 2013 the Cleveland City Council presented a resolution honoring the Cleveland High School wrestling team and declared February 25 as Blue Raider Wrestling Day The Blue Raiders were state champions for the second time in three years after winning the 2013 TSSAA Division I Traditional State Championships and the State Duals Finals The team was runner up in both the Duals and State Tournaments in 2012 after claiming the Traditional title in 2011 112 Parks and recreation EditSeveral public recreational parks are located within or near Cleveland 113 They are all maintained by the Cleveland Parks and Recreation department They allow a variety of activities and some organized sports teams compete at them The Cleveland Bradley County Greenway is an approximately 4 4 mile long greenway path which follows South Mouse Creek from downtown to neighborhoods in the northern part of the city 114 Other facilities include the Bradley County Park Kenneth L Tinsley Park Greenway Park Mosby Park Deer Park College Hill Recreation Center Johnston Park Leonard Fletcher Park Taylor Spring Park Cleveland Family YMCA and the South Cleveland Community Center Government EditThe city of Cleveland operates under a council manager form of government with an elected mayor and seven council members Five are elected from single member districts and two are elected at large as is the mayor 115 The city council chooses a fellow council member to serve as vice mayor 115 The city council hires a professional city manager to carry out daily operations The mayor is Kevin Brooks who has held that position since September 2018 and the vice mayor is at large councilman Avery Johnson 3 The city manager is Joe Fivas who has held that position since June 2016 116 Elections are nonpartisan and take place in August of every even year along with the state primary District 115 Councilman 115 District 1 Marsha McKenzieDistrict 2 Bill EstesDistrict 3 Tom CassadaDistrict 4 David May Jr District 5 Dale R HughesAt large 1 Avery L Johnson vice mayor At large 2 Ken WebbMost of Cleveland is in the 4th congressional district of Tennessee for the U S House of Representatives represented by Republican Scott DesJarlais 117 A small amount of the city including East Cleveland and northeast Cleveland are in the 3rd congressional district represented by Republican Chuck Fleischmann 118 Most of Cleveland is part of District 24 of the Tennessee House of Representatives represented by Mark Hall 119 A small part of the city is in District 22 represented by Republican Dan Howell 120 Most of Cleveland is part of District 9 for the Tennessee Senate represented by Republican Mike Bell 121 A small portion of the city is in District 10 represented by Republican Todd Gardenhire 122 Cleveland and Bradley County have historically been majority Republican since the Civil War as has most of East Tennessee Through much of the 20th century Middle and West Tennessee were majority Democrat which Democrats were made up of conservative whites As a whole Tennessee was considered part of the Solid South Both areas had been slave societies and West Tennessee was dominated by large cotton plantations whereas East Tennessee was based in yeoman farmers and little slaveholding Since the Republican Party s founding only two Democratic presidential candidates have won Bradley County Southerner Woodrow Wilson in 1912 and Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1936 during the Great Depression 123 Education EditCleveland High School Bradley Central High School and Walker Valley High School are the three public high schools in Bradley County Cleveland Middle Ocoee Middle and Lake Forest are the three middle schools Cleveland City Schools is a school system for students living within the city limits Several elementary schools serve students within different sub district divisions Some schools maintained by Bradley County Schools are also in the city Tennessee Christian Preparatory School is a Christian college preparatory school located in Cleveland The city is also home to Cleveland State Community College a unit of the Tennessee Board of Regents as well as Lee University the second largest private four year university in the state Public schools Edit See also Cleveland City Schools High schools Edit Cleveland High School Bradley Central High School Walker Valley High School Teen Learning CenterPrivate schools Edit Tennessee Christian Preparatory School