| Roane County |
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| History and Genealogy | ||||
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Roane
county was formed in 1856, from portions of Kanawha, J. P.
Tomlinson carried the petition asking for the formation of the county to
The First Circuit
Court
convened at the house of M. B. Armstrong, in Spencer, October 20, 1856,
with Hon. George Summers, Judge of the Eighteenth Circuit and Ninth
Judicial District, presiding. Spencer, the county seat, is situated
in the Spring Creek valley, within a survey of 6000 acres, patented by
Albert Gallatin, in 1787. The land afterward became the property of J. P.
R. Bureau, once a prominent business man of The first
settlers upon
the spot came in 1812. They were Samuel Tanner, his wife, one child, and a
man named Wolf, who lived in Tanner's family. Their first residence was
beneath a shelving rock, within a few yards of the present residence of
Hon. J. G. Schilling. The Tanner family thought it, no doubt, a
comfortable lodging: in a trackless wilderness. The birth of the first
white child born here occurred in this cave; it grew to an adult age and
yet survives. In 1813,
Mr. Tanner erected his cabin near the spot on which the residence of M. W.
Kidd, ex- Clerk of
the Circuit Court, was afterward built. In 1814, other pioneers came and
settled on Spring creek, two miles below Spencer. In 1817, the spot was
visited by a Baptist minister, who preached the first sermon in the cabin
of a Mr. Greathouse, and the same year a Methodist minister established an
appointment at the house of Mr. Tanner. The first grist mill was built in
1818. It was a water mill with a capacity for cracking about eight bushels
of corn per day. The patience of the pioneer was supposed to have stood
the crucial test if he had waited for his grist at Runion's
mill. William
Armstrong, J. S. Spencer and John Shedd were among the first
teachers. In 1816,
the name of Tanner's Cross roads was bestowed upon the place, suggested by
the fact that two paths bisected each other here. Thus the place was known
until 1839, when a man named Raleigh Butcher, residing on Reedy creek,
sold his property, intending to go to California, but instead of removing
to that far off land, came to where Spencer now stands, where, in 1840, he
erected a large frame house, and the place became known as New California,
because it was the place at which Raleigh Butcher stopped. By this name it
was known until March 15, 1858, when it was incorporated under the present
name. The town was almost entirely destroyed by fire in the summer of
1887. [Source:
History of
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