BIBLIOGRAPHY
 Culture

 
Note:  Some historic documents listed in the bibliography are no longer in print.

 

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  • Adams, Helen J.  "A Child's View of the Riot of '34."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 3:4 (1977): 92-94.

 

  • Alexander, Charles C., and Virginia W. Alexander.  Historic Ebenezer (Reeses Chapel) Presbyterian Church and Cemetery, Maury County, Columbia, Tennessee.  N.P., 1968.

 

  • Alexander, Virginia W. Riverside United Methodist Church, 1945-1995.  Columbia: Riverside UMC, 1995.

 

  • Anderson, Victoria S.  Social and Economic Conditions of Small Farmers in Antebellum and Postbellum Coffee County, Tennessee. Unpublished Master's Thesis, West Georgia College, 1995.

 

 

 

  • Barbee, John D.  Navigation and River Improvements in Middle Tennessee, 1807-1834.  Nashville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, Vanderbilt University, 1934.

 

  • Barr, Charlotte.  The Bell Buckle Years.  Bell Buckle: Iris Press, 1995.

 

  • Barr, Thomas C.  The Story of the Presbyteries of Columbia and Nashville: From Early Settlement to 1972.  Nashville: Middle Tennessee Presbytery, Presbyterian Church, 1976.

 

  • Baumgarner, John R.  Sarah Childress Polk: A Biography of a Remarkable First Lady. Jefferson: McFarland Press, 1997.

 

  • Bedford County Historical Society.  Doors of the Past, Homes of Shelbyville and Bedford County.  Shelbyville: Shelbyville Times-Gazette, 1969.

 

  • Bell, Donald B. "Social Activities Associated with Two Rural Cemeteries in Coffee County, Tennessee."  Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin 41 (1975): 93-98.

 

  • Bergeron, Paul H.  "All in the Family: President Polk in the White House." Tennessee Historical Quarterly 46:1 (1987): 10-20.

 

  • Bergeron, Paul H.  "My Brothers Keeper: William H. Polk Goes to School."  North Carolina Historical Review 44 (1967): 188-294.

 

  • Bethbirei Presbyterian Church (Marshall County). Souvenir of Centennial Celebration of Bethbirei Presbyterian Church (Rock Creek Church) Held at the Church, Near Lewisburg, Tennessee, on May 13, 14, & 15, 1910.  N.P., 1910.

 

  • Betterly, Richard D.  "St. John's Episcopal Churchyard: Material Culture and Antebellum Class Distinction."  Tennessee Historical Quarterly 53:2 (1994): 88-99.

 

  • Black, Patti C.  The Natchez Trace.  Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 1985.

 

  • Brandt, Robert.  Touring Middle Tennessee Backroads.  Winston-Salem: John F. Blair Publisher, 1995.

 

  • Brestrup, Craig.  "On the Natchez Trace." Southern Humanities Review 25 (1991): 23-38.

 

  • Bridgewater, Betty Anderson.  History of Beans Creek Christian Church of God, 1857-1917.  Tullahoma: Coffee County Historical Society, 1974.

 

  • Bridgewater, Betty Anderson.  "St. Barnabas Parish: The First One Hundred Years."  Coffee County Historical Society Quarterly 4:4 (1974): 1-57.

 

  • Bridgewater, Betty Anderson.  Tullahoma and the Hurricane Springs Hotel Company. Tullahoma: Coffee County Historical Society, 1976.

 

  • Caldwell, Benjamin H., Jr., Robert Hicks, and Mark W. Scala, comps. Art of Tennessee.  Nashville: Frist Center for the Visual Arts, 2003.

 

  • Cannon, Minnie Pearl.  Christmas at Grinder's Switch.  Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1985.

 

  • Cannon, Minnie Pearl.  Minnie Pearl's Diary. Greenberg, 1953.

 

  • Cannon, Minnie Pearl, and Joan Dew. Minnie Pearl: An Autobiography.  New York: Simon and Schuster, 1980.

 

  • Carter, Cullen Tullen.  History of the Columbia District of the Tennessee Conference of the Methodist Church. Nashville: Parthenon Press, 1962.

 

  • Cartwright, Peter.  Autobiography of Peter Cartwright, the Backwoods Preacher.  W.P. Strickland, ed.  New York: Hunt and Eaton, 1856.

 

  • Cavender, Anthony P.  A Phonemic and Phonetic Analysis of the Folk Speech of Bedford County, Tennessee.  Knoxville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, University of Tennessee 1974.

