Skip to content
Tennessee Encyclopedia Logo
  • Home
  • About
    • This Land Called Tennessee
    • Foreword
    • Acknowledgments
    • Authors
    • Staff Members
    • Supporters
  • Categories
  • Objects
    • Entries
    • Images
    • Interactives
  • Contact
    • Suggest A Topic
    • Corrections
  • Donate
  • Browse Site »
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z
  • 0-9

B

Boy Scouts of America, Tennessee

The Boy Scout program came to both the United States and Tennessee in 1910, only three years after General Robert Baden-Powell founded the program in Great Britain. In 1909 William Perry "Buck" Toms read an article on the scouting movement…

Boyd, Henry Allen

Henry Allen Boyd, founder of the Nashville Globe, was the son of Richard Henry Boyd, founder and manager of the National Baptist Publishing Board. As the son of one of Nashville's most prominent black businessmen and public figures, Boyd learned…

Boyd, John W.

John W. Boyd was one of the first African Americans to serve in the Tennessee General Assembly. Born in Georgia to Jackson and Martha Boyd around 1841, John Boyd grew up probably in both Georgia and Tennessee. His family is…

Boyd, Richard Henry

Richard Henry Boyd, a founder of both the National Baptist Convention and the National Baptist Publishing Board, was born in Texas late in the antebellum era. After receiving an education at Bishop College, an institution for black Baptist men supported…

Boyle, Virginia Frazer

Virginia Frazer Boyle, "Poet Laureate of the Confederacy," was born in Chattanooga on February 14, 1863, to Charles Wesley and Letitia Austin Frazer. After the Civil War, the family moved to Memphis, where her father practiced law. Boyle challenged tradition…

Brabson, Reese Bowen

Reese Bowen Brabson, attorney, state legislator, and U.S. congressman, was born at Brabson's Ferry, Knox County, on September 16, 1817. He graduated from Maryville College and studied law at Dandridge in Jefferson County. In 1844 he married Sarah Maria Keith,…

Bradford, Roark

Roark Bradford, novelist, short story writer, and journalist, was born in Lauderdale County, where he was raised on a cotton plantation in the Nankipoo-Knob Creek area. The African Americans who worked the farm and with whom he attended church strongly…

Bradley Academy

Bradley Academy is a historic African American school in Murfreesboro that now serves as a community heritage center. The name Bradley Academy was given to the first school in Murfreesboro and to subsequent school buildings located on property donated by…

Bradley County

Located in southeast Tennessee, Bradley County was carved out of the Ocoee District, which had been part of the Cherokee Nation. Today, one of the top tourist sites in Tennessee is Red Clay State Historical Area, an interpretative center for…

Bradley, Owen

Owen Bradley, musician and producer, was one of the pioneers of the Nashville recording industry and a developer of the Nashville Sound. Born in Westmoreland, Sumner County, Bradley began his musical career early by assembling musical groups to play at…

Bragg, Braxton

Braxton Bragg, controversial commander of the Army of Tennessee from June 1862 to December 1863, was born in Warrenton, North Carolina, on March 21, 1817. He attended West Point and graduated fifth in the class of 1837. Bragg fought against…

Bragg, John

John Thomas Bragg, long-time member of the Tennessee House of Representatives and chair of its powerful Finance, Ways and Means Committee, was born in Woodbury on May 9, 1918, to Minor Elam and Callie Luree Bragg. In his early teens,…

Brainerd Mission

Brainerd Mission was a multi-acre mission school situated on Chickamauga Creek near present-day Chattanooga. Named for eighteenth-century missionary David Brainerd, it was the largest institution of its type among the Eastern Cherokees. The Boston-based American Board of Commissioners for Foreign…

Branson, Lloyd

Artist Lloyd Branson was born in Union County in 1854 and spent his life in the Knoxville area. In 1871, at age seventeen, he exhibited at the East Tennessee Division Fair and received favorable notice. As a result, Branson moved…

Brauch, Liane and Russell, William Lawson

The Russells, husband and wife, were leaders of mammalian genetics studies at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Liane Brauch was born in Austria in 1923. She immigrated to the United States, enrolled in Hunter College, and earned her Ph.D. in zoology…

Bredesen, Philip Norman

Phil Bredesen, the forty-eighth governor of Tennessee, built a reputation for effective leadership in business and government as a private businessman and as mayor of Nashville/Davidson County from 1991 to 1999. He campaigned for governor in 2002 on a platform…

Brentwood Academy v. Tennessee Secondary Schools Athletic Association

Brentwood Academy v. TSSAA is a nationally significant court case that answers the question as to whether or not a high school athletic association can prohibit recruiting without violating a school’s First Amendment rights. Located just south of Nashville, Brentwood Academy,…

Brentwood, Battle of

The village of Brentwood, situated between Nashville and Franklin on the Nashville & Decatur (also called the Tennessee & Alabama) Railroad, was a strategic supply depot and source of food and livestock for the Union army during its operations in…

Brewer, Carson

Carson Brewer, journalist and conservationist, was born in Hancock County, the son of a rural postmaster. Brewer attended Maryville College (1939-41) before entering military service during World War II. He served in the European Theater and returned to college at…

Brewster Sr., William Herbert

Born July 2, 1897, on a farm near Somerville, William H. Brewster was the oldest of sharecroppers William and Callie Polk Brewster’s eight children. In 1915 Brewster entered Memphis’s Howe Collegiate Institute and studied under the Reverends T. O. Fuller…

Page 5 of 7« First«...34567»

Browse A-Z

  • Entries (134)
  • Images (0)
  • Interactives (2)

Categories

  • African-American
  • Agriculture
  • Architecture
  • Arts
  • Civil Rights
  • Civil War
  • Commerce
  • Conservation
  • County History
  • Culture
  • Education
  • Event
  • Geography and Geology
  • Industry
  • Institution
  • Journalism
  • Labor
  • Law
  • Literature
  • Medicine
  • Military
  • Music
  • Native American
  • People
  • Place
  • Politics
  • Preservation
  • Primary City
  • Recreation
  • Religion
  • Science
  • Settlement
  • Social
  • Sports
  • Suffrage
  • Thematic Essay
  • Transportation
  • Women

  • 305 Sixth Ave. North
  • Nashville, TN 37243
  • (615) 741-8934
  • Monday – Friday
  • 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM

Online Edition © 2002 ~ 2018, The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, Tennessee. All Rights Reserved.

Functionality and information are in compliance with guidelines established by the American Association for State and Local History for online state and regional encyclopedias.

© 2018 Tennessee Historical Society | Built by R.Squared with eCMS WP
Close Sliding Bar Area

Popular Entries

  • Lamar Alexander
  • Daniel Boone
  • Civil Rights Movement
  • Civil War
  • Civil War Occupation
  • Columbia Race Riot, 1946
  • Alfred Leland Crabb
  • Cumberland Furnace
  • John Bartlett Dennis
  • J.R. "Pitt" Hyde III

Popular Images

  • Adelicia Acklen
  • Andrew Johnson
  • Andrew Johnson National Historic Site
  • Cordell Hull
  • Dolly Parton
  • National Campground
  • Opry House And Opryland Hotel
  • Shelby County
  • The Emancipator
  • Walking Horse National Celebration

Recent Updates

  • "Tennessee" Ernie Ford
  • 101St Airborne Division
  • Aaron Douglas
  • Beth Halteman Harwell
  • William Edward Haslam
  • The Patrons of Husbandry
  • World War I
  • Worth, Inc.
  • Zion Presbyterian Church
  • Felix Kirk Zollicoffer