Cleveland Christian School Candies Creek Academy Bowman Hills Adventist School Shenandoah Baptist Academy United Christian Academy Vanguard Christian AcademyHigher education Edit Cleveland State Community College Lee University Pentecostal Theological Seminary Church of God School of MinistryMedia EditNewspapers Edit The Cleveland Daily Banner is the town s newspaper The paper was first published in 1854 124 Additionally the Chattanooga Times Free Press a paper based in Chattanooga also serves as a primary source of news for Bradley County residents Radio Edit Several radio stations located within Chattanooga and neighboring cities serve Cleveland along with others licensed to Cleveland which are listed below 125 Call sign Frequency FormatW207C1 WAYW 89 3 FM WAY FM Contemporary ChristianWSAA 93 1 FM Air 1 Contemporary ChristianWALI 97 1 FM Lite rockWOOP LP 99 9 FM BluegrassWUSY 100 7 FM CountryW267BI 101 3 FM TalkWCLE FM 104 1 FM Adult contemporaryW290CA WTSE 105 9 FM Contemporary ChristianWBAC 1340 AM News TalkWCLE AM 1570 AM TalkTelevision Edit Cleveland is served by several TV stations licensed both in the city and neighboring cities Stations licensed in Cleveland include Call sign 126 Channel NetworkWPDP CD 25 ABC Fox My Network TVWTNB CD 27 HeartlandWFLI TV 42 53 The CW Me TVInfrastructure EditTransportation Edit Historic Southern Railway Depot Air Edit Hardwick Field also known as Cleveland Municipal Airport was the principal airport from 1955 to 2013 127 128 Cleveland Regional Jetport located approximately two miles east of Hardwick Field opened on January 25 2013 replacing Hardwick Field 129 It consists of a 6 200 by 100 foot 1 890 by 30 m runway 130 Rail Edit Cleveland is served by the Norfolk Southern Railway which forks in the city and provides logistics for industries 131 Into the late 1960s the Southern Railway operated daily passenger trains through Cleveland the Birmingham Special New York Birmingham Pelican New York New Orleans and Tennessean Washington Memphis 132 133 The last train serving the station was the an unnamed remnant of the Birmingham Special on August 11 1970 134 Roads Edit The center of Cleveland is at the intersection of U S Route 11 and U S Route 64 U S 11 connects the area with Chattanooga to the south and Athens to the north The U S 11 Bypass Keith Street serves as a bypass route for US 11 around downtown passing approximately 0 5 miles 0 80 km west of the central business district U S Route 64 connects Cleveland with Murphy North Carolina to the east and the Chattanooga area to the southwest State Route 60 25th Street connects Cleveland with Dayton to the northwest and Dalton Georgia to the southeast where the road becomes State Route 71 State Route 74 connects the city to Chatsworth Georgia to the south APD 40 made up of the U S 64 Bypass and a section of S R 60 is part of the Appalachian Development Highway System from where it takes its name and serves as a beltway around the business district Parts of this beltway are controlled access Paul Huff Parkway serves as a major thoroughfare on the northern end of the city Interstate 75 passes through western Cleveland connecting the area with Knoxville to the north and Chattanooga to the south I 75 has three exits in the city 135 Principal highways Edit Aerial view of the cloverleaf interchange with APD 40 US 64 Byp SR 60 and US 64 Inman Street Waterlevel Highway Paul Huff Parkway crossing Candies Creek Ridge Interstate 75 US 11 US 64 US 64 Bypass US 11 Bypass US 74 SR 60 SR 74 Paul Huff ParkwayOther major roadways Edit Mouse Creek Road Stuart Road Peerless Road Georgetown Road SR 312 Harrison Pike Freewill Road 20th Street NE 17th Street NW Michigan Avenue Road Benton Pike Blue Springs Road McGrady DrivePublic transportation Edit The Cleveland Urban Area Transit System CUATS is a bus service operated by the Southeast Tennessee Human Resource Agency SETHRA that operates within the city limits of Cleveland and select parts of Bradley County 136 The city operates on five fixed routes 91 A Greyhound bus station is located on Paul Huff Parkway just off of I 75 exit 27 citation needed Public safety Edit The Cleveland Fire Department is an all paid professional department It currently consists of more than 90 highly trained personnel and 6 stations and serves an estimated 67 000 people The current chief is Robert Gaylor 137 The Cleveland Police department currently has more than 90 Certified