 

  • Centennial Celebration, Fourth of July, 1876, at Shelbyville, Bedford County, Tennessee.  Chattanooga: W.I. Crandall, 1877.

 

  • Chapman, Jefferson.  The American Indian in Tennessee:  An Archeological Perspective. Knoxville:  McClung Museum, University of Tennessee, 1982.

 

  • Churches of Maury County, Tennessee, Prior to 1860.  Columbia: Tennessee Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, 1980.

 

  • Clark, Forrest Shelton.  "A History of the Duck River Baptists."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 3:2 (1977): 61-67.

 

  • Cogswell, Robert E.  "A New Date for an Old Church."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 1:3 (1975): 87-91.

 

  • Cogswell, Robert E.  History of the First Presbyterian Church, Shelbyville, Tennessee, 1815-1865.  Nashville: Parthenon Press, 1965.

 

  • Cook, Jerry Wayne.  "Early Cabinet Makers in Bedford County."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 1:3 (1975): 97.

 

  • Cook, Jerry Wayne.  "Old Zion Primitive Baptist Church."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 2:2 (1976): 22.

 

  • Cook, Jerry Wayne. "The Jett Family Brought the First Piano Forte to Shelbyville."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 10:1 (1984): 6-15.

 

  • Cottrell, Dan F.  A Chronology of Significant Occurrences in the History of Columbia Military Academy.  Nashville: Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, Tennessee State University, 1992.

 

  • Cox, Stephen D.  Art and Artisans of Prehistoric Middle Tennessee.  Nashville: Tennessee State Museum, 1985.

 

  • Crowell, Mary Lizzie.  "The Days of the Raft." Bedford County Historical Quarterly 11:3 (1985): 26.

 

  • Crutchfield, James A.  The Natchez Trace: A Pictorial History.  Nashville: Rutledge Hill Press, 1985.

 

  • Davis, William C.  A Way Through the Wilderness: The Natchez Trace and the Civilization of the Southern Frontier.  New York: Harper Collins, 1995.

 

  • Derryberry, Mary Alice.  "History of the Missionary Society of the Bell Buckle United Methodist Church."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 21:1 (1995): 11-13.

 

  • "The Diary of Isaac Conger [Methodist Circuit Rider], 1813."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 28:4 (2002): 84-106.

 

  • Dotson, Edward.  Lest We Forget: Churches of Christ in Hickman County, Tennessee, Across 150 Years.   N.P., 1984.

 

 

 

  • Enterprise Publishing Company.  Columbia, Maury County, Tennessee: Her Progress and Importance.  Manufacturing Advantages, Business and Transportation Facilities, with Sketches of Representative Merchants, Manufacturers and Professional Men. Nashville: A.B. Tavel, 1885.

 

  • Estes, P.M., A.P. Foster, and John Trotwood Moore, comps.  Historic Places in Davidson, Williamson, Maury and Giles Counties.  N.P., N.D.

 

  • Evins, S.C., ed.  Memoir of the Late Elder Elijah Hanks of Maury County, Tennessee: Together with a Synopsis of His Views on the Atonement of Christ and Other Subjects. Nashville: Union and American, 1872.

 

  • Ferguson, Jane E.  The Development of Domestic Architecture in Hickman County, Tennessee, 1800-1910.  Nashville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, Vanderbilt University, 1975.

 

  • Fleming, William Stuart.  A Historical Sketch of Maury County:  Read at the Centennial Celebration in Columbia, Tennessee, July 4th, 1876. Columbia:  Maury County Historical Society, 1967.

 

  • Fleming, William S.  Historical Sketch of Zion Church, Maury County, Tennessee, 1907, and Genealogy of the Frierson Family, 1730-1887. Columbia: Aydelott's Printery, 1907.

 

  • Folmsbee, Stanley J.  "The Turnpike Phase of Tennessee's Internal Improvement System of 1836-1838."  Journal of Southern History 3 (1937): 453-477.

 

  • Ford, Kenneth Roy.  An Analysis of Significant Persons and Events Contributing to a Paradigm for Renewal in the First Presbyterian Church, Shelbyville, Tennessee. Pasadena: Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, Fuller Theological Seminary, 1985.

 

  • Fort, Mary Pepper.  "Religions in Tennessee Before 1820."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 20:2 (1994): 56-61.

 

  • Fountain Creek United Primitive Baptist Church, Culleoka, Tennessee, 85th Church Anniversary Yearbook, 1905-1990.  Self-published, 1991.

