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== History ==
== History ==


Jack Daniel's Distillery was founded by Jasper Newton "Jack" Daniel in 1875 in Moore County, Tennessee, making it one of the earliest registered distilleries in the United States under federal law. Jack Daniel himself was born in 1846 and began his whiskey-making career in the 1860s under the mentorship of a distiller named Dan Call. The distillery's location in Lynchburg was chosen deliberately for its proximity to the Cave Spring, a natural water source essential to the distillation process. The spring water's mineral composition, filtered through limestone, became integral to the distinctive character of Jack Daniel's whiskey. In 1884, Daniel registered his distillery with the U.S. government, receiving Distillery Number 16 in Coffee County, Tennessee—a landmark moment that established Jack Daniel's as an officially recognized producer. The now-famous Old No. 7 brand emerged during this period, though the exact origin of the name remains subject to historical debate.<ref>{{cite web |title=Jack Daniel Distillery Registration and Early History |url=https://www.tnhistory.org/historical-markers/jack-daniels-distillery |work=Tennessee Historical Society |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Jasper Newton "Jack" Daniel founded the distillery in 1875 in Moore County, Tennessee. This made it one of the earliest registered distilleries in the United States under federal law. Born in 1846, Jack Daniel got his start in whiskey-making during the 1860s, learning the craft from a distiller named Dan Call. The choice of Lynchburg wasn't random. The Cave Spring provided the natural water source that'd become essential to the whole operation. That limestone-filtered spring water gave Jack Daniel's whiskey its distinctive character, something you couldn't replicate anywhere else.


Jack Daniel died in 1911 following an infection, but his legacy and business operations continued under subsequent ownership. The distillery remained family-controlled initially, then passed through various hands throughout the twentieth century. The most significant transition occurred in 1956 when the Brown-Forman Corporation, a Kentucky-based spirits company, acquired Jack Daniel's. Under Brown-Forman's stewardship, the brand expanded dramatically from a regional product to a global phenomenon, though the distillery itself remained located in rural Moore County. The distillery continued traditional production methods even as demand increased exponentially; the company consciously maintained the charcoal-mellowing process known as the Lincoln County Process, which differentiates Tennessee whiskey from bourbon and other American whiskeys. This commitment to traditional methodology, despite modern pressures for efficiency, became a point of distinction and pride for the brand. The distillery survived Prohibition by securing permits for medicinal whiskey production, a practice many American distilleries employed during that period.
In 1884, Daniel registered his distillery with the U.S. government and received Distillery Number 16 in Coffee County, Tennessee. This was huge. It officially established Jack Daniel's as a recognized producer. The Old No. 7 brand came about during this same period, though historians still argue about where the name really came from.<ref>{{cite web |title=Jack Daniel Distillery Registration and Early History |url=https://www.tnhistory.org/historical-markers/jack-daniels-distillery |work=Tennessee Historical Society |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
 
Jack Daniel died in 1911 from an infection, but the business didn't die with him. It stayed in the family at first, then moved through various owners over the decades. The real turning point came in 1956 when the Brown-Forman Corporation, a Kentucky-based spirits company, bought Jack Daniel's. Under Brown-Forman, what'd been a regional product exploded into a global phenomenon. The distillery stayed put in rural Moore County, though, and kept using the same methods that'd always worked. They weren't about to abandon the Lincoln County Process, that charcoal-mellowing technique that separates Tennessee whiskey from bourbon and other American whiskeys, just because efficiency demanded it. That commitment to doing things the old way became a source of real pride for the brand. During Prohibition, the distillery managed to survive by securing permits to produce medicinal whiskey, a loophole that many American distilleries exploited during those years.