Police Officers two Codes Enforcement Officers and 11 full time civilian employees along with one part time civilian employee 13 School Crossing Guards and eight Animal Control employees They also maintain a Volunteer Program consisting of a 15 member Public Service Unit and a nine member Chaplain Unit The Chief of Police is Mark Gibson 138 Healthcare Edit Cleveland s two hospitals are Bradley Memorial Hospital and Cleveland Community Hospital 139 Since 2015 both have been operated by Tennova Healthcare 140 Bradley Healthcare amp Rehabilitation Center is a nursing home that serves the county Bradley County Emergency Medical Services is an emergency medical service EMS agency of the county government established in 1972 and consists of three stations eleven ambulances and six ancillary vehicles along with more than 60 full time employees and more than 25 part time employees 141 Utilities Edit Cleveland Utilities is a corporate agency owned by the city which provides electric water and sewage services to residents of Cleveland and surrounding areas 142 Cleveland Utilities receives water from the Hiwassee and Tennessee Rivers and a spring in Waterville just southeast of the city and purchases electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority which is delivered via two subtransmission substations in the city 143 144 Wastewater is pumped to a treatment facility on the Hiwassee River in northern Bradley County 145 Natural gas is provided by Chattanooga Gas a subsidiary of Southern Company 146 Other local providers include the Hiwassee Utilities Commission Ocoee Utility District and Volunteer Electric Cooperative 91 Public works Edit The Public Works Department performs the most varied actions of all the city departments It has approximately 51 employees The department is responsible for the city s fleet operation sign maintenance and design and street markings The current director is Tommy Myers 147 Notable people EditMain article List of people from Cleveland TennesseeSister Cities Edit Phnom Penh Cambodia 148 See also Edit United States portalList of cities in Tennessee National Register of Historic Places listings in Bradley County TennesseeNotes Edit a b c d e f g Goodspeed s History of Bradley County Tennessee 1887 Transcribed for web content and maintained by TNGenWeb Bradley County Retrieved December 30 2007 Tennessee Blue Book 2005 2006 pp 618 625 a b Siniard Tim September 11 2018 Kevin Brooks Sworn in as New Cleveland Mayor Cleveland Daily Banner Cleveland TN Official Website Office of the City Manager www clevelandtn gov ArcGIS REST Services Directory United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 15 2022 a b U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Cleveland Tennessee a b Census Population API United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 15 2022 Cleveland Tennessee TN Zip Code Map Locations Demographics list of zip codes www city data com a b U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 Find a County National Association of Counties Archived from the original on May 31 2011 Retrieved June 7 2011 a b QuickFactS Cleveland city Tennessee census gov Retrieved August 20 2021 a b Welcome to Cleveland Tennessee clevelandtn gov November 2 2012 Archived from the original on August 5 2013 Retrieved July 6 2013 Cleveland Tennessee citiesofpromise com September 21 2015 Retrieved November 5 2017 Lillard 1980 p 5 6 a b Lillard 1980 p 15 16 Lillard 1980 p 11 Lillard 1980 p 12 a b Lillard 1976 pp 34 35 a b Snell 1986 p 4 a b c Bradley County Historical Society 1992 p 31 Snell 1986 p 5 a b c d William Snell Cleveland An Encyclopedia of East Tennessee Children s Museum of Oak Ridge 1981 pp 108 111 Bradley County Historical Society 1992 p 233 Bradley County Historical Society 1992 p 216 Snell 1986 p 9 Temple Oliver Perry 1899 East Tennessee and the Civil War Cincinnati Robert Clarke amp Company pp 370 406 ISBN 1166069060 via Internet Archive a b The Civil War in Bradley County museumcenter org Museum Center at Five Points May 12 2019 Retrieved October 26 2019 Temple 1899 p 344 Tennessee Civil War Trails Program June 9 2011 pp 1 2 Accessed March 12 2015 Barclay R E 1946 Ducktown Back in Raht s Time Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press pp 87 96 ISBN 0807868493 via Google Books Lillard 1980 p 59 Lillard 1980 p 60 Local Sites of Historical Interest Charleston Calhoun Hiwassee Historical Society