Spring Clean Up
Title: Spring Clean Up
Location: Oliver Springs, TN
Description: The Town of Oliver Springs will start its annual spring clean-up on April 9th and ending on April 20th for household pickup only.
All brush will be picked up the week of April 23rd through April 27th.
All items to be picked up should be left near the street for easy access.
The town will not accept tires, paint, batteries, or other hazardous/toxic chemicals, refrigerators or appliances that use coolants.
The schedule is as follows for the week of April 9th through April 13th:
Monday and Tuesday—Midway Drive, Fox Subdivision (including side streets), and Sleepy Hollow.
Wednesday and Thursday—Airport Road, Duncan Drive, Richards Drive/Oliver Drive, Norwood Drive (including side streets), Edmond Drive, and Foxwood Circle.
Friday—Strutt Street, Maple Avenue, Dale Avenue, Bennett Road, Hermitage Drive (including side streets), Hannah Drive, and Browder Circle.
The schedule is as follows for the week of April 16th through April 20th:
Monday and Tuesday—Downtown Area
Wednesday and Thursday—Tuppertown, Windrock, and Kellytown.
Friday is an open date for any area that was missed.
You may call the office for scheduling pick-up at 435-7722.
Start Date: 2012-04-10
End Date: 2012-04-20
City Council Meeting
Title: City Council Meeting
Location: City Hall
Description: Support your city and its developments by attending our city council meetings! Lend your voice and ideas!
Start Time: 07:00
Date: 2012-03-15
Oliver Springs is where our rich past meets with an invigorating future!
The city of OliverSprings is a beautiful hamlet located in East Tennessee. Settled in 1821, we have a 190 year tradition based around the famed mineral springs in the area which led to part of our name. Thanks to an early settler Richard Oliver, of which the town gets the rest of its name, the town of OliverSprings began to develop around tourism to the mineral springs.
The land aroundOliverSprings had been used for centuries as an Indian hunting ground, but it was the springs that encouraged them to stay. The springs, whose reputation for miraculous medicinal properties lasted until the 20th century, were known as
“Tah-hah-lehaha” to the Cherokee, a name meaning ‘healing waters’. The land remained unexplored until 1761, when Elisha Walden traveled through the Clinch and PowellRiverValleys. Settlement in the area did not begin in earnest until the 1790′s.
The town of Oliver Springs was originally known as Winter’s Gap in honor on Maj. Moses Winter, the first settler. Growth remained slow, but by 1826, Richard Oliver became the town’s first postmaster. The town was re-named Oliver’s in his honor, then briefly Popular Springs, and then to Oliver Springs. Oliver had built a 35 room inn in the 1830′s and began the first promotion of the mineral springs. The inn was used as a hospital but both sides during the Civil War.
Joseph Richards bought Oliver’s land in 1873. He built the first resort hotel, which was replaced in 1895 by a 150 room hotel. From 1895 until it burned in 1905, the Oliver Springs Hotel was a nationally known destination. The railroad, which came toOliverSprings in 1888, brought thousands of visitors to the springs. Due to being improperly insured, the Hotel was not rebuilt. The town decided to cover the springs in later years. Evidence of water conduits and reservoirs can still be seen on the site.
In the early part of the twentieth century, the area became dependent on the coal industry. According to historian Keith Glass, the Windrock Coal and Coke Company, a subsidiary of the Bessemer Coal, Iron and Land Company of Birmingham,Alabama began operating a coal mine nearOliverSpringsin approximately 1904.
In 1942, during World War II, theU.S.government bought up the neighboring communities of Robertsville, Edgemoor, East Fork, Elza,Bethel,Scarborough, and Wheat and built the secret city of Oak Ridge as part of the Manhattan Project. During this period, one of the most prominent buildings inOliverSprings— the Dr. Fred Stone, Sr. Hospital— was built by Dr. Fred Stone, who worked as a physician and examiner for new Manhattan Project employees. Eventually, the economy ofOliverSpringsbecame dependent on government employment inOak Ridge, and suffered when employment levels declined at the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s.
In the years following the end of the Cold War,OliverSpringsand its neighbors have struggled to re-establish a solid foundation on which to base their economies.OliverSpringshas experimented with several industries. In the late 1990s, the movie October Sky was filmed in nearby coal mining areas as well as the city’s downtown area. Currently, the local economy is beginning to take advantage of the mountains, which are very popular among all-terrain vehicle (ATV) riders with the largest privately owned off-road facility in the Untied States called Coal Creek OHV located on Windrock Mountain.
Oliver Springs Hotel
The year is 1895 andOliverSpringshas become a growing boomtown. The old 35 room Oliver Springs Hotel, or ‘Richards House’ as it was known had been torn down in 1894 to make way for the new hotel, which promised to surpass anything that the town had yet seen. And as first the mansions, then the carpenters did their magic, what came into being was indeed a magnificent edifice which promised grander times to come.
So it was official the old hotel had been torn down. Ripped apart and hauled away in the Fall of 1894. What had once been rumored as an addition to the Richards House soon became a much larger expansion then anyone had dreamed. And here the new hotel was in late Spring of 1895, almost finished and ready for the Summer tourist season.
Who would have thought it could have done, erecting such a proud and bold structure in only a few short months time. Yet here it was, with workers scurrying up and down scaffolds, installing soffit, hoisting up planking for the whimsical cupola that rose to the lofty height of nearly 80 feet. What a grand show place it promised to be!
Soon the trains would be coming whistling into the resort, bringing all manners of guests lured by the legend of the mineral springs and their reputed healing powers. Guests could choose their diversions from everyday life with a quick trip to the bowling alley, or play tennis on the new grass courts, or spend their time in a well equipped billiard’s room. And for those less physically inclined, a lazy stroll through the shady grove might be in order.
The new hotel promised the most modern of conveniences to its wealth guests. With 150 large, airy, quite chambers with purified hot airs heaters, foul air ducts, elevator, electric lights, call bells, hot and cold water, with or without baths, with every room being carpeted well furnished and with a view outside. The hotel stood to be a beacon of light and promise as the new century approached.
Looking back on that era, it must have been an amazing time to have lived here inOliverSprings. The Oliver Springs Historical Society continues its efforts to raise the funds needed to preserve the history of the Oliver Springs Hotel, as well as, the rich 190 year history of the town.
The 5th Annual October Sky Fall Festival on Saturday October 22nd from 10am to 5pm is their way to make that dream a reality with all proceeds from the festival going directly to the OSHS. Make sure to visit www.oshistorical.com for more information on the OSHS and its efforts to preserve its history.
Stay tuned and look for next week’s article on Oliver Springs Train Depot!
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The 5th Annual October Sky Fall Festival on Saturday October 22nd from 10am to 5pm is a great way to help support and help keep this history alive and preserved for generations to come. The festival and all proceeds from it go directly to the Oliver Springs Historical Society. Make sure to visit www.oshistorical.com for more information on the OSHS and its efforts to preserve its history.





