Civil War History

Civil War Places of Interest in Bradley County

As the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War approaches, a special focus is placed on the significant sites of Bradley County.  While this may not be a comprehensive list of Civil War sites, these are places that are accessible to and interpreted for the public.

Grand Army of the Republic Monument, Fort Hill Cemetery Worth Street, Cleveland
The Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) was the major Federal veterans organization; the organization erected few monuments in the South.  This GAR memorial, erected at the Fort Hill Cemetery’s entrance in 1914, is one of only three in Tennessee.  Because of Fort Hill’s commanding views overlooking downtown, the railroad and adjacent turnpikes, federal troops occupied the cemetery during the Civil War.  Fort Hill also contains a burial section of 270 unknown Confederate soldiers as well as the individual graves of such notable local citizens as Civil War diarist Myra Inman Carter, Colonel Spencer Boyd and Judge Levi Trewhitt, who played significant roles in the county’s Civil War and Reconstruction history. 

United Daughters of the Confederacy Monument
800 North Ocoee, Downtown Cleveland
Located where the Lee Highway splits at the north entrance to downtown Cleveland, this Civil War memorial was funded by the Jefferson Davis Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) in 1910. UDC chapters led efforts to memorialize the Confederacy in public monuments, museums and programs throughout the South.  

Craigmiles House – Cleveland Public Library History Branch and Archives
833 North Ocoee Street, Cleveland 
In 1866, business leader P. M. Craigmiles announced the beginning of post-Civil War recovery in Cleveland with the construction of this impressive Italianate-styled brick home.  The Local History Collection of the Cleveland Public Library contains significant records about the Civil War and Reconstruction years in Bradley County. 

First Presbyterian Church
433 Ocoee Street, Cleveland
The oldest existing church building in Cleveland, this structure was dedicated in October 1858. At the time of its construction the building had a gallery used mainly by slaves, which was removed in a renovation project that occured in 1935. The sanctuary was badly damaged during the Civil War, and musket balls are still embedded in the steeple. The church was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Houston Apartments
633 Ocoee Street
Formerly known as the Cleveland Masonic Female Institute, which opened its doors to pupils in 1856 under the direction of Professor H.W. Von Adelhoff. The school was forced to close in 1861 during Federal occupation of th city. It is believed the building served as a hospital or military headquarters during the War. After extensive repairs, the school reopened in December 1864, right after the war's end. In 1915, the building was made into apartments, as it remains to this day.

Museum Center at 5ive Points
200 Inman Street East, Cleveland 
The museum interprets the full history and culture of the Ocoee District of southeast Tennessee through exhibits and programs, including a special focus on the region’s Civil War experiences.





Charleston
Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Railroad Street, Charleston
This National Register-listed Greek Revival-style church served as a Confederate hospital in 1863.  That November, troopers of Company C of the 1st Tennessee Cavalry, CSA, whom largely came from neighboring McMinn and Monroe counties, helped to evacuate the town of Charleston. That unit then joined the 38th Tennessee Infantry, led by Col. John C. Carter, in occupying the crucial river town, which lies just south of the Hiwassee.


Henegar House
428 Market Street, Charleston
The difficult Civil War experiences of the Henegar family at this house near the Hiwassee River in downtown Charleston are related through documents and letters at the Tennessee State Library and Archives.  The family suffered from occupation by both armies and the use of the house as a military headquarters.