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Old City, Knoxville

The Old City is a neighborhood in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, located at the northeast corner of the city's downtown area. Originally part of a raucous and vice-ridden section of town known as "The Bowery," the Old City has since been revitalized through extensive redevelopment efforts carried out during the 1980s through the present.[3] Currently, the Old City is an offbeat urban neighborhood, home to several unique restaurants, bars, clubs, and shops.

Southern Terminal and Warehouse Historic District
East Jackson Ave, in the Old City neighborhood
Location in Tennessee
Location in United States
LocationParts of Jackson Avenue, North and South Central Street, Gay Street, State Street, Vine Avenue and Depot Avenue
Knoxville, Tennessee
Coordinates35°58′13″N 83°55′6″W / 35.97028°N 83.91833°W / 35.97028; -83.91833
Areaapproximately 33 acres (13 ha)[2]
Built1870–1935[2]
ArchitectFrank Pierce Milburn; Et al.
Architectural styleChicago, Classical Revival, Romanesque Revival, Renaissance Revival, Italianate, Vernacular Commercial
NRHP reference No.85002909[1]
Added to NRHPNovember 18, 1985

In spite of its name, the Old City is not the oldest section of Knoxville.[3] Most of the neighborhood was not part of the city until the 1850s, when the arrival of the railroad encouraged the city to annex the areas north of Vine Avenue.[4] The railroad brought an influx of Irish immigrants, who established the Old City's first saloons and shops. After the Civil War, Knoxville developed into one of the southeast's largest wholesaling centers. Wholesalers built large warehouses, such as the ones along Jackson Avenue, where rural East Tennessee merchants came to buy the goods with which they stocked their general stores.[2]

By the early 1900s, Central Street was lined with saloons and brothels. Violent crime and prostitution continued to be a problem into the 1960s, causing many of the neighborhood's businesses to flee the area.[3] Beginning in 1986, successful redevelopment efforts led by Architect Peter Calandruccio and Builder Benny Curl revitalized the neighborhood.[3] Calandruccio's master-planning (see below) prompted other developers to begin work on other properties as the opportunity of broad-scaled development showed itself promising.

Location edit

The Old City is concentrated around the intersection of Central Street and Jackson Avenue, adjacent to the Southern Terminal tracks and railyard (now part of the Norfolk Southern system). The neighborhood is roughly bounded by Magnolia Avenue on the north, Gay Street on the west, Summit Hill Drive on the south, and the interstate overpasses on the east.[3] Interstate 40 passes just north of the Old City, and is accessible via the Downtown Loop from Summit Hill Drive.

History edit

19th century edit

 
Detail of an 1886 map of Knoxville, showing what is now the Old City; "Crozier" is now Central Street. Building #21, the White Lily factory, is still standing.

During the first half of the 19th century, Knoxville's northward expansion was slow. By 1852, Vine Avenue marked the city's northern limits.[4] The establishment of Market Square in 1854 and the arrival of the railroad in 1855 catalyzed development north of the city, however, and by the end of 1855 the city's limits had pushed northward to what is now Emory Place.[5]

The arrival of the railroad had a major impact on the city's cultural makeup, as hundreds of Irish immigrants arrived in town to help construct the railroad tracks and facilities. Many of these immigrants settled in what is now the Old City, so much so that at one point the area was known as "Irish Town."[6] After the Civil War, Irish businessmen began building saloons and shops along Central (originally Crozier) Street that served the city's railroad traffic. Among these businesses was a saloon built by Patrick Sullivan (1840—1925), which initially operated out of a wooden structure before Sullivan erected the elaborate brick building that still stands at the corner of Central and Jackson.[7]

In 1869, Knoxville's two main rail lines merged to form the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railroad, which in subsequent years constructed or acquired over 2,500 miles (4,000 km) of track across the southeast, leading to a wholesaling and industrial boom in the city.[5] By 1886, several factories had moved into the Old City. The Burr and Terry Sash Factory stood at what is now the intersection of Central and Jackson.[8] The four-story City Mills (later White Lily) plant and the Beach's Marble Works finishing mill stood along Depot, and the Elridge Carriage Factory operated near the modern corner of Central and Summit Hill.[8]

Early 1900s edit

 
Intersection of South Central Street and West Jackson Avenue. The Patrick Sullivan's building now houses an upscale restaurant called The Lonesome Dove.

