
Fayetteville Stone Bridge - Fayetteville, Tennessee
Posted by:
flyingmoose
N 35° 08.647 W 086° 34.107
16S E 539310 N 3889110
Located by the cabin at Stone Bridge Park.
Waymark Code: WM17EKZ
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 02/07/2023
Views: 4
In 1862, Lincoln County and Fayetteville residents celebrated the completion of a local engineering marvel, a huge stone bridge over the Elk River, that they hoped would ensure the continual prosperity of this agricultural community. The 450-foot six-arch limestone bridge cost almost $40,000 to build.
When the Civil War began, Lincoln County's residents overwhelmingly supported secession, and almost 5,000 men enlisted as Confederate soldiers. Union forces briefly occupied the town in April 1862. A year later, Union Gen. David S. Stanley ordered Col. Eli Long's troops here, and a garrison remained until the war's end, using the courthouse to shelter both soldiers and horses.
In November 1863, Union Gen. William T. Sherman's Army of the Tennessee moved through Fayetteville, where the Stone Bridge provided safe passage across the Elk River, en route from Memphis to Chattanooga. Sherman ordered the bridge destroyed, but the order was not followed. In the fall of 1864, Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest led raids in north Alabama and Middle Tennessee to disrupt rail transportation and Federal communications. Forrest reported, "On the 28th I reached Fayetteville. During the day I ordered Capt. Boone, of my escort, to proceed with twenty men as rapidly as possible to the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad and cut the same, with telegraph wires, at some point north of Tullahoma.”
The Stone Bridge survived the war but a flood destroyed it in 1969. Its stones were used in the construction of this park’s pedestrian bridge.
Type of site: Transportation Route or Facility
 Address: 301 Eufala Street Fayetteville, Tennessee United States of America 37334
 Admission Charged: No Charge
 Website: [Web Link]
 Phone Number: Not listed
 Driving Directions: Not listed

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