 

  • Fowler, William E.  "Folk Remedies and Beliefs in Maury County, 1936."  Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin 53:1 (1987): 7-26.

 

  • Fowler, William E.  Stories and Legends of Maury County, Tennessee.  Nashville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, George Peabody College, 1937.

 

  • Fox, Wilburn Mills.  History and Pictures of the Fifty Churches of Christ in Maury County, Tennessee.  Columbia: Self-published, 1962.

 

  • Galloway, Donnel M.  An Economic, Social and Educational Survey of Maury County, Tennessee.  Knoxville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, University of Tennessee, 1930.

 

  • Garrett, Jill Knight.  Footprints in Stone: Historical Sketches.  (Photographs by Jesse Forman.)  Columbia: First Farmers and Merchants National Bank, 1966.

 

  • Garrett, Jill Knight, and Virginia Alexander. A Guide to Points of Interest in Maury County, Tennessee.  Columbia: Association for the Preservation of Tennessee Antiquities, Maury County Chapter, 1969.

 

  • Garrett, Jill Knight.  "St. John's Church, Ashwood." Tennessee Historical Quarterly 29 (1970): 3-23.

 

  • Gentle, Victor, and Janet Perry.  Tennessee Walking Horses.  Milwaukee: Gareth Stevens Publishing, 2001.

 

  • Gentry, Finis E.  "History of Bethsalem Presbyterian Church U.S., 1816-1993." Bedford County Historical Quarterly 21:3 (1995): 81-85.

 

  • Gentry, Finis E.  "History of Bethsalem Presbyterian Church at Knob Creek." Bedford County Historical Quarterly 21:4 (1995): 104-112.

 

  • Gordon, Robert. "Hunting Lies and Fishy Stories from Bedford County." Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin 43 (1977): 23-26.

 

  • Gore, J.P.  "Indian Sites on the Wartrace Creek and Garrison Valley."   Bedford County Historical Quarterly 8:3 (1982): 74-79.

 

  • Greatwood, Richard Neil.  Charles Quintard (1824-1898): His Role and Significance in the Development of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Tennessee and in the South.  Nashville: Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, Vanderbilt University, 1977.

 

  • Green, Ben A.  Biography of the Tennessee Walking Horse.  Nashville: Parthenon Press, 1960.

 

  • Green, William Mercer.  Memoir of Right Reverend James Harvey Otey, D.D., L.L.D., the First Bishop of Tennessee.  New York: J. Pott, 1885.

 

 

  • Gresham, Mary Richardson.  The History of the Textile Industry in Tennessee.  Nashville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, George Peabody College, 1930.

 

  • Griffin, James B.  "The Chronological Position of the Hopewellian Culture in the Eastern United States."  Museum of Anthropology Anthropological Papers 12 (1958).

 

  • Guardian--A Family Magazine Devoted to the Cause of Female Education on Christian Principles.  Columbia: The Female Institute, 1841-1843.

 

  • Hall, Tom T.  Spring Hill, Tennessee: A Novel. Atlanta: Longstreet Press, 1990.

 

 

  • Hamilton, Neil A.  Visions of Worth: The Life of G.S. Lannom, Independent Entrepreneur. Solon: Preservation Publishing Co., 1988.

 

  • Haywood, John.  The Civil and Political History of the State of Tennessee from its First Settlement up to the Year 1796, Including the Boundaries of the State. Nashville:  N.P., 1823.

 

  • Haywood, John.  The Natural and Aboriginal History of Tennessee up to the First Settlements Therein by the White People in the Year 1768.  Nashville:  N.P., 1823.

 

  • Henderson, Jessie A. "Unmarked Historic Spots of Franklin County." Tennessee Historical Magazine (Ser. 2d) 3 (1934): 111-120.

 

  • Hinshaw, Jane S.  Archaeological Investigations at Rattle and Snap: The Kitchen Ell.  N.P., 1979.

 

  • Historic Sites Assessment of the Proposed Columbia Reservoir.  Knoxville: Tennessee Valley Authority, 1980.

 

  • History of El Bethel Baptist Church, Unionville Highway, Shelbyville, Tennessee, 1865-1991. N.P., 1991.

 

  • History of First Lutheran Church at Shelbyvillle. N.P., 1991.

 

 

  • Hummel, Charles G.  "Aboriginal Life in Bedford County."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 1:1 (1973): 3-6.

 

  • Hurricane Springs with Analysis of its Waters, the Diseases to Which they are Applicable, Hints as to use, Location of Springs, etc.  Mail, Telegraph, and Express Facilities are Perfect, with Offices in Hotel, four Daily Mails--Two from South and Two from the North. Manchester: Franklin County News Printing, 1900.