By the early 1900s, Central Street had developed into a raucous area known as "The Bowery," presumably after the New York neighborhood of similar repute. A 1900 article described the Bowery as being "congregated by nine-tenths of the criminal element" of Knoxville,[3] and according to historian Jack Neely, "saloons, whorehouses, cocaine parlors, gambling dens, and poolrooms" lined Central from the tracks to the river.[9] Florida Street, which ran adjacent to Central prior to expressway construction, developed into a red-light district known as "Friendly Town."[6]

Bar fights and shootouts were not uncommon at the Bowery's saloons. The most well-known of the Bowery's gunfights occurred at Ike Jones' bar on Central on December 13, 1901, when outlaw Kid Curry (a member of Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch) shot two Knoxville police officers.[10][11] Curry was eventually captured and jailed, but managed to escape. The shooting became a rallying cry for the city's prohibitionists, who shouted down Knoxville mayor Samuel Heiskell with chants of "Harvey Logan" (Curry's real name) during a rally on Market Square in 1907.[4]

 
John H. Daniel Building, pre-renovation. Now open as "The Daniel", upscale rental lofts with ground floor retail.

Peace Corps "progenitor" James Herman Robinson (1907–1972) grew up in a polluted and disease-ridden slum known as "The Bottoms," which lay adjacent to the Bowery on the banks of First Creek.[12] In his autobiography, Road Without Turning, Robinson describes the Bottoms as the "lowest" part of Knoxville, "geographically, morally, and economically."[13] He later joined a gang which hung out at the corner of Central and Vine, where they witnessed "every lewd act and heard every vile phrase descriptive of it."[14]

While the Bowery was one of the most crime-ridden sections of Knoxville, it was also one of the most diverse, and was one of the few parts of town where black-owned businesses functioned next to white-owned businesses.[6] Black-owned businesses in the neighborhood included the Gem Theater,[9] the Dogan-Gaither Motel, Gleaner Printing Company, and Easley's Grocery.[15] In the early 1900s, Greek immigrant Constantine Stergiokis opened one of Knoxville's first Greek restaurants along Central. After citywide prohibition shut down Knoxville's saloons, the Italian-American Armetta family opened an ice cream parlor in the Sullivan building.[6]

Part of the Knoxville Riot of 1919, one of the city's worst racial episodes, took place in the Bowery on August 30, 1919. Early that morning, a white woman was murdered, and police arrested Maurice Mays, a prominent local mulatto, for the crime. That afternoon, a lynch mob broke into the jail, and failing to find Mays, freed several inmates and looted the liquor storage room. As the riot spread into the streets, the rioters made their way to the Bowery, where they attacked and exchanged gunfire with black residents along Vine Avenue. The National Guard finally restored order the following morning.[16]

Revitalization edit

 
This alley off of South Central Street is home to several apartments.

As crime persisted in the Bowery, businesses began moving away. In the 1940s, JFG Coffee, which had opened its processing plant on West Jackson in 1921, threatened to move to a new location, complaining that the company's truck drivers were consistently mobbed by prostitutes.[3] Walter McGinnis, who operated the Tri-City Barber College at the corner of Jackson and Central from 1952 until 1992, recalled that, "Saturday at noon, the sawmills would close, and the people who worked in the forest would come to South Central. By 5 o'clock that night they were all pretty drunk and fightin.'"[3]

Several scenes in Cormac McCarthy's 1979 novel, Suttree, take place in the Old City. In one scene, the title character passes along Central, where "loud and shoddy commerce erupted out of the dim shops into the streets and packs of scarred dogs wandered," en route to sell his fish to a Central Street butcher. In another scene, a friend of Suttree's tells a story about a murderer showing off his victim's severed head at a bar on Central.[17] The book also mentions the "Corner Grill" (later the Corner Lounge), which operated on North Central from the 1930s until 2008.[10]