== Geography ==
== Geography ==


Jack Daniel's Distillery is situated in Lynchburg, Tennessee, the county seat of Moore County in the Cumberland Plateau region of Middle Tennessee. The location is geographically significant because of its natural resources, particularly the Cave Spring, which flows at a consistent 56 degrees Fahrenheit year-round. This natural spring is the only water source used in Jack Daniel's whiskey production, and its mineral composition—filtered through limestone geological formations—cannot be replicated elsewhere. The spring's consistency and purity have remained unchanged since the distillery's founding, making it a crucial geographical asset that is fundamental to the product's identity and quality standards. The distillery complex itself covers approximately 140 acres of land in the rolling terrain characteristic of the Cumberland Plateau region.
Jack Daniel's Distillery sits in Lynchburg, Tennessee, the county seat of Moore County in the Cumberland Plateau region of Middle Tennessee. Geography matters here, and for good reason. The Cave Spring flows at a consistent 56 degrees Fahrenheit year-round, and that's the only water source the distillery uses. You can't replicate that mineral composition, filtered through limestone, anywhere else on Earth. Since the distillery opened in 1875, that spring's consistency and purity haven't changed. It's fundamental to everything the brand does. The distillery complex itself takes up about 140 acres in the rolling terrain typical of the Cumberland Plateau.


The broader geographical context of Moore County places the distillery within a historically significant region of Tennessee known for whiskey production and rural craft traditions. Lynchburg, with a population of approximately 400 residents as of recent counts, is among Tennessee's smallest county seats, yet it has become internationally known largely due to the distillery's prominence. The town's character—small, rural, and conservative—has been preserved deliberately, with the distillery and local government implementing policies to maintain the area's historical character and prevent industrial sprawl. The nearest major metropolitan area is Nashville, approximately 80 miles north, connected by Tennessee State Route 55 and other regional highways. This relative isolation from major urban centers has been advantageous in preserving both the distillery's production environment and the region's rural character, though it presents logistical challenges for tourism and supply chain operations.
Moore County sits in a historically significant region known for whiskey production and rural craft traditions. Lynchburg's population hovers around 400 people, making it one of Tennessee's tiniest county seats, yet it's become internationally famous almost entirely because of the distillery. The town itself has stayed small, rural, and traditional on purpose. The distillery and local government have worked to maintain that historical character and keep industrial sprawl out. Nashville lies about 80 miles north, connected by Tennessee State Route 55 and other regional roads. This relative isolation from major cities has actually helped preserve both the production environment and the region's rural feel, though it creates real logistical challenges for tourism and getting supplies in and out.


== Economy ==
== Economy ==


Jack Daniel's Distillery represents one of the most significant economic drivers for Moore County and the surrounding region. The distillery itself employs approximately 600–700 workers directly, making it the largest employer in Moore County and a major employer across several surrounding counties. These positions range from production and quality control roles to administrative, marketing, and visitor services positions. Beyond direct employment, the distillery generates substantial economic activity through supply chains, including grain suppliers, packaging manufacturers, transportation logistics, and hospitality services. The brand generates annual revenues exceeding $2 billion globally, though precise ownership and revenue figures are not publicly disclosed as Jack Daniel's is part of the privately-held Brown-Forman Corporation.
Jack Daniel's Distillery is one of the most important economic engines in Moore County and the surrounding region. The distillery directly employs somewhere between 600 and 700 people, making it the largest employer in Moore County and a major one across several neighboring counties. Jobs range from production and quality control to administration, marketing, and visitor services. The economic impact extends beyond those payroll numbers. Grain suppliers, packaging manufacturers, transportation companies, and hospitality services all benefit from the distillery's operations. The brand pulls in more than $2 billion in annual revenues globally, though exact figures stay private since Jack Daniel's is part of privately-held Brown-Forman Corporation.


Tourism constitutes a major economic dimension of the distillery's impact. The Jack Daniel's Distillery receives approximately 250,000 visitors annually, making it one of Tennessee's most visited historical sites and tourist attractions.<ref>{{cite web |title=Jack Daniel's Distillery Tourism and Visitor Statistics |url=https://www.nashville.gov/planning/attractions/jack-daniels |work=Nashville Metropolitan Planning Department |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> Visitors spend money not only on distillery tours and tastings but also on lodging, dining, and shopping in Lynchburg and surrounding communities. The distillery operates a visitor center with museum exhibits, gift shop, and hospitality facilities. Local hotels, restaurants, and service businesses depend significantly on this visitor flow. The whiskey production process itself requires substantial material inputs—grain purchased from suppliers, bottles and labels, metal and wooden barrels, and energy for distillation—creating economic multipliers throughout Tennessee and beyond. The distillery also invests in local infrastructure and community development programs, though such investments are modest relative to the corporation's overall scale.
Tourism drives a huge piece of the economic picture. The Jack Daniel's Distillery gets roughly 250,000 visitors annually, putting it among Tennessee's most visited historical sites and tourist attractions.<ref>{{cite web |title=Jack Daniel's Distillery Tourism and Visitor Statistics |url=https://www.nashville.gov/planning/attractions/jack-daniels |work=Nashville Metropolitan Planning Department |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> Those visitors don't just pay for tours and tastings. They stay in hotels, eat at restaurants, shop in Lynchburg and nearby towns. The distillery runs a visitor center with museum exhibits, a gift shop, and hospitality services. Local businesses depend heavily on that tourist flow. Then there's what the whiskey production itself requires: grain from suppliers, bottles and labels, metal and wooden barrels, energy for distillation. That creates economic ripples throughout Tennessee and beyond. The distillery also invests in local infrastructure and community programs, though not in proportion to the corporation's total size.


