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Chattanooga
built 656 days ago
From Chattanooga's port cotton was shipped to Memphis... the trip was difficult especially around Muscle Shoals. Completion of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad ended this market virtually overnight in the mid-1840's, but by that time other industries had moved to the area, among them a charcoal iron industry, forerunner of Chattanooga's steel mills. One of the earliest "ironmasters" was Robert Cravens, who built a house on the northern end of Lookout Mountain, overlooking the city.
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The most prominent natural features in and around Chattanooga are the Tennessee River and the surrounding highlands. The city is nestled between the southwestern Ridge-and-valley Appalachians and the foot of Walden's Ridge; the river separates the ridge from the western side of downtown. Several miles east, the city is bisected by Missionary Ridge, which hosted an important battle of the American Civil War.
NASHVILLE, Tenn., March 6 /PRNewswire/ -- Cingular Wireless customers in Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Clarksville/Hopkinsville and Dyersburg now have more coverage in more places thanks to the integration of the AT&T Wireless and Cingular Wireless networks. The network integration, coupled with the new sites built in 2005, gives customers enhanced call quality, as well as in-building, in-car and street level coverage
Map of Chattanooga, Tennessee after the Civil War In 1860 population of Chattanooga reached 2,000. Although still a small town, Abraham Lincoln understood the importance of this growing rail center to the Southern Cause. Three times the Union Army would fight for this land. In 1862, General Kirby Smith[CSA] defended the city from forces under the command of Ormsby Mitchel[USA]. Mitchel's first attempt to disrupt the city on April 12, 1862 featured the theft of the W&ARR's General (biography of The General) in an episode of American history now called The Great Locomotive Chase.
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Walnut Street Bridge at Night Located on the north shore of the Tennessee River, just across from downtown Chattanooga, the North Shore represents a great triumph in city growth and development. What was once a street of abandoned buildings and run-down homes has become one of the city's focal points. Mixed-use business and residential developments are underway, bringing even more people to the area. Coolidge Park, one of the city's most popular greenspaces, is the centerpiece of the North Shore District. The renovation of the Walnut Street Bridge as a pedestrian bridge is ... heralded as part of the dramatic growth in the area. Frazier Avenue is considered to be the "Main Street" of this area, and many unique businesses are located here, such as
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Chattanooga in time of the civil war. Soldiers' tents and supply wagons beside the city building, 1864.  Lookout Mountain is visible in the background. As the name implies, the Chattanooga-Hamilton County Bicentennial Library system has been jointly operated by the city and county governments since 1976. The city was gifted with a Carnegie library in 1904, and the two-story purpose-built marble structure survives to this day at Eighth Street and Georgia Avenue as commercial office space. In 1939, the library moved to Douglas Street and McCallie Avenue and shared the new building with the John Storrs Fletcher Library of the University of Chattanooga. This building is now called Fletcher Hall and houses classrooms and offices for the University. The city library was moved to its third and current location in 1976 at the corner of Tenth and Broad streets.
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