During the 1970s restaurant owner Kris Kendrick began buying random individual properties in the area, but had no particularly cohesive vision for the district. In 1986 Architect Peter Calandruccio began a visionary master planning and development undertaking. Acquiring strategic properties oriented around the intersection of Central and Jackson streets, he brought to the district a sense of place and orientation. After setting-up multiple partnerships with which he acquired some 9 properties as a critical mass he embarked on securing financing for his ventures. Simultaneously, he secured a long-term lease for the relocation of Hewgley's Music, a Knoxville institution specializing in the sale of musical instruments, as a vital anchor tenant for his flagship 40,000 s.f. mixed-use property at the NW corner of the intersection of Jackson and Central, naming it "Hewgley Park". Calandruccio teamed-up with builder, Benny Curl to undertake the renovation/preservation of the historic buildings for re-use, Curl's specialty as a builder. Curl also acquired and developed the pivotal corner opposite Hewgley Park as a restaurant he called Manhattan's - the former name of a former establishment at that location. Manhattan's became a thriving first-start gathering spot and Curl's construction crew worked doggedly on multiple builder restorations simultaneously as the district's popularity exploded. Calandruccio set-up and presided over the "Old City Neighborhood Association" as new businesses began to open. To improve overall infrastructure Calandruccio applied for and secured a $1.2m federal Urban Development Action Grant for the placement of overhead utility wires underground, new sidewalks, landscaping, and new outdoor lighting. With this focused vision, he was able to gain critical publicity for the bringing-in of other developers, tenants, and residents to the area, thus setting in motion the revitalization that stimulated the rebirth of Knoxville's Central Business District. Most noteworthy in addition to Hewgley's Music was Calandruccio's work with Ashley Capps in starting the now renowned "Ella Guru's" live music venue. Capps and Calandruccio's friendship had started over their love of music and together they set music as the focal theme of the Old City. Some of the other memorable initial new businesses included "Annie's Restaurant" by Annie Delisle (novelist Cormac McCarthy's ex-wife), Old City Mercantile, Kerby's Antiques, Sullivan's Saloon, and Java Coffee Shop. From the work of these early entrepreneurs came what is now the bustling Old City.[7]

Economy edit

 
South Central's 100 block

Now considered the "club district" of Knoxville (currently no strip clubs), the Old City is generally made up of warehouses, buildings of light industrial use, and a small historically commercial strip along South Central Street. The White Lily Foods plant, which had operated since 1885, shut down in 2008. JFG Coffee was for decades located in several buildings in the Old City, but moved in 2007.[18] The former JFG roasting facility at 200 West Jackson Avenue was redeveloped into the JFG Flats residential lofts in 2009, and the White Lily Foods building was purchased in 2012 by the same company that developed the roasting facility (Dewhirst Properties). It reopened as residential rental apartments in 2015.[19] John H. Daniel Company, a custom tailoring company, operated on West Jackson from 1928 to 2016 when they moved north of downtown on Central St. The building was sold to developers and reconfigured as rental loft apartments with retail storefronts on the first floor. It is called "The Daniel", and opened to tenants late in 2016.

There are several loft apartments in the older buildings of the Old City, many located behind and above offices and stores. The Jackson Ateliers Building and Hewgley Park lofts have been residential locations for many years. The Jacksonian Condos, JFG Flats, and Fire Street Lofts, have been redeveloped more recently as upscale condominiums, some listing in excess of $600,000.