The economic relationship between Jack Daniel's and Moore County is asymmetrical; while the distillery is economically essential to the region, it represents only a fraction of Brown-Forman Corporation's overall business. This relationship has occasionally created tensions regarding labor standards, environmental practices, and community influence. The distillery's decision-making authority resides at Brown-Forman's corporate headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky, rather than locally. Nevertheless, the distillery's economic contribution to Moore County remains substantial and irreplaceable, making whiskey production central to the region's economic identity and future prospects.
The relationship between Jack Daniel's and Moore County works one way more than the other. The distillery's economically essential to the region, but it's only a fraction of Brown-Forman's overall business. That imbalance has caused some friction over labor standards, environmental practices, and community influence. Decision-making happens at Brown-Forman's Louisville, Kentucky headquarters, not locally. Still, the distillery's economic contribution to Moore County is substantial and irreplaceable. Whiskey production is central to how the region sees itself economically and what it hopes for the future.


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


Jack Daniel's Distillery has become embedded in Tennessee culture and American folklore as a symbol of frontier craftsmanship, rebellion, and authentic American tradition. Jack Daniel himself has become a legendary figure in American business history, celebrated as a self-made entrepreneur who built his enterprise in rural Tennessee during the post-Civil War era. The brand's marketing has consistently emphasized heritage, tradition, and a romanticized narrative of American frontier whiskey-making, positioning the product as linked to authenticity and American values. This cultural positioning has made Jack Daniel's not merely a beverage but a cultural icon with symbolic significance extending far beyond its commercial function.
Jack Daniel's Distillery is woven into Tennessee culture and American folklore as a symbol of frontier craftsmanship, rebellion, and authentic American tradition. Jack Daniel himself became a legendary figure in American business history. Self-made entrepreneur building his enterprise in rural Tennessee after the Civil War. That's the story that sells. The brand's marketing has always emphasized heritage, tradition, and a romanticized version of American frontier whiskey-making, linking the product to authenticity and American values. It's not just a drink anymore. It's a cultural icon with meaning that goes far beyond what's in the bottle.


The distillery site itself functions as a cultural heritage institution, preserving historical buildings, production methods, and narratives about American whiskey production and Tennessee history. The visitor experience is carefully curated to present a particular version of that history—one emphasizing craft, tradition, and regional pride while downplaying or omitting less comfortable historical dimensions such as the role of enslaved labor in whiskey production or the distillery's environmental impacts. The distillery museum presents exhibits on Jack Daniel's life, the development of the brand, and the production process, serving an educational function alongside its commercial tourism purpose. Local Lynchburg culture has become substantially defined by the distillery's presence, with tourism revenue supporting community identity and pride, though some residents express concerns about over-commercialization and loss of privacy.
The distillery site functions as a cultural heritage institution, preserving historical buildings, production methods, and stories about American whiskey and Tennessee history. What you experience as a visitor is carefully constructed—one version of history that emphasizes craft, tradition, and regional pride while glossing over or leaving out less comfortable truths, like the role of enslaved labor in whiskey production or the distillery's environmental impacts. The distillery museum presents exhibits on Jack Daniel's life, the brand's development, and the production process. It serves an educational function alongside its commercial purpose. Lynchburg's own identity has become substantially tied to the distillery's presence. Tourism revenue supports community pride, though some residents worry about over-commercialization and loss of privacy.