 

  • Ingram, Joe Mason.  The Educational History of Shelbyville, Tennessee, 1870-1954. Nashville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, George Peabody College, 1954.

 

  • Jackson, Blanche Scott.  Reese's Church and Its Founders.  Columbia: N.P., 1940.

 

  • Jenkins, Al Warren.  The [Episcopal] Diocese of Tennessee, 1898-1978.  Sewanee: University of the South, 1978.

 

  • Jenkins, Al Warren.  The History of the Episcopal Churchwomen in the Diocese of Tennessee. Sewanee: Unpublished Master's Thesis, University of the South, 1983.

 

  • Jolley, Robert L.  Archaeological Investigations at the Clifton Place Plantation Privy, Maury County, Tennessee.  Knoxville: Tennessee Anthropological Association Miscellaneous Papers No. 9, 1983.

 

  • Jones, James B., Jr.  Mill Villages in Tennessee. Study Unit No. 3.  Nashville: Tennessee Historical Commission, 1986.

 

  • Jones, James B., Jr.  Pre-TVA Hydro-Electric Power Development in Tennessee, 1901-1933. Study Unit No 1.  Nashville: Tennessee Historical Commission, 1988.

 

  • Kocsis, Alexander.  Old Stone Fort.  Manchester: Browning Printing Service, 1973.

 

  • Lewisburg Methodist Chapel, Women's Society of Christian Service.  Cooking 'Round the World and at Home.  Lewisburg: N.P., 1972.

 

  • Little, D.D.  History of the Presbytery of Columbia, Tennessee.  Columbia: Maury Democrat, 1928.

 

  • Locke, Mildred, comp.  Bell Buckle United Methodist Church: 100 years 1893-1993. Bell Buckle: N.P., 1993.

 

  • Lynn, Mrs. O. J.  I Remember When: An Oral History of Centerville and Hickman County. Centerville: Oral History Project, Homecoming '86 Roots Committee, 1986.

 

  • Martinez, Corinne.  Coffee County, From Arrowheads to Rockets:  A History of Coffee County, Tennessee.  Manchester: Coffee County Conservation Board, 1969.

 

  • Martinez, Corinne.  Trinity Lutheran Church, Tullahoma, Tennessee.  Tullahoma: Self-published, 2002.

 

  • McBride, Robert M. "A Camp Meeting at Goshen Church." Tennessee Historical Quarterly 22 (1963): 137-142.

 

  • McBride, Virginia.  "A History of the Smith Chapel Church."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 2:4 (1976): 15-16.

 

  • McDonald, Kenneth M.  Milling in Middle Tennessee, 1780-1860.  Nashville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, Vanderbilt University, 1939.

 

  • McDonaugh, James L.  "Forgotten Empire: Sam Graham's Pinewood."  Tennessee Historical Quarterly 27 (1968): 40-49.

 

  • McKennon, Sara Tom, and Deane Kennedy Hendrix.  The History of Hunter Meetinghouse and Its Cemetery Records, Mt. Pleasant, Tennessee.  Columbia: P-Vine Press, 1983.

 

  • McKinney, Robert L.  The Ancestral Home of James Knox Polk, 11th President of the United States, Columbia, Tennessee: Under Management of James K. Polk Memorial Association,  James K. Polk Memorial Auxiliary of Columbia.  Columbia: James K. Polk Memorial Association, 1967.

 

  • McMahon, Basil B.  The Mystery of the Old Stone Fort.  Nashville: Tennessee Book Co., 1965.

 

  • McMillin, Lawrence. The Schoolmaker: Sawney Webb and the Bell Buckle Story. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1971.

 

  • Morgan, Lisa.  "The Poor House of Bedford County." Bedford County Historical Quarterly 2:2 (1976): 10-11.

 

 

  • Murrell, Frances C.  The Methodists Came This Way.  Tullahoma: First United Methodist Church of Tullahoma, 1984.

 

 

  • One Hundredth Anniversary of the Thompson Creek Baptist Church House, 1889-1989.  Raus: The Church, 1989.

 

  • Pearsall, James E., and Clyde D. Malone.  "A Middle Woodland Solstice Alignment at Old Stone Fort."  Tennessee Anthropologist 16:1 (Spring 1991): 20-27.

 

  • Phelps, Dawson A., and John T. Willett.  "Iron Works on the Natchez Trace."  Tennessee Historical Quarterly 12 (1953): 309-322.