The area tends to attract young single adults, who are sometimes affiliated with the University of Tennessee, which is less than two miles away. The Old City's proximity to entertainment and nightlife make it an attractive place to live for many young adults.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c Gail Guymon, Ann Bennett, and Teresa Irwin, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Southern Terminal and Warehouse Historic District, July 1985.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Melonee McKinney, "A Time of Transition an Avenue of Renaissance in Knoxville." Knoxville News Sentinel, 3 April 1994.
  4. ^ a b c Jack Neely, Market Square: A History of the Most Democratic Place on Earth (Knoxville, Tenn.: Market Square District Association, 2009), pp. 7, 18, 100.
  5. ^ a b East Tennessee Historical Society, Lucile Deaderick (ed.), Heart of the Valley: A History of Knoxville, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1976), pp. 70-80, 226-231.
  6. ^ a b c d "Ask Doc Knox," . Metro Pulse, 19 May 2010. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 2 October 2015.
  7. ^ a b . Retrieved: 10 December 2010.
  8. ^ a b Henry Wellge, Knoxville, Tenn.: County Seat of Knox County, 1886 (Milwaukee: Norris, Wellge and Company, 1886). Map.
  9. ^ a b Jack Neely, . Metro Pulse, 28 May 2008. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 2 October 2015.
  10. ^ a b Jack Neely, . Metro Pulse, 20 August 2008. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 2 October 2015.
  11. ^ Matt Lakin, "Notorious Outlaw, Notable Invention Among Biggest Stories for Sentinel in New Century," Knoxville News Sentinel, 29 January 2012. Retrieved: 29 January 2012.
  12. ^ James Herman Robinson, Road Without Turning: The Story of James H. Robinson (New York: Farrar, Straus and Company, 1950), p. 17-22.
  13. ^ Robinson, Road Without Turning, p. 17.
  14. ^ Robinson, Road Without Turning, p. 70.
  15. ^ Becky French Brewer and Douglas Stuart McDaniel, Park City (Arcadia Publishing, 2005), pp. 86-88.
  16. ^ Bruce Wheeler, Knoxville Riot of 1919. Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 12 December 2010.
  17. ^ Cormac McCarthy, Suttree (New York: Vintage Books, 1992), pp. 69, 203-204.
  18. ^ "Knoxville's 'Old City' by Jack Neely, Retrieved: 12 May 2020.
  19. ^ White Lily Flats, official website. Retrieved: 25 January 2015.

External links edit

  • Historic Old City District Association
  • Library of Congress - Historic Buildings Survey: Jackson Avenue

