We saw several homes along the river, and to access them, we had to travel up steep hills, which could be very hazardous in the winter.
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| The Killen & Canal System at Lock 6 was located at the boating dock at the end of Turtle Landing Road. |
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| Soldiers rest at Butler Cemetery in front of the Polo Club. |
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| Old Gabe Cemetery, located at CR 42 Gabriel Butler, also known as "Ole Gabe," was born in the Carolinas in 1779, during the time of the Revolutionary War. His name appears in the records in Kentucky from the 1800s. He married his first wife, Sarah Whitesides, in Warren County, KY, on December 26, 1803. Gabe was among the earliest white settlers of Lauderdale County. He arrived here during the early 1800s and leased land from Cherokee Indian Chief Doublehead on the Chief's Reserve. After Doublehead was killed in 1807, the government directed the settlers on his Reserve to leave. Gabe and other settlers signed a petition in 1809 asking to remain; however, the settlers were elected around 1811. Gabe and his family moved to the north, to Tennessee. Indian Treaties signed in 1817 allowed the creation of Lauderdale County in February 1818. The Federal Land Office was established, allowing land to be sold here beginning in March of 1818. Gabe traveled to Huntsville on November 14, 1818, and purchased land here along Bluewater Creek. Eventually, he owned several acres in this area. |
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Gaberial "Old Gabe" Butler 1779-1856 Gabe's land was fertile, with an abundance of good water, timber, and game. He built his home on the hill across Bluewater. He expected the road between Huntsville and Florence to be constructed nearby, giving him easy access to his farmland on the other side of the creek. However, the road was built 1 1/2 miles south in the general vicinity of the modern-day US Highway 72. After 1824, Gabe built his second home southwest of here on this side of the creek. Old Gabe donated two acres of land to start the Primitive Baptist Church at Bluewater on May 16, 1840.
The churches at Mitchell Town and Elgin Crossroads developed from that church. The cemetery at this location, one of the earliest in Lauderdale County, was established by Gabe and named for him. Gabe died in November 1856 at the age of 77. He and some of his family members are buried within the rock walls. Old Gabe had three wives and 11 children, nine of whom married and raised families in this area. Many of the descendants of “Old Gabe" are buried in this cemetery.
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| Gaberial "Old Gabe" Butler 1779-1856 Cemetery Butler Cemetery Deeded to Gabriel Butler, Nov 14, 1818 |
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CR 568Spider, Ghost, Skeletons, Witches, Pumpkins "Halloween" |
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| Bettie Anne Highway Historic |
Bought Lottery tickets and rode to Lawrenceburg, stopping at The Brass Lantern for lunch.
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| Brass Lantern Hoyt Tidwell & wife were there promoting their recipe book, which included his wife's famous chicken dumpling recipe. |
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| Barred Owl bird of prey resting on its perch |
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| David Crockett Museum with carved pumpkins inviting us inside |
In the museum, we saw Crockett, Tennessee, Westward Movement, Crockett's distillery, Crockett the Politician, the Great Frontier, Crockett's power mill, Crockett the Industrialist, Crockett the Hunter, Crockett's office, his timeline 1786-1822, some of his tools, Markee of the Almo, where David Crockett was killed, and Crockett the homesteader.
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| Autumn leaves mirroring the lake, what a beautiful sight. |
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| Monday, after the weekend of Celebrating Halloween, still lingered at the Town Square of Lawrenceburg. |
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| Witches sitting, and spiders climbing on the white brick wall showing the joys of a bright October Halloween Day. |
Seeing gobblings of all kinds in places we would not have seen if we had chosen to stay home.
We met new people, tried new food, and spent the day together on one of our many traveling adventures.















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