Lawrence County Archives

Lawrence County Archives Located in Leoma, Tennessee, the Lawrence County Archives was formed in 1988 under the supervision of the Lawrence County Public Records Commission.

Today in Lawrence County - June 1, 1906"Spring Creek"
06/01/2026

Today in Lawrence County - June 1, 1906
"Spring Creek"

06/01/2026

Happy birthday, Tennessee!

Tennessee was first admitted to the Union on June 1, 1796 and had been a state for 21 years when Lawrence County was founded on October 21, 1817.

Tennessee's road to statehood was long and arduous. In 1784, settlers in several western counties of North Carolina (an area that encompasses twelve modern counties in East Tennessee) formed an unauthorized state government which they called Franklin, wrote a constitution, elected a governor, and proceeded to exist in a state of political limbo for the next four years.

Neither the hapless Confederation Congress nor the State of North Carolina recognized the existence of Franklin, and after years of in-fighting and quarreling, Franklin dissolved and rejoined North Carolina in 1789. A year later, the Federal government organized the territory claimed by North Carolina west of the mountains into the Southwest Territory.

A 1795 census of the Southwest Territory showed it exceeded the population requirement for statehood. In a referendum that followed the census, voters in the territory approved the motion for statehood by a margin of 6,504 to 2,562.

After the referendum, Territorial Governor William Blount called for a constitutional convention in Knoxville to draft a state constitution. The 1796 Constitution allowed all free males who owned property the right to vote, regardless of race. This was a very progressive stance for the time. According to the historian J.G.M. Ramsey, Thomas Jefferson is said to have remarked that Tennessee's 1796 Constitution was the "least imperfect and most republican of the state constitutions."

The name "Tennessee" comes from the Cherokee word "Tanasi." Although the exact meaning of the word is unclear, Tanasi was an important 18th-century Cherokee village in modern Monroe County. The village's status as a trading center resulted in Europeans naming the river after the village. Thus, the name 'Tanasi' became the Tennessee River, and subsequently the State of Tennessee.

Tennessee was admitted as the sixteenth state of the Union on June 1, 1796, by a bill signed into law by President George Washington.

Today in Lawrence County - May 30, 1890"Locals"
05/30/2026

Today in Lawrence County - May 30, 1890
"Locals"

Today in Lawrence County - May 29, 1912"Route Four"
05/29/2026

Today in Lawrence County - May 29, 1912
"Route Four"

Today in Lawrence County - May 28, 1913"Leoma"
05/28/2026

Today in Lawrence County - May 28, 1913
"Leoma"

Thanks to a query from a patron, here's a website where you can find aerial photography of Lawrence County from the 1980...
05/28/2026

Thanks to a query from a patron, here's a website where you can find aerial photography of Lawrence County from the 1980s, and purchase prints.

(The website is not in any way affiliated with the Archives. Unfortunately, we do not have these images in our collection.)

Over 19 million aerial photos documenting the history of rural America spanning five decades.

Today in Lawrence County - May 27, 1904"Rural Route No. 2"
05/27/2026

Today in Lawrence County - May 27, 1904
"Rural Route No. 2"

Today in Lawrence County - May 25, 1906"St. Joseph"
05/25/2026

Today in Lawrence County - May 25, 1906
"St. Joseph"

Today in Lawrence County - May 24, 1895"Town and County News"
05/24/2026

Today in Lawrence County - May 24, 1895
"Town and County News"

Address

2588 Highway 43 South
Leoma, TN
38468

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 8am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 8am - 4:30pm
Thursday 8am - 4:30pm
Friday 8am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+19318524091

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