 

  • Pierce, Deborah H.  Wagon Trails and Train Rails: A Journey Back to Old Fifth District of Hickman County, Tennessee.  N.P., 1989.

 

  • Polk, George W.  "St. John's Church, Maury County, Tennessee."  Tennessee Historical Magazine 7 (1921): 147-153.

 

  • Polk, William M.  Leonidas Polk,

Bishop and General.  2 vols.  New York: Longmans, Green, and Company, 1893.

 

  • Poplin, Richard H.  "Enon Primitive Baptist Church." Bedford County Historical Quarterly 1:2 (1975): 37-41.

 

  • Poplin, Richard H.  "Bedford County Church History." Bedford County Historical Quarterly 11:3 (1981): 11-19.

 

  • Poplin, Richard H.  Silhouettes from Walking Horse Country.  Shelbyville: Central Publishing Co., 1969.

 

  • Prados, Mrs. G.E.  History of the Spring Hill Presbyterian Church from 1844 to 1974.  Spring Hill: Self-published, 1974.

 

  • Prichard, Mack.  "The Archeological Parks." Tennessee Conservationist 39:3 (1973): 2-5.

 

  • Quin, Richard.  Ashwood, the Pillows, the Polks. Murfreesboro: Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, Middle Tennessee State University, 1992.

 

  • Quintard, Charles Todd.  Doctor Quintard, Chaplain, CSA and Second Bishop of Tennessee: Being His Story of the War (1861-1865).  Ed. Arthur Howard Noll.  Sewanee: University Press, 1905.

 

  • Records of the Church of Christ at Flat Creek, Bedford County, Tennessee, 1868-1981. Flat Creek: The Church, 1981.

 

  • Rice, Orlenas L.  "A Catlinite Disk Pipe Find: Salvage Archeology at 40MR12."  Central States Archaeological Journal 21:4 (1974): 162-170.

 

  • Rieldl, Norbert F., Donald Ball, and Anthony Cavender.  A Survey of Traditional Architecture and Related Folk Material Culture Patterns in the Normandy Reservoir, Coffee County, Tennessee. Knoxville: Department of Anthropology, Report of Investigations, 17, 1976.

 

  • Riverside Methodist Church History. Columbia: N.P., 1965.

 

  • Rogers, Eliza G. "Pioneering Accounts of Frontier Religion."  Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin 17 (1951): 32-40.

 

  • Rogers, Eliza G. "Popular Sayings of Marshall County." Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin 15 (1949): 70-75.

 

  • Rogers, Eliza G.  Stories and Legends of Marshall County, North of Duck River.  Nashville: Unpublished Master's Thesis, George Peabody College, 1936.

 

  • Rogers, Paul.  I Have Much People in This City: Highlights of 125 Years, Centerville Church of Christ.  N.P., 1995.

 

  • Ryan, Thornton.  St. Peter's Episcopal Church of Maury County, Tennessee, the First 125 Years of the Parish, 1829-1954.  Columbia: N.P., 1954.

 

  • Sharber, Patricia Ferrell.  Social History of Tennessee Episcopalians, 1865-1935, with Guide to Research in Local Religious History. Murfreesboro: Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, 1973.

 

  • Shetrone, Henry Clyde.  The Mound-Builders: A Reconstruction of the Life of a Prehistoric American Race Through the Exploration and Interpretation of Their Earth Mounds, Their Burials and Their Cultural Remains.  New York: Appleton, 1930.

 

  • Smalling, C.W.  "Bell Buckle: Its Origins, Schools--An Address Given in 1834."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 30:1 (2004): 1-3.

 

  • Smith, Garnett Roy.  The Dynamics of Missionary Expansion and Evangelization of the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Tennessee from 1865 to 1935, Including a Brief Survey of the First Quarter. Sewanee: Unpublished Master's Thesis, University of the South, 1982.

 

  • Smith, James Croley.  Sketches of Tennessee History: In Franklin, Giles, Lawrence, Lincoln, Maury, Moore, & Perry Counties: Water Powered Mills, Communities, Houses, Homes ... Road, Kilns, Iron Furnace, Merchants, Bridges.  Self-published, 1997.

 

  • Smith, Samuel D., and Benjamin C. Nance.  A Survey of Civil War Era Military Sites in Tennessee. Nashville: Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Division of Archaeology, Research Series No. 14, 2003.

