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America's Scenic City Part I - 1815 through The Civil War
With available transportation, abundant natural resources nearby, and an increased labor force thanks to the migration of African-Americans, Chattanooga quickly rebuilt itself as an industrial center, specifically, iron and steel. Additionally it became a processing center for the agricultural products grown in the fields of east Tennessee and north Georgia. Robert Cravens returned to Chattanooga after the Civil War. His home and business destroyed, near financial ruin, and nearing the age of 60 he began anew, rebuilding an empire of iron. He introduced coke-fired iron processing to the area in 1868. Located near the natural resources needed to make iron, and later, steel, Chattanooga grew on the strength of its production. The charcoal and coke-fired smelters that turned out 150,000 tons of iron in 1870 were producing 1.8 million tons of pig iron in 1890. By 1890 there were machine shops, boiler shops, plow makers, stove works, and at least 2 pipe manufacturers within the city limits, and the city was known as the "Pittsburgh of the South." On June 9, 1867, the First Congregationalist Church of Chattanooga became the first church in the South to welcome both black and white members. Along Railroad Avenue warehouses began to serve the growing railroad traffic in the 1870's and 1880's. The area known as Warehouse Row is a remnant of these buildings. A Yellow Fever epidemic in the city in 1878 claimed nearly 400 lives and was part of a much larger epidemic that claimed more than 5,000 lives statewide. The wounds of war began to heal on what would eventually become the Chickamauga-Chattanooga National Military Park (info). In Chattanooga, Point Park (more), Cravens House (more), Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge (more) formed the core of the park. The Lookout Mountain Hotel sat atop the imposing mountain south of downtown.
Floods and fire did little to discourage the city after the Civil War. By 1900 the city had become a major southeastern rail center and a hub for the warehousing and distribution of cotton and other agricultural products. Market Street was the center of the city and Erlanger Hospital had been treating patients for less than 10 years. In February, 1899, a thick blanket of snow covered the city in the worst snowstorm for more than 100 years. After the turn of the century Chattanooga's African-American population began to gain some economic strength, although generally relegated to second-class jobs in this segregated society. White reaction to this strength frequently took the form of lynching (death by violent means, not just hanging). On January 23, 1906, Nevada Taylor, who was white, claimed she had been assaulted in the St. Elmo, then a suburb of Chattanooga. When a black man, Ed Johnson, was arrested two days later a white mob stormed the St. Elmo's jail. Johnson had been moved to a Nashville jail. On March 19, 1906, Johnson was lynched by a angry crowd of whites because the U. S. Supreme Court had stayed the execution. President Theodore Roosevelt called the "contemptuous of the (U. S. Supreme) Court." St. Elmo Sheriff Joseph Shipp will serve 90 days in a federal prison for contempt of court and return a hero in the eyes of white Chattanooga. The city's Terminal
Station opened its doors in December, 1909. About the same time an old friend
of the city returned to Union Station--The
General, whose appearance in
Chattanooga would set off a dispute with its northern neighbor, Nashville
for some 50 years. ![]() Chattanooga, Tennessee during World War I. The entry of the United States into World War I in 1917 had a dramatic affect on the city thanks to the men being trained a few miles south in Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia. Chattanooga was the nearest city and men from the camp were frequent visitors. However, prior to the end of the war in 1918 an outbreak of Spanish Influenza changed things in the city. Movie theaters and pool halls were closed, as were other popular gathering places. The war ended in November, 1918, and the epidemic continued until February, 1919. Starting in 1920, and continuing until World War II, the agricultural economy weakened, in part due to the destruction of the cotton crop because of the boll weevil. Another factor adding to the plight of area farmers was overproduction (they added equipment and improved technology during World War I). In the 1920's the way Americans traveled began to undergo nothing less than a revolution. The automobile began to play a larger role in the day-to-day lives of most people, and two families were set to take advantage of the change. Leo Lambert, a spelunker with a knack for promotion finds a beautiful 145' underground waterfall that he names for his wife. Further up the mountain, Frieda Carter develops the unusual formations at the top of Lookout Mountain. Generation after generation return to Chattanooga to see the tourist attractions they promoted, Rock City(more) and Ruby Falls (site). The industrial portion of Chattanooga's economy began to feel the effects of The Great Depression in 1930 and would not return to the pre-Depression production levels until 1942. The creation of the Tennessee Valley Authority by Franklin Delano Roosevelt on May 18, 1933 led to the control of flooding that devastated the area on a regular basis. Part I - 1815 through The Civil War
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