Archived from the original on May 15 2011 Retrieved October 26 2019 Donald L Hardesty Barbara J Little 2009 Assessing Site Significance A Guide for Archaeologists and Historians pp 47 189 ISBN 9780759113282 via Google Books Hardy Lucina Welch March 1962 An Album of Historical Memories Chatata Tasso Bradley County Tennessee 1830 1961 Hardy amp Randolph p 53 Lillard 1976 p 318 Benton Ben November 18 2013 Inside the Civil War bridge burners mission Guerrilla action was at Lincoln s request Chattanooga Times Free Press Chattanooga Tennessee Retrieved September 2 2019 Belcher Dennis W May 2 2016 The Cavalry of the Army of the Cumberland Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company pp 179 180 ISBN 978 0786494804 via Google Books Lillard 1980 p 63 Powell David June 19 2018 All Hell Can t Stop Them The Battles for Chattanooga Missionary Ridge and Ringgold November 24 27 1863 El Dorado Hills California Savas Beatie p 33 ISBN 978 1611214130 via Google Books Powell Dave July 18 2017 East Tennessee and Confederate Copper emergingcivilwar com Emerging Civil War Retrieved October 26 2019 Shemo Christina October 14 2005 Legends abound Cleveland Daily Banner The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Washington D C United States Department of War 1891 pp 743 746 via Google Books Lillard 1980 p 63 64 Jameson W C 1997 Lost and Buried Treasures of the Civil War Lyons Press p 78 ISBN 1493040758 via Google Books Lillard 1980 p 65 Maysilles Duncan May 30 2011 Ducktown Smoke The Fight over One of the South s Greatest Environmental Disasters Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 8078 7793 7 via Google Books National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Craigmiles Hall National Park Service Retrieved May 18 2018 History of Cleveland Cleveland TN Official Website clevelandtn gov A Walking Tour Of Historic Downtown Cleveland Tennessee a b Snell 1986 pp 115 116 Snell 1986 p 117 Snell 1986 p 201 202 Snell 1986 p 179 182 Snell 1986 p 193 Snell 1986 pp 298 301 Snell 1986 pp 301 303 Snell 1986 p 392 History of BJU bju edu Bob Jones University Retrieved October 26 2019 Graves Brian February 22 2018 Remembering Billy Graham Cleveland Daily Banner Cleveland Tennessee Retrieved October 26 2019 Lillard 1980 p 113 114 Snell 1986 p 422 Update Tomlinson College cogop org Church of God of Prophecy January 17 2017 Retrieved October 26 2019 Bowers Larry C December 16 2016 College Hill in Spotlight Cleveland Daily Banner Cleveland Tennessee Retrieved October 26 2019 Armstrong Christy September 30 2016 CSCC celebration includes tour of first college campus sites Cleveland Daily Banner Cleveland Tennessee Retrieved April 4 2019 Vartabedian Ralph February 16 2000 Odometer Fraud Is Alive and Well in Digital Age Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 16 2017 Tennessee Mayor Hits 60 Minutes The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee United Press International December 3 1983 p 8 C via Newspapers com Greenfield Steven August 1 2017 Investigative Reporting in Cleveland Chattanoogan Chattanooga TN Retrieved October 16 2017 Barrett Danny November 30 1989 Local population growth significant Cleveland Daily Banner Planning Area and Region clevelandtn gov Cleveland Urban Area Metropolitan Planning Organization May 2011 Retrieved October 26 2019 a b c Cleveland Chamber of Commerce 2013 City Limits Map Map Scale not given Cleveland TN Cleveland Chamber of Commerce Retrieved July 7 2014 Charter of the City of Cleveland Tennessee clevelandtn gov Tennessee General Assembly Retrieved September 15 2019 Higgins Randall February 28 2012 Cleveland Tenn city slogan author collects 1 000 prize Chattanooga Times Free Press Chattanooga Tennessee Retrieved September 2 2019 Strayer Kayla November 6 2018 Cleveland voters pass referendum to allow liquor stores in the city WTVC Chattanooga Tennessee Retrieved September 15 2019 Siniard Tim November 20 2020 Taylor Spring Park Opens Cleveland Daily Banner Retrieved November 21 2020 Geographic Identifiers 2010 Demographic Profile Data G001 Cleveland city Tennessee U S Census Bureau American Factfinder Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved April 9 2014 a b c d e f East Cleveland Tennessee Map US Geological Survey 1976 Retrieved November 12 2017 a b c d South Cleveland Tennessee Map US Geological Survey 1965 Retrieved November 12 2017 US Geological Survey Map Chattanooga 1 250 000 United States