Hair Conrad Cabin
Hair Conrad Cabin | |
35°9′47″N 84°54′37″W / 35.16306°N 84.91028°W / 35.16306; -84.91028 | |
Area | 4 acres (1.6 ha) |
---|---|
Built | 1804 (1804) |
NRHP reference No. | 76001765[1] |
Added to NRHP | September 13, 1976 |
The Hair Conrad Cabin is a historic log cabin in Bradley County, Tennessee, United States, and the oldest residential structure in the county.[2]
It is a single-pen cabin that was built in the early 1800s by a Cherokee known by the names Tekahskeh and Hair Conrad. Its construction followed the style of cabins built by white settlers of the era.[2][3]
Hair Conrad, who had a white father and a Cherokee mother, farmed the land near the cabin, growing apples, peaches, and other produce. A leader in the Cherokee community and a "man of means", he was the founder of a school for the education of Cherokee children. He participated in writing the Cherokee Constitution in 1827, and prior to 1836 he was a representative of the Cherokee Nation in Washington, D.C.[4] He was later (in 1838) to lead the first detachment of Cherokees from Rattlesnake Springs on the Trail of Tears and died soon after reaching Oklahoma in 1839.[2][4][5]
After Hair Conrad's departure, a succession of white families owned and lived in the cabin. It is now on the property of Blythewood Farms.[4]
The cabin was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.[1]
See also
- Charles R. Hicks
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ a b c "National Register of Historic Places". Cleveland/Bradley Chamber of Commerce. Archived from the original on December 15, 2013. Retrieved January 26, 2014.
- ^ "Your Passport to Explore Cherokee Heritage". VisitClevelandTN.com. Archived from the original on October 7, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2014.
- ^ a b c "A closer look at the Hair Conrad cabin". Cleveland Daily Banner. August 24, 2011. Archived from the original on February 2, 2014.
- ^ "A Brief History of the Trail of Tears". Cherokee Nation History and Culture. Cherokee Nation. Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. Retrieved January 26, 2014.
External links
Media related to Hair Conrad Cabin at Wikimedia Commons
- v
- t
- e
- Cherokee Nation
- Eastern Band
- United Keetoowah Band
- Society
- National holiday
- Calendar
- Clans
- Chiefs
- Gadugi
- Ghigau
- Green Corn Ceremony
- Language
- history
- syllabary
- Cherokee (Unicode block)
- Cherokee Supplement (Unicode block)
- Cherokee Immersion School
- New Kituwah Academy
- Marbles
- Spiritual beliefs
- Ethnobotany
- Stomp dance
- Booger dance
- Flag of the Cherokee Nation
- Heritage Center
- Cherokee Preservation Foundation
- Warriors Society
- Original Keetoowah Society
- Keetoowah Nighthawk Society
- Youth Choir
- Heritage groups
- Cherokee Southwest Township
- Oconaluftee Indian Village
- Education
- Female Seminary
- Male Seminary
- Cherokee Central Schools
- Cherokee High School
- Sequoyah Schools
- Sequoyah High School
villages
- Cherokee Towns (pre-Removal)
- Amoyeligunahita
- Brasstown
- Chatuga
- Chilhowee
- Chota
- Conasauga
- Cowee
- Coyotee
- Crowtown
- Dirt town
- Ducktown
- Etowah
- Frogtown
- Hiwassee
- Hiwassee Island
- Island town
- Isunigu
- Joara
- Keowee
- Kituwa
- Kulsetsiyi
- Long Swamp
- Mialoquo
- Nacoochee
- Nantahala
- NewEchota
- Nickajack
- Nikwasi
- Nununyi
- Ocoee
- Oconee
- Oostanaula
- Red Clay
- Settico
- Spike Bucktown
- Talisi
- Talulah
- Tanasi
- Tellico
- Tomassee
- Tomotley
- Toqua
- Toxoway
- Tsatanugi
- Tuckasegee
- Tugaloo
- Turkeytown
- Turtletown
- Tuskegee
- Running Water
- Titsohili
- Cherokee Nations
- Western Cherokee Nation
- Eastern Band
memorial sites
- Cherokee National Capitol
- Cherokee Removal Memorial Park
- Chieftains Museum
- First Cherokee Female Seminary Site
- Judaculla Rock
- Long Island
- John Ross House
- Ross's Landing
- Sequoyah's Cabin
- Tellico Blockhouse
- Trail of Tears State Park
- Brainerd Mission
- Rattlesnake Springs
- Fort Cass
- Red Clay State Historic Park
- Hair Conrad Cabin
- Nancy Ward Tomb
- Blythe Ferry
- Bussell Island
- Chief Vann House Historic Site
- Mantle Rock
- Museum of the Cherokee People
- Untokiasdiyi
- Standing Stone
- Stick Ball Grounds
- Cullasaja River
- Tuckasegee River
- Oconaluftee valley
- Oconaluftee River
- Abrams Creek
- Sycamore Shoals
- The Great Trading Path
- The Great War Path
- Hiwassee River Heritage Center
- Chatata
- Tuckaleechee
- Fort Smith Historic Site
- Port Royal State Park
- Five Civilized Tribes Museum
- Tlanusiyi
- Cherokee Path
- Early leaders
- Cherokee Nation East (1794-1839)
- Enola
- Pathkiller
- Big Tiger
- Charles R. Hicks
- William Hicks
- John Ross
- Cherokee Nation West (1810-1839)
- The Bowl
- Degadoga
- Tahlonteeskee
- John Jolly
- Sam Houston
- John Looney
- John Rogers
- Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (1824-present)
- Cherokee Nation in Indian Territory (1839–1907)
- Cherokee Nation (1975–present)
- J. B. Milam
- W. W. Keeler
- Ross Swimmer
- Wilma Mankiller
- Joe Byrd
- Chadwick "Corntassel" Smith
- Bill John Baker
- Chuck Hoskin, Jr.
- United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians (1939–present)
- James L. Gordon
- John W. Hair
- Other notable Cherokee
- Nancy Ward
- Tsali
- Tahlonteeskee (warrior)
- Turtle-at-Home
- Junaluska
- Goingsnake
- Elias Boudinot
- Wauhatchie
- James Vann
- David Vann
- Joseph Vann
- Bob Benge
- Nunnahitsunega
- Ned Christie
- John Martin
- Markwayne Mullin
- Yvette Herrell
- Sequoya
- Major Ridge
- Jenny McIntosh
- Sam Sixkiller
- Clement V. Rogers
- Redbird Smith
- Durbin Feeling
- Hastings Shade
- Kimberly Teehee