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Chattanooga „
PART OF Ol/R COLUMNS Wtf,I, UK DEVOTED TO A SHORT DESCRIPTION
- OF OUK SOUTHERN CITIES AND THElliCOMMERCIAL ADVANTAGES.
L N A 1 U Rh to . ,
seems
especally prepared the
upon which the city 01 Ghatta
nooga is located as the site lor
great couime.rcial and industrial
center. At the base ot grand o d
Lookout Mountain; all but sur
rounded by high ridges and high
er mountains, broken through
hero and there by fertile valleys;
half encompassed by the majes
tic curve ol a grant river; in close
proximity to almost inexhausti
ble deposits of iron and coal ;
near dense forests of hard and
soit wood timber; with farming
lauds in the valleys and grazing
lands on the lull-sides, it is not
surprising that here should be
located in a city whose past 19
record of pluck and energy and
whose future gives commercial promise or
iiiahufacturing and
importance greater than that °*
an iy other city in the bouth.
Chattanooga is appropriately
termed the“ Plucky City. I he
.seat of government of Hamilton
Oounty, is situated on the lenn
essee River, in latitude 85 degrees
and 15 minutes west. It ism a
rolling valley at an elevaton of
nearly 700 feet above sea level,
and almost 100 feet above low
mark on the fiver.
Throughout the city the
streets rise and fall in
Jar undulation, so that the . 1
drainage is iperfect. Where
the heavier commerce is
tfiuisagted the streets are
paved with gi Ahite aild ‘ aS
phalt, and towards the su
•luirbs tliese are superseded
by asphalt, vitrified briejk,
and evenly crushed, .hard
rolled 'macadam.' Tho busi
ness hoiifees are ornamental
in theif height and solidity
of appearance, as well as in
their design and material.
-Block After Hilbefc of ittrem
line, the .principal thnroqgh- fren,
faros; interspersod tall at, office
ijoeiVt point by arch
buildings of the latest
itect iiVe. . y-' r '"
A' visit to the suburbs' will
Convince, the stranger that
tile people, who make up the
.population of Chattanooga
live in their own homes.
‘Electric railways operated
under a system of transfer,
one may ride ftom
htlier oim e.nd of the for pity five ,to cents any
orner. end enci lor nve ,,ccuts,
pierce,every:part, ol thecity
and adjacent sub.u r ban
tew n*i i ke the airterie^ of the
hnmnir body, ; and »o»re can
getfrohl other any ppintLsbLT’hbtibiy to
aity cnuckly* everV
‘ KnSK and- -o that
.man,yon find sqpye eouvcu- epuveu
lent spot lor Jus home, limy
ever humble has station in
life may be. .There are
$$ J# 4 -,fifths • of tb(>
•tip f.si'ecial- )
'Cotttiges, beautified
Iy* with vines and; shade
trees, which Hio o.Mii D
OHUPes to.gcowi
m any kind
'Also, 1 beyond Chattanooga mature* is
'h ot only a. city of homes but
palafial homes'.' - ^
..On the terraces, in the
city and suburbs and upon
The surrounding ridges are
that, cost for
t«Uep-—residences of stone,
tirick, alid residences of
' every material that houses
'(•jin'tie sjgiis built varied of. and Tlie of tile
are
architects, can produce,
aisled,bv the native artistic
of the owners.