city, knoxville, city, neighborhood, knoxville, tennessee, united, states, located, northeast, corner, city, downtown, area, originally, part, raucous, vice, ridden, section, town, known, bowery, city, since, been, revitalized, through, extensive, redevelopmen. The Old City is a neighborhood in Knoxville Tennessee United States located at the northeast corner of the city s downtown area Originally part of a raucous and vice ridden section of town known as The Bowery the Old City has since been revitalized through extensive redevelopment efforts carried out during the 1980s through the present 3 Currently the Old City is an offbeat urban neighborhood home to several unique restaurants bars clubs and shops Southern Terminal and Warehouse Historic DistrictU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtEast Jackson Ave in the Old City neighborhoodLocation in TennesseeShow map of TennesseeLocation in United StatesShow map of the United StatesLocationParts of Jackson Avenue North and South Central Street Gay Street State Street Vine Avenue and Depot AvenueKnoxville TennesseeCoordinates35 58 13 N 83 55 6 W 35 97028 N 83 91833 W 35 97028 83 91833Areaapproximately 33 acres 13 ha 2 Built1870 1935 2 ArchitectFrank Pierce Milburn Et al Architectural styleChicago Classical Revival Romanesque Revival Renaissance Revival Italianate Vernacular CommercialNRHP reference No 85002909 1 Added to NRHPNovember 18 1985In spite of its name the Old City is not the oldest section of Knoxville 3 Most of the neighborhood was not part of the city until the 1850s when the arrival of the railroad encouraged the city to annex the areas north of Vine Avenue 4 The railroad brought an influx of Irish immigrants who established the Old City s first saloons and shops After the Civil War Knoxville developed into one of the southeast s largest wholesaling centers Wholesalers built large warehouses such as the ones along Jackson Avenue where rural East Tennessee merchants came to buy the goods with which they stocked their general stores 2 By the early 1900s Central Street was lined with saloons and brothels Violent crime and prostitution continued to be a problem into the 1960s causing many of the neighborhood s businesses to flee the area 3 Beginning in 1986 successful redevelopment efforts led by Architect Peter Calandruccio and Builder Benny Curl revitalized the neighborhood 3 Calandruccio s master planning see below prompted other developers to begin work on other properties as the opportunity of broad scaled development showed itself promising Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 19th century 2 2 Early 1900s 2 3 Revitalization 3 Economy 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksLocation editThe Old City is concentrated around the intersection of Central Street and Jackson Avenue adjacent to the Southern Terminal tracks and railyard now part of the Norfolk Southern system The neighborhood is roughly bounded by Magnolia Avenue on the north Gay Street on the west Summit Hill Drive on the south and the interstate overpasses on the east 3 Interstate 40 passes just north of the Old City and is accessible via the Downtown Loop from Summit Hill Drive History edit19th century edit nbsp Detail of an 1886 map of Knoxville showing what is now the Old City Crozier is now Central Street Building 21 the White Lily factory is still standing During the first half of the 19th century Knoxville s northward expansion was slow By 1852 Vine Avenue marked the city s northern limits 4 The establishment of Market Square in 1854 and the arrival of the railroad in 1855 catalyzed development north of the city however and by the end of 1855 the city s limits had pushed northward to what is now Emory Place 5 The arrival of the railroad had a major impact on the city s cultural makeup as hundreds of Irish immigrants arrived in town to help construct the railroad tracks and facilities Many of these immigrants settled in what is now the Old City so much so that at one point the area was known as Irish Town 6 After the Civil War Irish businessmen began building saloons and shops along Central originally Crozier Street that served the city s railroad traffic Among these businesses was a saloon built by Patrick Sullivan 1840 1925 which initially operated out of a wooden structure before Sullivan erected the elaborate brick building that still stands at the corner of Central and Jackson 7 In 1869 Knoxville s two main rail lines merged to form the East Tennessee Virginia and Georgia Railroad which in subsequent years constructed or acquired over 2 500 miles 4 000 km of track across the southeast leading to a wholesaling and industrial boom in the city 5 By 1886 several factories had moved into the Old City The Burr and Terry Sash Factory stood at what is now the intersection of Central and Jackson 8 The four story City Mills later White Lily plant and the Beach s Marble Works finishing mill stood along Depot and the Elridge Carriage Factory operated near the modern corner of Central and Summit Hill 8 Early 1900s edit nbsp Intersection of South Central Street and West Jackson Avenue The Patrick Sullivan s building now houses an upscale restaurant called The Lonesome Dove By the early 1900s Central Street had developed into a raucous area known as The Bowery presumably after the New York neighborhood of similar