Bucksnort, Tennessee
35°53′31″N 87°38′22″W / 35.89194°N 87.63944°W[1]
Bucksnort is a spring in Hickman County, Tennessee, United States, located on Sugar Creek, 0.2 miles (0.32 km) downstream of the confluence of the South Fork of Sugar Creek, 0.2 miles (0.32 km) to the south-east of Exit 152 on Interstate 40, and 2.7 miles (4.3 km) west of Spot.[1] There are no U.S. Census statistics for the location and there is no post office.[citation needed] A trout farm business operated just upstream and adjacent to the I-40 in 1967, operated by Mr. and Mrs. Joda Austin.[2]
According to the county historian, the name Bucksnort comes from a one-time merchant who sold a 'snort' of moonshine for a dollar (buck).[3]
Also at the confluence of Sugar Creek and South Fork (also known as Coleman's Branch) was Lee's Furnace, later to be called Lee's Old Furnace.[4] It was named after Samuel B. Lee, who together with James Gould bought a large tract of land for mining and timber production in 1830.[5] It was soon abandoned, as the mineral deposits were found to be located further away from the furnace than was expected, near Vernon.[5]
A Methodist church was established here some time after 1856.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ a b USGS 1981, p. 380.
- ^ TGFC 1971, p. 11.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. 32.
- ^ Spence & Spence 1900, p. 238.
- ^ a b Spence & Spence 1900, p. 242.
- ^ Spence & Spence 1900, p. 259.
Bibliography
[edit]- Miller, Larry L. (2001). "Bucksnort". Tennessee Place-names. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253214782.
- Water Resources Data for Tennessee 1979. United States Geological Survey Water Resources Division. 1981. TN-79-1.
- The Tennessee Conservationist. Vol. 37–39. Tennessee Department of Conservation and the Tennessee Game and Fish Commission. 1971.
- Spence, W. Jerome D.; Spence, David L. (1900). A History of Hickman County, Tennessee. Southern Historical Press. ISBN 9780893082420. (A History of Hickman County, Tennessee at the Internet Archive)
Further reading
[edit]- Burchard, Ernest Francis; Wells, Francis Gerritt; Cushman, Joseph Augustine; King, Warren Raymond (1934). Surface Waters of Tennessee: With a Chapter on Flood Conditions for Rivers Other Than the Mississippi, Volumes 39–42. Nashville: Williams. — Page 24 has a picture of the Lee furnace.
- "Lee & Gould Furnace circa. 1833". Historical Marker Database.