The interiors are even more strik
ingthan ’passer-hy. t.hnft part which greets
the
The early history of this neigii
horhpod is derived mainly from
legends of the aborigines, there
fpre, more or less, obscure. 11 is
•learned, however, from “Mar
tinfq,Louisiana’^ that, as early as
1678 many of tli -'D colonists in Vir
> 1 lit i ’ >
ft under ---ilia, Englisbhijsr.uje.m 1 chafing
, the Atr
tlaatic Frovincys, determined to
move further, towards the setting
sun,--and “Emigrants' began to
sr-ek a route to it thVough the ‘in
Wrinr, and down Hit- Teniiessee
(and Oln'o 1 ) * * *
“A higher degree of nautical
•■S 7 . ?• gZgZ&i
< __ 55 -- v '-'
ABBEVILLE CHRONItteE.
adventure, by men unaccustoin
ef j to navagation, through the
Boiling Fot . the skillet, the
g uc j^ the j\i usc le Shoals, more
than f w0 thousand miles down an
urieX pi ore( i r i V er, both banks of
vvere, at these places, in
Bie 0 CCU p anC y G f Indians, was
more than an adventure; it was
an enterprise, in which every
move ment was accompanied with
j at ,g er an( j probable disaster,”
'i'j, roug b this channel, several
y eara i a t e r, Tennessee received
some of the oldest American fain
j] ics _
Ramsey, in his “Annals of
r r enn essee,” says of the Tennessee
B j ver a p this point that the pass
a g e o f this river through the sev
orjrl ranges of the Cumberland
Mountains forms one of the most
remar ] ;a blo features in Ameri
can topography. It is unique,
romatic and picturesque varigtited, — pre
senting and views At ohffe' At tlje^great
£ ,r ran d sublime.
0 „k 0U t Mountain conuuepces a
ser ; e8 c ,f rapids, where. iu,jt,$ tor
tuous windings alongtliei base of
aevera | moirfitain .ranges,> t he
Tennessee River, contracted into
a nar f 0W chanAel, cliffs hemhTUd 'tb/ttierihir in’ by
projecting ajid 'iaghbs
precipices F of solid stone, " m,f7
\ _ t lit <r ril ‘< ~7 in ii*y ig t>t”vi \i ' r ]L :THVc i, ‘Jn l ! o- 5 9 y.\ fifj'ifjt. Ln to'n
•
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a/. •> idn .us-ghO to nolnkjo t< ,, K f tuifi 1 ~ (Hi )*>fl iiifi •: A b*iU
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myj isoiut; idT "SrS,;'Siirr Kie. . .. ______
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MARKET vSTRKLT IN 1867
with TmmuRlWHfsu vH.ly-tndp from
'shore tiCshot-Pj cro-Mtipg in' its
r‘, lP
htiuldci;-' M and litasftcs. of rock,, a
siicye.^sioii oC cgtaLavts ;uul
For x'hiu's'-after the whites had
b‘airie<i a fbAtbold, the jdace Vas
ronspiciihtis only as a .
thy fieet^.of llathoats to latuLiyid
f-J.y uj'.Wgr night, ratfier thyiih.Mir
imijnter.; the . treacherous,;*ijtre,ssti
and- murderous savages rArciiiwirl
the mountain in darkness. >f'Wre
gave it the name of “The tl4fi«jh|a' Land
irtJSf; !U ihfftl^frlv in the v
miitMo* wlMt^W -ks’ “Ross’ more ilaVirduTirTl- trdWfc?”
" L a
named for an educated Cherokee
Chief, John Ross, who lived where
his somewhat pretentious log
house still stands, four miles from
Chattanooga, ville, at what is now Ross
Georgia, just over the
Tennessee State Line. There is
a popular tradition that in this
house Chief Ross translated the
New Testament into the Cherokee
dialect and had charge of a mis
sum. It is a.matter ok
however, that about 18_0 several
missions were established along
the crest and eastern slopes ot
the elevation east of tin* city ,
which received and still retains
the name of Missionary (
popularly Mission) Kidge.
In the year 1808 the
surrendered possession of the
country and were removed to the
Indian Territory. It was then
that the name of the settlement
was changed from Ross’ Landing
to Chattanooga, and in 1841 the
Legislature granted it a charter
as a city. There was then a pop
ulation of about 500 inhabitants,
including whites, Negroes and In
dians.