repute A 1900 article described the Bowery as being congregated by nine tenths of the criminal element of Knoxville 3 and according to historian Jack Neely saloons whorehouses cocaine parlors gambling dens and poolrooms lined Central from the tracks to the river 9 Florida Street which ran adjacent to Central prior to expressway construction developed into a red light district known as Friendly Town 6 Bar fights and shootouts were not uncommon at the Bowery s saloons The most well known of the Bowery s gunfights occurred at Ike Jones bar on Central on December 13 1901 when outlaw Kid Curry a member of Butch Cassidy s Wild Bunch shot two Knoxville police officers 10 11 Curry was eventually captured and jailed but managed to escape The shooting became a rallying cry for the city s prohibitionists who shouted down Knoxville mayor Samuel Heiskell with chants of Harvey Logan Curry s real name during a rally on Market Square in 1907 4 nbsp John H Daniel Building pre renovation Now open as The Daniel upscale rental lofts with ground floor retail Peace Corps progenitor James Herman Robinson 1907 1972 grew up in a polluted and disease ridden slum known as The Bottoms which lay adjacent to the Bowery on the banks of First Creek 12 In his autobiography Road Without Turning Robinson describes the Bottoms as the lowest part of Knoxville geographically morally and economically 13 He later joined a gang which hung out at the corner of Central and Vine where they witnessed every lewd act and heard every vile phrase descriptive of it 14 While the Bowery was one of the most crime ridden sections of Knoxville it was also one of the most diverse and was one of the few parts of town where black owned businesses functioned next to white owned businesses 6 Black owned businesses in the neighborhood included the Gem Theater 9 the Dogan Gaither Motel Gleaner Printing Company and Easley s Grocery 15 In the early 1900s Greek immigrant Constantine Stergiokis opened one of Knoxville s first Greek restaurants along Central After citywide prohibition shut down Knoxville s saloons the Italian American Armetta family opened an ice cream parlor in the Sullivan building 6 Part of the Knoxville Riot of 1919 one of the city s worst racial episodes took place in the Bowery on August 30 1919 Early that morning a white woman was murdered and police arrested Maurice Mays a prominent local mulatto for the crime That afternoon a lynch mob broke into the jail and failing to find Mays freed several inmates and looted the liquor storage room As the riot spread into the streets the rioters made their way to the Bowery where they attacked and exchanged gunfire with black residents along Vine Avenue The National Guard finally restored order the following morning 16 Revitalization edit nbsp This alley off of South Central Street is home to several apartments As crime persisted in the Bowery businesses began moving away In the 1940s JFG Coffee which had opened its processing plant on West Jackson in 1921 threatened to move to a new location complaining that the company s truck drivers were consistently mobbed by prostitutes 3 Walter McGinnis who operated the Tri City Barber College at the corner of Jackson and Central from 1952 until 1992 recalled that Saturday at noon the sawmills would close and the people who worked in the forest would come to South Central By 5 o clock that night they were all pretty drunk and fightin 3 Several scenes in Cormac McCarthy s 1979 novel Suttree take place in the Old City In one scene the title character passes along Central where loud and shoddy commerce erupted out of the dim shops into the streets and packs of scarred dogs wandered en route to sell his fish to a Central Street butcher In another scene a friend of Suttree s tells a story about a murderer showing off his victim s severed head at a bar on Central 17 The book also mentions the Corner Grill later the Corner Lounge which operated on North Central from the 1930s until 2008 10 During the 1970s restaurant owner Kris Kendrick began buying random individual properties in the area but had no particularly cohesive vision for the district In 1986 Architect Peter Calandruccio began a visionary master planning and development undertaking Acquiring strategic properties oriented around the intersection of Central and Jackson streets he brought to the district a sense of place and orientation After setting up multiple partnerships with which he acquired some 9 properties as a critical mass he embarked on securing financing for his ventures Simultaneously he secured a long term lease for the relocation of Hewgley s Music a Knoxville institution specializing in the sale of musical instruments as a vital anchor tenant for his flagship 40 000 s f mixed use property at the NW corner of the intersection of Jackson and Central naming it Hewgley Park Calandruccio teamed up with builder Benny Curl to undertake the renovation preservation of the historic buildings for re use Curl s specialty as a builder Curl also acquired and developed the pivotal corner opposite Hewgley Park as a restaurant he called Manhattan s the former name of a former establishment at that location Manhattan s became a thriving first start gathering spot and Curl s construction crew worked doggedly on multiple builder restorations simultaneously as the district s popularity exploded