• Source: Timeline of Tennessee
    • The following is a timeline of the history of the US state of Tennessee.


      Before the 16th century



      c. 10,000 BC – Paleo-Indians are known to exist in Tennessee, as evidenced by a mastodon skeleton with cut marks found in Williamson County.
      c. 7500 BC – Icehouse Bottom in Monroe County is used as a hunting camp, making it one of the oldest known habitation areas in the state.
      c. 1-500 AD – The Pinson Mounds complex, one of the largest Middle Woodland sites in the United States, is created in Madison County.
      c. 800-1600 AD – During the Mississippian period, many sites are created in Tennessee, including Chucalissa, Mound Bottom, Shiloh Mounds, and Toqua.


      16th and 17th centuries


      1540 – Hernando de Soto's expedition arrives from modern day North Carolina and enters East Tennessee in June. The expedition stays at Chiaha in Sevier County for several weeks before leaving to the south.
      1559 – Part of Tristán de Luna's expedition under Mateo del Sauz moves into the Chattanooga area in August in order to return the Napochie tribe to vassal status under the Coosa chiefdom so that the Spaniards could receive food from the Coosa. Sauz's expedition succeeds and returns south around August 1560.
      1567 – Part of Juan Pardo's expedition under Hernando Moyano de Morales moves into Tennessee and stays at Chiaha, building a fort called San Pedro. Pardo later came to Moyano at Chiaha before the expedition returned to Santa Elena in modern South Carolina.
      1682 – A French expedition down the Mississippi River under René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle stops in West Tennessee and builds a simple fortification called Fort Prudhomme while looking for a missing crew member before continuing downriver.


      18th century



      1739
      August 15 – During the Chickasaw Wars, Frenchmen under Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville venture into Shelby County, building Fort Assumption in present-day Downtown Memphis. The fort is abandoned on March 31, 1740.
      1756
      October 5 – During the French and Indian War, the British begin construction of Fort Loudoun in modern-day Monroe County to protect the local Cherokee, making the fort one of the first British structures in modern-day Tennessee.
      1760
      February-August – Relations between the British and the Cherokee worsen, leading to the Anglo-Cherokee War. Fort Loudoun is besieged, and surrenders with most of its garrison killed or captured.
      1763
      October 7 – King George III issues the Royal Proclamation of 1763, forbidding settlement in Tennessee and making it an Indian Reserve.
      c. 1768 – The first white settlers begin moving into the Watauga, Nolichucky, and Holston areas in violation of the Royal Proclamation of 1763. They believe they are in Virginia.
      1771
      May 16 – The Battle of Alamance ends the War of the Regulation in North Carolina, and many former Regulators (those opposed to the North Carolina government) settle in Tennessee.
      1772
      May – Watauga and Nolichucky settlers negotiate a 10-year lease with the Cherokee and create a constitution called the Articles of the Watauga Association based on the laws of Virginia. The settlers build a courthouse and jail at Sycamore Shoals, and their government becomes known as the Watauga Association.
      1775
      March 19 – Richard Henderson and the Cherokee agree to the Treaty of Sycamore Shoals, also known as the Transylvania Purchase, in which the Cherokee transfer the Path Grant, with land in northern East Tennessee, and the Great Grant, with the land north of the Cumberland River, including the site of modern Nashville.
      April – With the outbreak of war with Britain, the Watauga Association declares itself loyal to the united colonies as the Washington District.
      1776
      Longhunter and pioneer William Bean establishes the town of Bean Station in Grainger County, becoming the first reported permanent settlement in Tennessee.
      May – Dragging Canoe and the Chickamauga break from the Cherokee due to opposition to white settlement and begin the Chickamauga Wars.
      November – After unsuccessfully asking Virginia to annex the Washington District, the settlers are admitted to North Carolina.
      1777
      November 15 – Washington County is created from the Washington District, making it the oldest county in what is now Tennessee.
      1779
      February – James Robertson establishes Fort Nashborough, which would become Nashville. John Donelson later arrives with more settlers, who sign the Cumberland Compact.
      October 18 – Sullivan County is created from Washington County, making it the second-oldest county in what is now Tennessee.
      1780
      October 7 – Overmountain Men from Washington and Sullivan Counties win the pivotal Battle of Kings Mountain near Kings Mountain, North Carolina, after a march over the mountains.
      Surveyors from Virginia and North Carolina survey the modern Tennessee–Virginia border. The North Carolinians' "Henderson Line" is two miles north of the Virginians' "Walker Line", creating a disputed area between the states.
      1783
      April 18 – Greene County is created from Washington County.
      October 6 – Davidson County is created from Washington County, making it the oldest county in Middle Tennessee.
      1791
      The Knoxville Gazette, first Tennessee newspaper, begun.
      1794
      Blount College, a predecessor of the University of Tennessee, founded in Knoxville, first American nondenominational institution of higher learning.
      1796
      February 6 - Tennessee adopts a constitution.
      June 1 - Tennessee becomes the 16th of the United States.
      John Sevier elected the first governor of Tennessee.
      Andrew Jackson elected first congressman of Tennessee.