Chattanoogi occupies a
of unbounded mineral wealth,
and is at the same time the
ural gateway to the groat, South,
Its advantages as astrategic point
were early recognized by leading
military authorities during the
&«*»«» late war. The fact that the pros
landing for early v'- v navigation «* »> of j
Tennessee is not. the only one
that suggested it, as a place
future iniportance. .It was on
‘tne’ one regjiiy available path
through the mountain ranges and
on the line of the old stage route
lending from Nashville, Tonnes
to Augusta, Georgia.
MARhMitofflKkU . ....... J»N,d ... 8 b..J,
TW first stWinlnMt .espne
Ghntlam.ogu -.probably in 1886.
which They increased in
1tumhW;vrit-y most jiiiiportanf rapnllv, adjunct -Hn'd wore
a to
'fradei’.’gdmriierc^ and first travel. In
oiitll-t coiinietipn Vu with South' tlie railway
tjte in 1819-50,
the rim made Chatt-a-msgra
a great cotton mart, where all
tlie (;ottq/i grow,a , <»n, |hy rich
priiiriesami in 1 lit? hiyttom lands
of North Alabama, a*- far down
asd.Decatur, was handled'for .re
khipmeriti fhe to Atlanta, (I corgi ir
and >sontlyeast sAabt.ar.L'’-In
thfi im 'mW
other railroads wer'4' l.llflf 'rt-akl/
ingto Nashville and
the latter being built to Bristol
in I 860 , frantically all the rail
wav lines in tho State then either
reached Chattanooga direct or
made near connections.
The rapid advance in railroad
building and inauiifacturimr re
ceived a sudden check at the out
break of the war, at which time
Chattanooga returned a property
assessment of about $ 1 ,> 200 , 000 ,
which included the value of
about 000 slaves. Curing the
years of the war all real values
were destroyed, and there was no
Hvil government except what ex
jsted by toleration of the military
power.
The first census taken after the
close of the war, that of 1870,
gave the population of Ghatta
nooga, as 6,07iL of which 8,872
where whites and 2,221 negroes.
In 1880 the population f was Tho 12,-
870, and in 8 !K), 20,100.
precentage af negroes has steadi
ly decreased since the census of
1870 was taken, however, and at
ttle present time the number of
negroes in Chattanooga is per
haps less, proportionately, than
in any other Southern city. The
figures above mentioned refer to
the city proper. But a new con
dition of affairs lias arisen since
J880, which requires some exuJa
natioh at this point. Within the
past, ten years a number of su
up •***.» adjacent '»«», to 1 he "r city ol , Cliata
nooga, in may instances divided
from thvxity.;i>?me$ iPnJLv by a
street. These suburban towns
are trie feacjVfTV,i lines,, ) # mu) their and inhabit- elec
car
ants are for the most part con
meted with tlm-rity in a business
way. In tact, th(*se towns are m-
tcgnil parts of flic city of!('»»a4t«
ut.,w»»im-takmg. noogg,jqr starwm«.y#pt.that .rl6VM«M»u
.
1 at ion of tho city ami suburbs
may; at tho present time,- he
placed in" tlie neighborhood of
50^)00,' Cstjniqt^. bitted Mannflictu'r^s’ upotj'a conservative haVe,
advantage ina n.imltcr ol u/^'instai.^s, the existance taken ot
tIiesh'hdHqrl/Afi built, their factories towns' ahd to evade have
so as
municipal taxes, yet at 'the. same
p'.. ,„u .,, 101 , 11 ;,™ ‘.7 ,,1 rh-it.
; •
W ■ sh.ippn)g,rate-V, v . t A. . belt
;
mmalinp- the
city gives theffi ufNT/e'aHimtrt'a^s
railroad frontage.
‘ v Enthralled by Music.
r“
T")UT the major spirnVdl locket} reflectively »uit
O =" ,1)i; ririll t>’ s'mokv
h*••tktiiU -know about tk»>.