The distillery's cultural significance extends to Tennessee's broader identity as a whiskey-producing state. Tennessee whiskey, defined by the Lincoln County Process of charcoal-mellowing, has become protected as a distinct category under state law and in federal regulations. Jack Daniel's, as the largest and most internationally recognized Tennessee whiskey producer, has substantially shaped global perceptions of Tennessee's industrial heritage and cultural identity. The brand appears frequently in American popular culture, including music, film, and literature, often serving as shorthand for Southern or American identity. This cultural prominence has created complex relationships between commercial branding, historical authenticity, and community identity in Lynchburg and Moore County.
The distillery's cultural reach extends to Tennessee's broader reputation as a whiskey-producing state. Tennessee whiskey, defined by the Lincoln County Process of charcoal-mellowing, is now protected as a distinct category under state law and federal regulations. Jack Daniel's, as the largest and most recognized Tennessee whiskey producer, has shaped how the world sees Tennessee's industrial heritage and cultural identity. The brand shows up everywhere in American popular culture: music, film, literature, usually standing in for something Southern or American. That's created complex relationships between commercial branding, historical accuracy, and what it means to live in Lynchburg or Moore County.


== Attractions ==
== Attractions ==


The Jack Daniel's Distillery operates as a major tourist attraction offering guided tours, educational exhibits, and hospitality experiences. The distillery tour, the primary visitor experience, takes guests through the production process from grain receipt through bottling, with stops at various production stages and the historic barrel warehouses where whiskey ages in charred oak barrels. The tour includes information about the Cave Spring water source, the charcoal-mellowing process distinctive to Tennessee whiskey, and the barrel-aging procedures that develop the whiskey's flavor profile. Tours typically last approximately 75 minutes and accommodate groups of varying sizes, with multiple tour sessions offered daily.<ref>{{cite web |title=Jack Daniel's Distillery Visitor Tours and Experiences |url=https://jackdaniels.com/en-us/visit |work=Jack Daniel's Official Site |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
The Jack Daniel's Distillery operates as a major tourist destination offering guided tours, educational exhibits, and hospitality experiences. The tour itself is the main event. Guests move through the production process from grain arrival through bottling, stopping at various stages and the historic barrel warehouses where whiskey ages in charred oak. You'll learn about the Cave Spring water source, the charcoal-mellowing process that defines Tennessee whiskey, and the barrel-aging procedures that build flavor. Most tours run about 75 minutes and handle groups of different sizes, with multiple sessions daily.<ref>{{cite web |title=Jack Daniel's Distillery Visitor Tours and Experiences |url=https://jackdaniels.com/en-us/visit |work=Jack Daniel's Official Site |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>


The distillery visitor center includes museum exhibits presenting Jack Daniel's history, the life of Jack Daniel as a historical figure, and exhibits on American whiskey production and Tennessee industrial heritage. A gift shop offers Jack Daniel's branded merchandise, whiskey products, and souvenirs. The distillery operates a tasting room where visitors may sample Jack Daniel's products and learn about flavor profiles and production variations across the brand's different expressions (original, single barrel, rye, etc.). The distillery also hosts special events, private tours, and experiences tailored to whiskey enthusiasts and collectors. Nearby Lynchburg itself offers historical architecture, local dining, and shopping experiences that complement the distillery visit. The broader region includes natural attractions such as hiking areas in the Cumberland Plateau and historic sites related to Tennessee's frontier and Civil War history.
Inside the visitor center, museum exhibits cover Jack Daniel's history, Jack Daniel the man, and American whiskey production and Tennessee industrial heritage. There's a gift shop selling Jack Daniel's merchandise, whiskey, and souvenirs. A tasting room lets visitors sample different Jack Daniel's products and learn about flavor profiles and the brand's different expressions: original, single barrel, rye, and more. Special events, private tours, and experiences tailored to whiskey enthusiasts and collectors also happen here. Lynchburg itself offers historical architecture, local restaurants, and shopping that add to the visit. Beyond town, the Cumberland Plateau has hiking areas and historic sites connected to Tennessee's frontier and Civil War past.