Calandruccio set up and presided over the Old City Neighborhood Association as new businesses began to open To improve overall infrastructure Calandruccio applied for and secured a 1 2m federal Urban Development Action Grant for the placement of overhead utility wires underground new sidewalks landscaping and new outdoor lighting With this focused vision he was able to gain critical publicity for the bringing in of other developers tenants and residents to the area thus setting in motion the revitalization that stimulated the rebirth of Knoxville s Central Business District Most noteworthy in addition to Hewgley s Music was Calandruccio s work with Ashley Capps in starting the now renowned Ella Guru s live music venue Capps and Calandruccio s friendship had started over their love of music and together they set music as the focal theme of the Old City Some of the other memorable initial new businesses included Annie s Restaurant by Annie Delisle novelist Cormac McCarthy s ex wife Old City Mercantile Kerby s Antiques Sullivan s Saloon and Java Coffee Shop From the work of these early entrepreneurs came what is now the bustling Old City 7 Economy edit nbsp South Central s 100 blockNow considered the club district of Knoxville currently no strip clubs the Old City is generally made up of warehouses buildings of light industrial use and a small historically commercial strip along South Central Street The White Lily Foods plant which had operated since 1885 shut down in 2008 JFG Coffee was for decades located in several buildings in the Old City but moved in 2007 18 The former JFG roasting facility at 200 West Jackson Avenue was redeveloped into the JFG Flats residential lofts in 2009 and the White Lily Foods building was purchased in 2012 by the same company that developed the roasting facility Dewhirst Properties It reopened as residential rental apartments in 2015 19 John H Daniel Company a custom tailoring company operated on West Jackson from 1928 to 2016 when they moved north of downtown on Central St The building was sold to developers and reconfigured as rental loft apartments with retail storefronts on the first floor It is called The Daniel and opened to tenants late in 2016 There are several loft apartments in the older buildings of the Old City many located behind and above offices and stores The Jackson Ateliers Building and Hewgley Park lofts have been residential locations for many years The Jacksonian Condos JFG Flats and Fire Street Lofts have been redeveloped more recently as upscale condominiums some listing in excess of 600 000 The area tends to attract young single adults who are sometimes affiliated with the University of Tennessee which is less than two miles away The Old City s proximity to entertainment and nightlife make it an attractive place to live for many young adults See also editBattle of Depot Street Jackson Avenue Warehouse District South Market Historic DistrictReferences edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 a b c Gail Guymon Ann Bennett and Teresa Irwin National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Southern Terminal and Warehouse Historic District July 1985 a b c d e f g h Melonee McKinney A Time of Transition an Avenue of Renaissance in Knoxville Knoxville News Sentinel 3 April 1994 a b c Jack Neely Market Square A History of the Most Democratic Place on Earth Knoxville Tenn Market Square District Association 2009 pp 7 18 100 a b East Tennessee Historical Society Lucile Deaderick ed Heart of the Valley A History of Knoxville Tennessee Knoxville Tenn East Tennessee Historical Society 1976 pp 70 80 226 231 a b c d Ask Doc Knox Turn of the Century Life in Knoxville s Bowery Metro Pulse 19 May 2010 Accessed at the Internet Archive 2 October 2015 a b Patrick Sullivan Steakhouse and Saloon History Retrieved 10 December 2010 a b Henry Wellge Knoxville Tenn County Seat of Knox County 1886 Milwaukee Norris Wellge and Company 1886 Map a b Jack Neely Detour de Knoxville Metro Pulse 28 May 2008 Accessed at the Internet Archive 2 October 2015 a b Jack Neely Knoxville s Oldest Bar Metro Pulse 20 August 2008 Accessed at the Internet Archive 2 October 2015 Matt Lakin Notorious Outlaw Notable Invention Among Biggest Stories for Sentinel in New Century Knoxville News Sentinel 29 January 2012 Retrieved 29 January 2012 James Herman Robinson Road Without Turning The Story of James H Robinson New York Farrar Straus and Company 1950 p 17 22 Robinson Road Without Turning p 17 Robinson Road Without Turning p 70 Becky French Brewer and Douglas Stuart McDaniel Park City Arcadia Publishing 2005 pp 86 88 Bruce Wheeler Knoxville Riot of 1919 Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture 2002 Retrieved 12 December 2010 Cormac McCarthy Suttree New York Vintage Books 1992 pp 69 203 204 Knoxville s Old City by Jack Neely Retrieved 12 May 2020 White Lily Flats official website Retrieved 25 January 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Old City Knoxville Historic Old City District Association Knoxville MPC Historic List Jackson Avenue Warehouse District Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey Jackson Avenue Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Old City Knoxville amp oldid 1169262157, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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