- Butler, Tennessee
Butler is an unincorporated community in Johnson County in the northeastern corner of the
U.S. state ofTennessee . It is located nearWatauga Lake . Butler is served by apost office , assignedZIP Code 37640.Early history
The town was originally located on
Roan Creek [http://www.tngenweb.org/johnson/places_of_johnson_county_tn.htm Places of Johnson County TN] , Johnson County TNGenWeb] at itsconfluence with Elk River, where the two streams combined to form theWatauga River . Settlement began in 1768. For many years the community was called Smith's Mill for thegristmill that Ezekial “Zeke” Smith built on the bank of Roan Creek in 1820. [http://www.amazon.com/Old-Butler-TN-Images-America/dp/0738541710 Book description] for "Old Butler (TN) (Images of America)", by Michael and Lanette Depew, Amazon.com] After the Civil War, it was renamed in honor of ColonelRoderick R. Butler of Johnson County, who then represented the area in the state legislature and had been a commander in the 13th Tennessee Cavalry in theUnion Army . [http://www.wataugalakemagazine.com/colonelroderickbutler.html Butler, Tennessee: Colonel Roderick Random Butler's Namesake] , WataugaLakeMagazine.com, September, 2007]Aenon Seminary, a
secondary school , was established in Butler in 1871. It later became Holly Spring College, offering education up to abachelor's degree , and enrolling as many as 200 students.Herman Tester (2006) [http://books.google.com/books?id=-MhSbxsjkVQC&pg=PA64&lpg=PA64&dq=Aenon+Seminary&source=web&ots=cfFi_vYRlx&sig=gvgIg7LMrfiVcKCLWWCqtnnSXkk&hl=en#PPA69,M1 Butler: Old, New and Carderview] . ISBN 0615154670] In 1906 it was purchased by the Watauga Baptist Association, which renamed it Watauga Academy. It operated under that name until 1948, when the town was inundated by the formation of Watauga Lake. [ [http://www.mce.k12tn.net/johnson/schools/schools.htm Schools] , in The History of Johnson County, Mountain City Elementary School website, accessedMarch 21 ,2008 ]Butler was the birthplace of
U.S. Congress menB. Carroll Reece of Tennessee andRobert R. Butler ofOregon (grandson of the town's namesake).Inundation and relocation
The original town of Butler was subject to frequent flooding, experiencing major floods in 1867, 1886, 1901, 1902, 1916, 1924, and 1940. [ [http://www.tnhistoryforkids.org/places/butler_museum Butler Museum] , Tennessee History for Kids website (accessed March 22, 2008)] The
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) began the construction of theWatauga Dam in 1942 which created the Watauga Lake. The construction was delayed because of the ongoing World War II, but was finished in 1948 when the water steadily began rising and the town slowly became submerged under the lake. Butler was the first and only incorporated town inundated by a TVA reservoir. [http://www.clui.org/clui_4_1/lotl/v28/b.html Immersed Remains: Towns Submerged In America] , "The Lay of the Land", volume 28, Spring 2005, Center for Land Use Interpretation] In 1948, before the reservoir was filled, the town, which at the time had a population of about 600 and included more than 125 homes and 50 businesses, was relocated to higher ground. The relocation project required construction of convert|54.9|mi|km of roads and highways, three bridges, and convert|66|mi|km of utility lines, as well as relocation of 1,281 graves. [ [http://www.mce.k12tn.net/johnson/history/1900/butler.htm The Town of Butler] , in The History of Johnson County, Mountain City Elementary School website, accessedMarch 21 ,2008 ] The town's new site is located onTennessee State Route 67 at coord|36.35682|N|82.03015|W.The original town is now known as "Old Butler." [ [http://www.wataugalakemagazine.com/oldbutlerdays.html Old Butler Days] , WataugaLakeMagazine.com, August, 2007] Old Butler, called “the town that wouldn’t drown,” is commemorated in a
museum in Butler and by "Old Butler Days" which is an annual festival held each year in August right in the heart of the town. [Lois Carol Wheatley, [http://www.highcountrypress.com/weekly/2007/08-02-07/dive.htm Dive Into Old Butler Days August 10 to 11] , "High Country Press" (Boone, NC ),August 2 ,2007 ] In 1983, a drawdown of the lake exposed the remains of Old Butler for a brief time, allowing former residents to visit the site. [ [http://www.etsu.edu/cass/Archives/Collections/afindaid/a437.html Butler Project Collection 1983-84] ,East Tennessee State University Archives of Appalachia]References
Further reading
*Calhoun, Russ (1998). "Lost Heritage: The People of Old Butler, Tennessee and the Watauga Valley". Overmountain Press. 387 pages. ISBN 978-1570720819
*Depew, Michael and Lanette (2005). "Old Butler (TN) (Images of America)". Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0738541716External links
*dmoz|Regional/North_America/United_States/Tennessee/Localities/B/Butler
* [http://www.thebutlermuseum.com/ Butler Museum]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.