Geological Survey 1972 Retrieved November 1 2017 USGS 03566044 SOUTH MOUSE CREEK AT HWY 60 NEAR CLEVELAND TN waterdata usgs gov a b Google November 7 2017 Overview of Cleveland Tennessee Map Google Maps Google Retrieved November 7 2017 Service US Department of Commerce NOAA National Weather Morristown TN www srh noaa gov NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 28 2021 Station Cleveland FLTR PLT TN U S Climate Normals 2020 U S Monthly Climate Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 28 2021 METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS AND COMPONENTS Archived May 26 2007 at the Wayback Machine Office of Management and Budget May 11 2007 Accessed 2008 07 30 Population and Housing Occupancy Status 2010 United States Metropolitan Statistical Area and for Puerto Rico more information 2010 Census National Summary File of Redistricting Data 2010 United States Census United States Census Bureau Population Division April 14 2011 Retrieved April 14 2011 dead link Cleveland city Tennessee American FactFinder P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2010 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Cleveland city Tennessee United States Census Bureau P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2020 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Cleveland city Tennessee United States Census Bureau Murray William H Jeynes foreword by William J 2009 A call for character education and prayer in the schools Santa Barbara Calif Praeger pp 122 123 ISBN 978 0313351044 Retrieved June 11 2015 a b c d e Our Hometown 2017 Cleveland Daily Banner September 9 2017 Retrieved November 2 2017 Kazek Kelly 2011 Forgotten Tales of Tennessee Stroud UK The History Press ISBN 978 1 60949 156 7 Moran Mark and Sceurman Mark 2005 Weird U S Your Travel Guide to America s Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets New York Sterling Publishing Co ISBN 978 0 7607 5043 8 Largest Manufacturing Companies in Cleveland Archived from the original on March 23 2006 Retrieved December 29 2005 Cleveland Chamber of Commerce Kim Christensen More in middle class using payday lenders Los Angeles Times December 24 2008 Hill Fletcher June 14 2011 Hardwick Clothes The History Archived from the original on August 12 2014 Retrieved November 18 2014 Graves Brian February 10 2016 Bradley Square Mall turns 25 Cleveland Daily Banner Museum Center At 5ive Points Americanheritage com American Heritage Retrieved March 31 2014 Goad Richard October 3 2014 27th Block Party nears Cleveland Daily Banner Cleveland TN Archived from the original on October 18 2014 Retrieved October 13 2014 Rowland Tom December 2015 The Mayor s Thoughts Clevelandtn gov Cleveland Chamber of Commerce Retrieved November 3 2017 Tall Betsy returning to life in documentary Cleveland Daily Banner Cleveland TN September 30 2011 Archived from the original on October 18 2014 Retrieved October 13 2014 Bell Caleb Bentley Brianna October 16 2013 The Spooky Southeast Tall Tales of Cleveland and Chattanooga Lee Clarion Cleveland TN Archived from the original on October 13 2014 Retrieved October 13 2014 Cleveland Apple Festival clevelandapplefestival org Cleveland Apple Festival 2014 Retrieved January 10 2014 History of Cleveland clevelandtn gov Cleveland Chamber of Commerce 2017 Retrieved November 19 2017 John Phillip Sousa first introduced the song The Diplomat at the Craigmiles Opera House in Cleveland TN in 1906 Since that time it has been the City song Bowers Larry C August 19 2017 City s 175th birthday celebration set Nov 5 Cleveland Daily Banner Retrieved November 2 2017 Cleveland Tennessee Encyclopedia Baseball Reference com Retrieved May 15 2017 Stephen Hargis Cleveland high school s winning streak starters enjoy 20th anniversary Chattanooga Times Free Press Sep 6 2013 a b TSSAAsports com Home of the TSSAA Championships tssaasports com Bradley Central High School Championship History visitclevelandtn gov visitclevelandtn Archived from the original on January 4 2014 Retrieved January 2 2014 Home cbcgreenway com Cleveland Bradley County Greenway Archived from the original on January 4 2014 Retrieved January 2 2014 a b c d Mayor amp City Council clevelandtn gov Cleveland Chamber of Commerce 2017 Retrieved November 19 2017 Cleveland Chooses Joe Fivas As New City Manager Chattanoogan June 16 2016 Retrieved November 19 2017 Congressman Scott DesJarlais United States House of Representatives