Yhe man who hiki midm bet
-why. you don’t amn-to
anything ki-Hous iti his cluitn,
in inquirecL “ 1 V» square ug»dbit"nnf
Mtre.m 11
'• TUW doeBiEt provetknHtlHuft,ipn«*ir
'btr Y" 1 1tie iimjor unswemt..: f(gi bourse
it/s h •woinlcrful thing whiell he givex
out as Irtith. but u man of Lfof.
tk-hwfyek's s land lag is etititled to claim
almpsf anything and the» toifooi us all
i»y proving n." ■•»•«••••
“Weil.” said the oUver, who *«»«*<-om
liamjpcnplmti 1 ami. not in thc mAlieal
oorp^-’I ciin only look updnltt ns prepo.—
IcrouRi It'slutereotiug,yoil knoiv -rsn
lv intiirattiiig. DY angoodo atwry uW tknt
nfi Orphi'iis nud tho. rrioks anul,|tnei4i
.irvd things »v 111 eh b« enllml rot hfui by
his.-playing. Vos, npd tp my mind
tbsm’s just about at much fsctinli,”
The major leaned back in htaiobfclr
and iihe ItunpUght of thaiichUirponi,
niiljug u|iip(i liisigouien ouk lmive# and
upoii liiis calm, t,bpnphtrcpn,oefill«g face.
I, ijuiiiuilBil Hie last trapasLPtnnrWhpO
*mll«-wAieh tl i t tod across and iwtm R«we.
"Tiio Onplicos bmuiioss isMli't.unP'ltei
td(v,eH|t«r. Kennedy,” .Impiodc i ViOln ?
ttiu not ipoking, foil, old, I Um se
nous about ,n. imn.Mi 1 V .vvp - 1
"'iaviv ivltqlvwjpip.wpifcfc.fcv.W* •
4 q,i.,oI,tUe.privfiig.;wj?w WIH.WV’
AyvI.Jf.T ,tl»e iy«ti«;./tokyi|i„r l ferV4
lft bi-wliT
tit <>pr tulh-” ,, f!l
ifiePfUflff
Jf®iW.O'iPW Mfi/h®-WtW 0 ^.^
^
trill iliq, Jlo S | 4eym} . : . 1 ’ , .1 il'i I
. i'l*
ht-ivws ststv mfd, H
••“MjAWm^iWWI , ivt-.wiimip, luidnds-K'r ,ero.”,|hfi Awa/vt
qfflgk(BKS}o*9,tw V?m wkyMv,4ia '.Ogd
bm , (liia < r’
laiuuux rp much us desert aud
Great cinders of rocks, bn rued under
Klin which was In
ami 11JVfvil^>V\1ikff the uplands were rough, ^jirprprtl
made of coke. Still, nil this has
to do with the storv. It- puly
m w ; ffis *m ’
\vfiaL ! tf hod
Ihing fit to be made into a
cemetery when we buried Lieut.
er, who, ns I satf, had been killed
of his own men, a fellow named
Italian, maybe; Austriun, commcpj^l
something out of the
enlisted men.
J '
natal u.ibience
Hus was on a day
Tied to the post
of institution, as
and Smijji. wfw.det nUeJ.
cring I.', over 1)p to j®
turn V t%Y/steps
(ear-old 1.(>L who
'sloop With'a
eouidn’t |'ianv, started
plav Soulji
as soon as
look off his cap and^UpWjilttf bovl^-fo' •k-fitW'uM
listening. The attentWWWStWM
and at last the
i:, the house was called
He was a statue, I tel) ntwiffcf.
statue;.immovable, rapt, wenfdplhe
An hour or so afterward 1 stilltlfflere
V. liuk.w and saw he was
'i-iening, listening, listening,
hcv'pi ivered and explode d up o
instrument.
"A- I viewed turn
"■cant came hurrying up ToTr™house
(|i.«i(f)i/nk •’hiic'tK'ribl^.' rt^hfui
.i 1 i struck him ami was arrested.
