We started the day by eating breakfast at Steak & Shake in Huntsville. We were on our way to Fort Payne when we stopped along the road to take pictures of Historic sites and markers.![]() |
| Alabama's Music Fan Club & Museum, which houses memorable items once owned by Randy Owens, Teddy Gentry, Jeff Cook, and Mark Herndon |
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| Crow Town in Stevenson One of the Five Lower Towns was established by the Chickamauga Cherokees in 1782 under Dragging Canoe's leadership. Territorial Governor William Blount reported to the Secretary of War in 1792 that: "Crow Town lies on the north side of the Tennessee (River), half a mile from the river, up Crow Creek, 30 miles below the Suck. (It) is the lowest town in the Cherokee Nation and contained 30 huts in 1790. The Creeks and Northward tribes cross (the river) here." All of the Five Lower Towns were on the extreme Cherokee frontier. Running Water and Nickajack were near Chattanooga, Tennessee. Long Island Town was twenty miles below the Suck, east of Bridgeport, Alabama. Lookout Mountain Town was near Trenton, Georgia. (Continued on another side) |
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| Crow Town in Stevenson Crow Town encompassed several miles by the early 1800s as increasing numbers of Cherokee families settled there. With the creation of Jackson County in 1819, many Cherokees moved to the south side of the river – some 19th-century maps placed Crow Town near the southeast end of Snodgrass Bridge, which carries Highway 117 across the Tennessee River east of Stevenson. The 1782 site of Crow Town, one-half mile from the confluence of Crow Creek and the original channel of the Tennessee River, was flooded with the closing of the spillway gates at Guntersville Dam in 1939. |
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| Trail of Tears Bridgeport In May 1838, soldiers, under the command of U.S. Army General Winfield Scott, began rounding up Cherokee Indians in this area who had refused to move to Indian Territory in Oklahoma. About 16,000 Cherokees were placed in stockades in Tennessee and Alabama until their removal. Roughly 3,000 were sent by boat down the Tennessee River, and the rest were marched overland in the fall and winter of 1838-1839. This forced removal under harsh conditions resulted in the deaths of about 4,000 Cherokees. In late June of 1838, a party of 1,070 poorly equipped Indians was marched overland from Ross' Landing at Chattanooga, Tennessee, to Waterloo, Alabama, because of low water in the upper Tennessee River. Following the general route of present-day U.S. Highway 72, they camped at Bellefonte, where about 300 escaped between Bellefonte and Woodville. On June 26, the remainder refused to proceed. Consequently, the militia, under the command of Army Captain G.S. Drane, was tasked with mobilizing the group and escorting them to Waterloo. Arriving in miserable condition on July 10, 1838, the Cherokee were placed on a boat to continue their journey West. The "Trail of Tears," which resulted from the Indian Removal Act passed by the U.S. Congress in 1830, is one of the darkest chapters in American history. |
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| Alabama Welcomes You, the 22nd State |
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| Alabama's Fan Club and Museum, Randy Owens and Teddy Wayne Gentry |
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| Alabama's Fan Club and Museum Mark Joel Herndon & Jeffrey Alan Cook |
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| Alabama's Fan Club and Museum |
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| Alabama's Fan Club and Museum |
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| Fort Payne City Park |
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| At Fort Payne City Park, we saw several historical markers and the individual statues of Teddy Wayne Gentry, Jeffery Alan Cook, Randy Yeuell Owen, and Mark Joel Herndon, all members of the group Alabama. |
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| Confederate War Marker |
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| Fort Payne's Train Museum. The Fort Payne Depot Museum was erected in 1891. It is housed in a unique Richardsonian Romanesque building of locally quarried pink and white sandstone. It served as a depot for the Alabama-Great Southern Railroad for approximately 85 years. The Gussie Killian Collection, housed in the north room, contains extensive examples of Native American basketry, pottery, and artifacts. Our south room displays the L.A. Dobbs exhibit, along with memorabilia from the Civil War, World War I and II, and the Vietnam War. |
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| Boom Town Historic District Around 1889-1891, Fort Payne experienced a major industrial boom, driven by New England investors who speculated heavily on the area's mineral deposits. During this period, several highly ornate commercial and civic buildings, along with the planned park, were constructed along Gault Avenue. The Fort Payne Opera House and other buildings in the same block been built by the Fort Payne Coal & Iron Co., together with the Sawyer Building, the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Depot & Union Park, which retain the integrity of the boomtown era and comprise a historic district listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1989, the year of Fort Payne's centennial. |
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| Lookout Mountain Ruby Falls |
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| Lookout Mountain Ruby Falls |
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| Inside Ruby Falls, we saw Potato Chip. |
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| Ruby Falls |
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| Inside Ruby Fal, we saw Steak and Potatoes. |
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| Lookout Mountain Ruby Falls |
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| Relaxing after the long trip into the cave |
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| My trip to Ruby Falls |
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| Lookout Mountain Welcome to Ruby Falls |
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| Lookout Mountain |
We rode to Fort Payne, Alabama, to visit the Group Alabama Museum, the Train Depot Museum, and the city park to see the statues of Teddy Wayne Gentry, Jeffery Alan Cook, Randy Yeuell Owen, and Mark Joel Herndon of the Group Alabama.
The historic markers I took pictures of were: Payne's Fort, Battle of Wauhatchie, Boom Town, Crown Town in Stevenson, Decatur County, Fort Payne City Park, Sequoyah Marker, The Trail of Tears at Bridgeport, and Willis Town Marker.
We ate lunch at Cracker Barrel in South Pittsburg, rode over to Chattanooga, and went down into the cave to see Ruby Falls.
Ruby Falls is an underground waterfall that is 145 feet high and has been named one of the most Incredible Cave Waterfalls on Earth.
It is America's deepest commercial cave and largest underground waterfall.
We went down an elevator shaft to the cave's floor, where we were given a tour. We talked about the rock formations, and the grand finale was the colorful Ruby Falls, a small hole where water was coming out.
Some of the rock formations that we saw were Totem Pole, Crystal Chandelier, Donkey Formation,
tobacco leaves, elephant's foot, Steak and Potatoes, Potato Chips, Leaning Tower, Dragon's foot, Beehives, Angle's Wings, Niagara Falls, Weight Watchers Lane, and Leo's passage.
Another great day of sightseeing!





