{{#seo: |title=Jack Daniel's Distillery | Nashville.Wiki |description=Historic Tennessee whiskey distillery in Lynchburg, established 1875. Iconic American spirit producer and major regional tourist attraction featuring traditional production methods. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title=Jack Daniel's Distillery | Nashville.Wiki |description=Historic Tennessee whiskey distillery in Lynchburg, established 1875. Iconic American spirit producer and major regional tourist attraction featuring traditional production methods. |type=Article }}
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[[Category:American distilleries
[[Category:American distilleries]]

Revision as of 19:01, 23 April 2026

The Jack Daniel's Distillery is an American whiskey distillery located in Lynchburg, Tennessee, approximately 80 miles south of Nashville in Moore County. As one of the oldest registered distilleries in the United States and the best-selling American whiskey worldwide, Jack Daniel's represents a significant chapter in Tennessee's industrial and cultural heritage. The distillery has been in continuous operation since 1875, with the exception of Prohibition (1920–1933), and remains a major tourist attraction and economic engine for the region. The Jack Daniel's Old No. 7 brand, recognized by its distinctive black label and square bottle, has become an iconic symbol of American whiskey production and Tennessee's legacy as a major whiskey-producing state.[1]

History

Jasper Newton "Jack" Daniel founded the distillery in 1875 in Moore County, Tennessee. This made it one of the earliest registered distilleries in the United States under federal law. Born in 1846, Jack Daniel got his start in whiskey-making during the 1860s, learning the craft from a distiller named Dan Call. The choice of Lynchburg wasn't random. The Cave Spring provided the natural water source that'd become essential to the whole operation. That limestone-filtered spring water gave Jack Daniel's whiskey its distinctive character, something you couldn't replicate anywhere else.

In 1884, Daniel registered his distillery with the U.S. government and received Distillery Number 16 in Coffee County, Tennessee. This was huge. It officially established Jack Daniel's as a recognized producer. The Old No. 7 brand came about during this same period, though historians still argue about where the name really came from.[2]

Jack Daniel died in 1911 from an infection, but the business didn't die with him. It stayed in the family at first, then moved through various owners over the decades. The real turning point came in 1956 when the Brown-Forman Corporation, a Kentucky-based spirits company, bought Jack Daniel's. Under Brown-Forman, what'd been a regional product exploded into a global phenomenon. The distillery stayed put in rural Moore County, though, and kept using the same methods that'd always worked. They weren't about to abandon the Lincoln County Process, that charcoal-mellowing technique that separates Tennessee whiskey from bourbon and other American whiskeys, just because efficiency demanded it. That commitment to doing things the old way became a source of real pride for the brand. During Prohibition, the distillery managed to survive by securing permits to produce medicinal whiskey, a loophole that many American distilleries exploited during those years.

Geography

Jack Daniel's Distillery sits in Lynchburg, Tennessee, the county seat of Moore County in the Cumberland Plateau region of Middle Tennessee. Geography matters here, and for good reason. The Cave Spring flows at a consistent 56 degrees Fahrenheit year-round, and that's the only water source the distillery uses. You can't replicate that mineral composition, filtered through limestone, anywhere else on Earth. Since the distillery opened in 1875, that spring's consistency and purity haven't changed. It's fundamental to everything the brand does. The distillery complex itself takes up about 140 acres in the rolling terrain typical of the Cumberland Plateau.

Moore County sits in a historically significant region known for whiskey production and rural craft traditions. Lynchburg's population hovers around 400 people, making it one of Tennessee's tiniest county seats, yet it's become internationally famous almost entirely because of the distillery. The town itself has stayed small, rural, and traditional on purpose. The distillery and local government have worked to maintain that historical character and keep industrial sprawl out. Nashville lies about 80 miles north, connected by Tennessee State Route 55 and other regional roads. This relative isolation from major cities has actually helped preserve both the production environment and the region's rural feel, though it creates real logistical challenges for tourism and getting supplies in and out.

Economy

Jack Daniel's Distillery is one of the most important economic engines in Moore County and the surrounding region. The distillery directly employs somewhere between 600 and 700 people, making it the largest employer in Moore County and a major one across several neighboring counties. Jobs range from production and quality control to administration, marketing, and visitor services. The economic impact extends beyond those payroll numbers. Grain suppliers, packaging manufacturers, transportation companies, and hospitality services all benefit from the distillery's operations. The brand pulls in more than $2 billion in annual revenues globally, though exact figures stay private since Jack Daniel's is part of privately-held Brown-Forman Corporation.