V-ftWfihriWm**- WHti ! W ( r«f»
i r I!;,
rZfi vergeant and of f:iilhtg.*K<fcflrsr.
'W'.rfiMfaw <«s-l* tjeomi 4 .- -mlifiH iti'H tn»'f*c-1
■wit- Mnr<*l man’s 1 (<or.<*nt*l|int> *
-"|irl H «Yehi|t'«ee«fj#tll to itnhtWit
o'9ifI umm»W! i*soWbIIriffg-'m«»v<t<**n.
i«•G-Gibr.-iup.gWM* ■.uiieiAoH-Mo
ivr. 93 ti.nwd M»».--i-.*fil / .(•')(.•.,(Grmie
ir i weuhln’t- tntlf -nl>o.it :
'-.if c '-t-awyi* he
hittiflMmpeMed; nUIkiK'WttS'U'-flasSffuV^
ore.th**>1«Wf^<Mfe prtrtMfV--
with, himi Music of unv kind over
poe -2%Mrf‘/f' ,u llim- , 11 '
EEeWWfisk hift'lhnt
of h'dA'Rng'fkft him wkeh"a 'eot-net l 'iiid
wnn'm-MV TW'l>rfR , le’'en;i 1 U;fbHf 1 t''(l
I .L”’ j.„n : 'div!.T?l tLV
UiHWMmh
t „ l)W p',, . sl rn ,.vd.i.«lc The
.u 4 pje -was ,*.u.*|>, l nV><-tk*m»o
iyiim.,, wfilliW* ^ivviiid.-ihfUft.
|ilaj|ie4.*K,iv mojbwd-de4««rdIi)io*bof
UisMKiiiier.bwlitswsiiiMMi-rMd
wiW'Wfls dnwiu.daiio.he
4 , vdli c«i.b.tore,the i ho iy „w a e,( t *..in.,Mt.(ir
|ll(Vi
jrhioh the ifatbec/ mi*«Mh.sii<HiW
"’ e ,ask of Arming hie uaisur 8
fashion % of whan he .lend man h«.l hoped
tWW
«I»14 «-a«
h? havrri""^
truce ol the Creative power. (/ ) ;
"fcle told roe that my boy’s mouth
organ had driven nil tliongbl ol ios, hos
pital errand out of Ida mind, arid when
the sergeant came un<J interrupted his
devotions lie wanted to kill him.
"Well, that's really what, happened
inter. The hand was at practice one
night and Hpulji, an usual, was listening.
Liept. Wheeler, coming .alot'g, called
tho pain to him, ug one knows for what
purpose, lie reputed to hear Ids *u
perlor, anil Wheeler walked over to him
and spoke to him again, rattier sharply,
1 .imagine. Soulji turned on him and
beut him to death. When the guard
found him the officer had just strength
enough to name hip murderer, ami died.
t'The man-hunt which was carried on
during all that night, the next day and
the following (light, was a thing long to
tie rpuu-qiliered, l might say that the
ordinary discipline and routine of the
garrison was abandoned for llie time,
and all hands were out in the
The soldiers did not like Soulji on ac
count of hta mysterious and uncanny
ways, .while Wh,<wJ*r was a beloved offi
cer. The utter lack of reason for the
murder was another infuriating thing.