 

  • Smith, Samuel D., Fred M. Prouty, and Benjamin C. Nance.  A Survey of Civil War Period Military Sites in Middle Tennessee.  Nashville: Division of Archaeology, Report of Investigations No. 7, 1990.

 

  • Smith, Samuel D., and Charlotte A. Watrin. "Zimmerie Brick Kiln."  Tennessee Anthropologist 11:2 (1986): 132-144.  

 

  • 165th Anniversary, Spring Hill United Methodist Church, Main Street.  Spring Hill: Spring Hill United Methodist Church, 1981.

 

  • Stephens, Gilley.  "The Duck River Association of Baptists."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 8:3 (1982): 119.

 

  • Stewart, Rose Tate.  Pioneer Schools of Bedford County and Their Masters.  N.P., N.D.

 

  • Sulzer, Elmer G.  Ghost Railroads of Tennessee. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998.

 

  • Talley, Thomas Washington.  The Negro Traditions.  Eds. Charles K. Wolfe and Laura C. Jarmon.  Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1993.   

 

  • Talley, Thomas Washington.  "De wull er de wust (The will o' the wisp)." Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin 66 (1992): 14-37.

 

  • Templin, Eleanor.  History of Duck River Baptist Association and Churches, 1826-1976: Coffee, Franklin, and Grundy Counties of Tennessee. Nashville: White Printing Co., 1976.

 

  • Templin, Eleanor.  History of the Duck River Association of Missionary Baptists. Nashville: White Printing Co., 1962.

 

  • "Tennessee: Her Manufactures and Internal Improvements."  DeBows Commercial Review 13 (1852): 156-166.

 

  • Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration: Worlds Greatest Horse Show. Paducah: Turner Publishing, 1991.

 

  • Thomas, William G.  "Dams and Mills on the Small Streams of Bedford County."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 8:2 (1982): 48-50.

 

  • Thruston, Gates P.  The Antiquities of Tennessee and the Adjacent States, and the State of Aboriginal Society in the Scale of Civilization Represented by Them: A Series of Historical and Ethnological Studies.  Cincinnati: R. Clarke, 1897.

 

  • Tullahoma, 1851.  Tullahoma: Historic Preservation of Tullahoma, 1986.

 

  • U.S. Congress, House Committee on Ways & Means.  Report of the Committee of Ways & Means, on the Position of Sundry Inhabitants of the Counties of Hickman and Dickson, in the state of Tennessee.  Washington, D.C.: Roger C. Weightman, 1815.

 

  • Walker, Leola Arnold.  "A History of the Wartrace Baptist Church."  Bedford County Historical Quarterly 2:4 (1976): 17-20.

 

  • Walker, Nancy Wooten.  Out of a Clear Blue Sky: Tennessee's First Ladies and Their Husbands. Cleveland: N.P., 1971.

 

  • Weaver, Herbert, and William G. Eidson.  "The James K. Polk Home."  Tennessee Historical Quarterly 24 (1965): 3-19.

 

 

  • West, Carroll Van.  Tennessee's Historic Landscapes: A Travelers Guide.  Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1995.

 

  • West, Carroll Van, and Margaret Duncan Binnicker, eds.  A History of Tennessee Arts: Creating Traditions, Expanding Horizons.  Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2004.

 

  • West. Earl Irvin.  "Religion in the Life of James K. Polk."  Tennessee Historical Quarterly 26 (1967): 357-371.

 

  • Wilcox, Charlotte.  The Tennessee Walking Horse. Mankato: Capstone Press, 1996.

 

  • Williams, Derita Coleman, and Nathan Harsh. The Art and Mystery of Tennessee Furniture and Its Makers Through 1850.  Nashville: Tennessee Historical Society and the Tennessee State Museum, 1988.

 

  • Wingard, George T.  The Story of the Columbia and Nashville Presbyteries in Middle Tennessee: Early Settlement to 1972. Nashville:  Presbyteries of Middle Tennessee,  1976.

 

  • Winters, Donald L.  Tennessee Farmers: Antebellum Agriculture in the Upper South. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1994.

 

  • Wolfe, Charles K.  A Good Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry.  Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1999.

 

  • Womack, Bob.  The Echo of Hoofbeats: The History of the Tennessee Walking Horse. Murfreesboro: Dabora, Inc., 1984.

 

  • Yeatman, Trezevant P., Jr.  "St. Johns--A Plantation Church of the Old South."  Tennessee Historical Quarterly 10 (1959): 334-343.

 

  • Zion Presbyterian Church, Columbia, Tennessee.  Columbia: Zion Presbyterian Church, 1982.