      19th century



      On June 8, 1861, Tennessee seceded from the United States to join The confederacy, becoming the last state to do so


      20th century




      21st century




      = 2000s

      =
      2001
      October 3 – An attack on a Greyhound bus near Manchester kills the driver and causes the bus to crash, killing seven.
      2002
      November 5 – With governor Don Sundquist term-limited, Phil Bredesen narrowly beats Van Hilleary in the 2002 gubernatorial election, becoming the 48th governor of Tennessee.
      2005
      November 8 – A school shooting leaves one dead and two injured in Jacksboro.
      2006
      November 7 – Winning every county, incumbent governor Phil Bredesen defeats Jim Bryson in the 2006 gubernatorial election. Tennesseans also vote on the Tennessee Marriage Protection Amendment, a state constitutional amendment prohibiting same-sex marriages, which passes with 81% of the vote.
      2008
      February 5-6 – A tornado outbreak on Super Tuesday kills many in West and Middle Tennessee, especially impacting the city of Jackson.
      July 27 – A mass shooting at a Unitarian Universalist church in Knoxville leaves two dead and seven injured.
      October 22 – A Tennessean and an Arkansan are arrested, foiling their plot to assassinate presidential candidate Barack Obama in Tennessee.
      December 22 – The Kingston Fossil Plant coal ash spill, the largest coal ash disaster in US history, releases over a billion gallons of coal fly ash slurry next to the city of Kingston.


      = 2010s

      =
      2010
      May 1-7 – Floods across Middle and West Tennessee, in particular the flooding of the Cumberland River in Davidson County, lead to 21 deaths.
      November 2 – With governor Phil Bredesen term-limited, Bill Haslam defeated Mike McWherter in the 2010 gubernatorial election to become the 49th governor of Tennessee.
      2011
      April 27 – The 2011 Super Outbreak of tornados hits East Tennessee, in particular Greene County and the Chattanooga area, killing 35.
      May 4-June 20 – The Mississippi River floods, impacting Dyersburg and Shelby County.
      October 6 – Protests with the Occupy Nashville movement begin, part of the global Occupy movement opposed to social and economic inequality, leading to governor Haslam enacting a curfew at the state capital.
      2014
      November 4 – Winning every county, incumbent governor Bill Haslam defeats Charles Brown in the 2014 gubernatorial election.
      2015
      July 16 – Mass shootings at a military recruiting center and U.S. Navy Reserve center in Chattanooga leave six dead and two injured.
      December 23-25 – A tornado outbreak kills several people around Hardeman and Perry counties.
      2016
      November 28-December 9 – Wildfires in the Great Smoky Mountains, particularly in Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg, leave 14 dead, 190 injured, and 17,900 acres burned, as one of the most destructive modern wildfires in the Eastern United States.
      2017
      September 24 – A mass shooting at a church in the Antioch neighborhood of Nashville leaves one dead and eight injured.
      2018
      April 22 – A mass shooting at a Waffle House in the Antioch neighborhood of Nashville leaves four dead and four injured.
      November 6 – With governor Bill Haslam term-limited, Bill Lee defeats Karl Dean in the 2018 gubernatorial election to become the 50th governor of Tennessee.


      = 2020s

      =
      2020
      March 2-3 – A tornado outbreak causes 25 deaths and 309 injuries, primarily in Putnam and Davidson counties.
      March 5 – Tennessee's first case of COVID-19 is confirmed in Williamson County, marking the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in Tennessee.
      2023
      March 27 – A mass shooting occurs at a private Presbyterian Church in America parochial school in Nashville, Tennessee, killing three children, three adults, and the perpetrator.
      April 6 – The Tennessee House of Representatives votes on resolutions to expel three of its Democratic members, ostensibly for breaking the body's decorum rules by leading personal protests for gun reform on the House floor in the wake of the March 27 school shooting. The resolutions for the expulsions of Justin Jones and Justin Pearson pass and they are removed from office, while the resolution against Gloria Johnson fails and she is allowed to retain her seat.


      See also


      List of Tennessee state legislatures


      References

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