So, very, very liiucb like a mob the tom
ma.nd spread over the country and into
the coke-built mountain* and the old
voloanoes and water-boles and searolied
for the inlawing lunik., It was all in vain,
however. The mom ing of the second
day came arid we had to acknowledge
that he had got away xciokm the line to
the south. So the ch**,e wus disoon
tinued and the command was set in
readiness for jfJvingtJiVheeler a soldier’s
funeral. We srHigM out ns favorable a
spot as vve could, ntibrt of sciilineJ point
above a little, HcuMhig thread of a
river, tujjtj .yr^eije the only patch
of green in all the area we had Irav
: we d-iig his
gray#, 1 ffhO: yiMXiiBiiawh; marched down
.,(.rom t )thp,({yvsft, a matter,, i should,pay,
rrpe khIh;Sr .Jh.WitSiiflo.long a (listtinge
ti tutu *, ,1'drD U'I!)V 88 usd) ,o(dlo
!, ^ •wz. ■= 5 e
- ___- _
t
nvs&m T, m sz&- -i
t,»t T i !ki t; j A > c \
r r
< Wl gl f t v fe :
, i Ims ’h '^1
eWMkx fW* 4 Ml>
^ f
*S*' k,fr
’ firpl iiH 'f {C^Mj
11 fiClD :
>. Ay mk
NI
WALKED INTO THE MIDST
iy geipyl OF US.
a country for the con
of .he l*md, holdt.alk so .he
the lender U,
. we drew near to the
the .native noteo
''T Wtac ''
reimot HpfWc
lmt * Wa **
Imndsoemed
% °“ " lH, ‘ "' 6 wHd
1 SUC w1,M1 1‘ rnu “ c 1 ,1< W( ' vttr re
‘
,w| “ d V “^ th * 1 T °^
'SWYr Is a man and his life
tU*vMU«fa has to expect now or
wss » <d,w, ff e frMn
« w «t softnew rose. Mdooe
! » lu,0 ‘ i ‘ Ho P® coining up out
, * <>s< * rt *° H re6t is**.dt-iul IVheef
kW*S&»i\d dw 11 -’ * uln< l marched on to the open
swung around, still [Saying,
(it'that..very moment a face ap
overhanging promon
BWgw; ? nd as we all stood, sur
inat >!!ity to speak or
move, a soldier form appeared and
highi^nil.eyt.h Wtd#)IWalked
.l.-iliiliB
“Soulji told me on IUouifgkiit iboftue
hi:ex«(u i11 1 ,ivifojctr mhhatiisnJataHj tliat
fvei,fflOMlf,l. liav«i(en< apeiUeilral. iM'illnfl a
eoidier's knowledge of the burial serv
ice <>£, !< > hear
i he hand play oru« more. Min Bering’ in
(MllnoWti'WV'fi JiiVf,‘M(>f , )TiUl?dftVhe
lyadc.l ai ^' u „^ l, ( n ^’. !•«<) . b«en
e ie c ?© t , ed
man ‘.‘I'li^alrent^Ao^ s st range influence, $*,0 nijd find $Jh Touted is
j,7C'L*fYtiaA, l1 P>?... h‘ hjf y
Jj .TT a 2> T’/.’f.J, a,
' hicapo nccord.
Safalu*.
'uynt. Tln-rt, of.Jmliu was. f. lufd Tiifrf'irlfeu'^goTern- t«. dfi^.H crtinmlly
not
Kr ' fier a
ful i,'fndia. i^fe«bgliV.'<u^?^Wra.rpost W mALtherc arMW.noo
tree* ^|®lk%#mfn of
fire in ftV§. 9 packet
of the njJWP^Sm whi’e th
government $ 2 .ooo to $3
soo R year o.. t ,oI,th M ynflt*.
WflT?,pf l ff- fhwp^t v i* iprrp^.^vtp.ihi.
WM'lM* WrviWW** «»Rngm^^pjia^.pnn nr«r (V«prIgi
ra »''>'»'»
81 \ivi>l).Ja ma l! ,n .:n ;; !. nn'i 1
y
rUllllvl^'riil,'CMM)ii|i>4tt«* , TE'ArunMinyepep
^laW4e'.m^:'¥ri^, ,: itIrtI'iIfadi
: i 25ct 8
>gno .
- ■■■ •»
I rwwsv* S ia,Uonstipation ana Tndi
gestion. Fc-'nlatrs tki l iver. Price, 25 cts.