Retrieved November 19 2017 Congressman Chuck Fleischmann United States House of Representatives Retrieved November 19 2017 Tennessee General Assembly 2017 State House District 24 PDF Map Nashville Tennessee General Assembly Retrieved July 7 2014 Tennessee General Assembly 2017 State House District 22 PDF Map Nashville Tennessee General Assembly Retrieved November 19 2017 Tennessee General Assembly 2017 State Senate District 9 PDF Map Nashville Tennessee General Assembly Retrieved November 19 2017 Tennessee General Assembly 2017 State Senate District 10 PDF Map Nashville Tennessee General Assembly Retrieved November 19 2017 Lillard 1980 p 24 Cleveland Daily Banner Bradley County News Online Magazine Archived from the original on October 10 2007 Retrieved December 15 2007 Radio Stations in Cleveland Tennessee radiolocator com Radio Locator Retrieved December 15 2013 Pro Content and Design Television station listings in Cleveland Tennessee tvstations com Pro Content and Design Archived from the original on December 1 2008 Retrieved December 28 2013 Love Joyanna December 29 2013 Cleveland s Hardwick Field officially closes Tuesday closes Tuesday Cleveland Daily Banner Archived from the original on March 17 2014 Retrieved March 16 2014 Leach Paul December 27 2013 Cleveland s oldest airport Hardwick Field to close at year s end Chattanooga Times Free Press Retrieved March 16 2014 FAA Information Cleveland Regional Jetport airnav com Retrieved December 8 2013 Bowers Larry C October 23 2017 Jetport work on extension now finished Cleveland Daily Banner Retrieved November 1 2017 Bradley County Official Transportation Map PDF Map TDOT 2017 Archived from the original PDF on September 21 2017 Retrieved November 12 2017 Southern Railway Table 3 Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 98 8 January 1966 Southern Timetable 1966 p 6 http streamlinermemories info South SRR66 10TT pdf Baer Christopher T September 8 2009 NAMED TRAINS OF THE PRR INCLUDING THROUGH SERVICES PDF The Pennsylvania Railroad Technical amp Historical Society Retrieved May 7 2011 Official Transportation Map back PDF Map TDOT 2016 Archived from the original PDF on January 12 2016 Retrieved November 1 2017 About Cleveland Transit Rideclevelandtransit org CUATS 2017 Retrieved November 1 2017 Cleveland Fire Department clevelandtn gov clevelandtn gov Retrieved January 29 2014 Cleveland Police Department clevelandtn gov clevelandtn gov Retrieved January 29 2014 Community forms Sky Ridge Medical Center Medical News Medical News 2008 Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Retrieved April 6 2014 Staff Report September 30 2015 SkyRidge hospital renamed Tennova Healthcare Cleveland Chattanooga Times Free Press Retrieved November 11 2017 Bradley County EMS Bradleyco net Bradley County TN 2014 Cleveland Utilities tva gov Tennessee Valley Authority Retrieved February 15 2019 Cleveland Utilities Water Quality Report 2016 PDF clevelandutilities com Cleveland Utilities 2017 Archived from the original PDF on August 8 2017 Retrieved February 15 2019 About CU clevelandutilities com Cleveland Utilities Retrieved February 15 2019 EPA 2012 Facility Detail Report Cleveland Utilities Wastewater Treatment Plant PDF epa gov U S Environmental Protection Agency 2012 Retrieved February 15 2019 Chattanooga Gas aglresources com Southern Company Archived from the original on February 23 2019 Retrieved February 23 2019 Public Works clevelandtn gov clevelandtn gov Retrieved January 29 2014 Higgins Randall July 24 2012 Cleveland Tenn is now sister city to Phnom Penh Chattanooga Times Free Press Retrieved February 3 2021 References EditSnell William R 1986 Cleveland the Beautiful Williams Printing Company Lillard Roy G 1980 Bradley County Memphis State University Press ISBN 0 87870 099 4 via Internet Archive Bradley County Historical Society 1992 Reflections Past and Present A Pictorial History of Bradley County Tennessee Taylor Publishing Company Lillard Roy G 1976 History of Bradley County Tennessee Bradley County Chapter ETHS External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cleveland Tennessee City of Cleveland official website Cleveland Bradley Chamber of Commerce official website Cleveland a city of Tennessee Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cleveland Tennessee amp oldid 1162021285, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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