Tourism drives a huge piece of the economic picture. The Jack Daniel's Distillery gets roughly 250,000 visitors annually, putting it among Tennessee's most visited historical sites and tourist attractions.[3] Those visitors don't just pay for tours and tastings. They stay in hotels, eat at restaurants, shop in Lynchburg and nearby towns. The distillery runs a visitor center with museum exhibits, a gift shop, and hospitality services. Local businesses depend heavily on that tourist flow. Then there's what the whiskey production itself requires: grain from suppliers, bottles and labels, metal and wooden barrels, energy for distillation. That creates economic ripples throughout Tennessee and beyond. The distillery also invests in local infrastructure and community programs, though not in proportion to the corporation's total size.

The relationship between Jack Daniel's and Moore County works one way more than the other. The distillery's economically essential to the region, but it's only a fraction of Brown-Forman's overall business. That imbalance has caused some friction over labor standards, environmental practices, and community influence. Decision-making happens at Brown-Forman's Louisville, Kentucky headquarters, not locally. Still, the distillery's economic contribution to Moore County is substantial and irreplaceable. Whiskey production is central to how the region sees itself economically and what it hopes for the future.

Culture

Jack Daniel's Distillery is woven into Tennessee culture and American folklore as a symbol of frontier craftsmanship, rebellion, and authentic American tradition. Jack Daniel himself became a legendary figure in American business history. Self-made entrepreneur building his enterprise in rural Tennessee after the Civil War. That's the story that sells. The brand's marketing has always emphasized heritage, tradition, and a romanticized version of American frontier whiskey-making, linking the product to authenticity and American values. It's not just a drink anymore. It's a cultural icon with meaning that goes far beyond what's in the bottle.

The distillery site functions as a cultural heritage institution, preserving historical buildings, production methods, and stories about American whiskey and Tennessee history. What you experience as a visitor is carefully constructed—one version of history that emphasizes craft, tradition, and regional pride while glossing over or leaving out less comfortable truths, like the role of enslaved labor in whiskey production or the distillery's environmental impacts. The distillery museum presents exhibits on Jack Daniel's life, the brand's development, and the production process. It serves an educational function alongside its commercial purpose. Lynchburg's own identity has become substantially tied to the distillery's presence. Tourism revenue supports community pride, though some residents worry about over-commercialization and loss of privacy.

The distillery's cultural reach extends to Tennessee's broader reputation as a whiskey-producing state. Tennessee whiskey, defined by the Lincoln County Process of charcoal-mellowing, is now protected as a distinct category under state law and federal regulations. Jack Daniel's, as the largest and most recognized Tennessee whiskey producer, has shaped how the world sees Tennessee's industrial heritage and cultural identity. The brand shows up everywhere in American popular culture: music, film, literature, usually standing in for something Southern or American. That's created complex relationships between commercial branding, historical accuracy, and what it means to live in Lynchburg or Moore County.

Attractions

The Jack Daniel's Distillery operates as a major tourist destination offering guided tours, educational exhibits, and hospitality experiences. The tour itself is the main event. Guests move through the production process from grain arrival through bottling, stopping at various stages and the historic barrel warehouses where whiskey ages in charred oak. You'll learn about the Cave Spring water source, the charcoal-mellowing process that defines Tennessee whiskey, and the barrel-aging procedures that build flavor. Most tours run about 75 minutes and handle groups of different sizes, with multiple sessions daily.[4]

Inside the visitor center, museum exhibits cover Jack Daniel's history, Jack Daniel the man, and American whiskey production and Tennessee industrial heritage. There's a gift shop selling Jack Daniel's merchandise, whiskey, and souvenirs. A tasting room lets visitors sample different Jack Daniel's products and learn about flavor profiles and the brand's different expressions: original, single barrel, rye, and more. Special events, private tours, and experiences tailored to whiskey enthusiasts and collectors also happen here. Lynchburg itself offers historical architecture, local restaurants, and shopping that add to the visit. Beyond town, the Cumberland Plateau has hiking areas and historic sites connected to Tennessee's frontier and Civil War past.