List of counties in Tennessee
There are 95 counties in the U.S. State of Tennessee . As of 2023, Shelby County was both Tennessee's most populous county, with 910,042 residents, and the largest county in area, covering an area of 755 sq mi (1,955 km2 ). The least populous county was Pickett County (5,128) and the smallest in area was Trousdale County , covering 114 sq mi (295 km2 ). As of the same year, Davidson County , in which the capital Nashville is located, covers 502 sq mi (1,300 km2 ) with a population of 712,334. The population of the state of Tennessee as of the 2023 census estimate was 7,126,489 in an area of 42,169 sq mi (109,217 km2 ).[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] The oldest county is Washington County , founded in 1777. The most recently formed county is Chester County (1879).[ 1]
According to the 2020 census, the center of population for Tennessee was located at 35°49′16″N 86°19′57″W / 35.821189°N 86.332487°W / 35.821189; -86.332487 , 3.5 mi (5.6 km) southeast of Murfreesboro in Rutherford County .[ 4] The center of population pinpoints the location at which the population of the state, as placed on a map of the state where they reside, would balance out the map. The geographic center , the point where the map of Tennessee would balance without the population, is located 5 mi (8 km) northeast of Murfreesboro. In 1976, the Rutherford County Historical Society marked the geographic center of Tennessee with an obelisk .[ 5]
Some of the counties were formed in part or completely from lands previously controlled by American Indians. The "Indian lands" were territories that American Indians had occupied from pre-Columbian times and to which they were granted the legal right of occupancy in an act of the United States government. In cases where counties had been formed from that territory, the legal right of American Indian occupancy was revoked in a federal act prior to the formal establishment of the county.[ 6] For Tennessee, ten treaties were negotiated between 1770 and 1835, defining the areas assigned to European settlers and to American Indians, regulating the right of occupancy regarding the lands. The remaining indigenous population was eventually removed from Tennessee to what became the state of Oklahoma .[ 7]
The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) code, which is used by the United States government to uniquely identify counties, is provided with each entry. FIPS codes are five-digit numbers; for Tennessee the codes start with 47 and are completed with the three-digit county code. The FIPS code for each county in the table links to census data for that county.[ 8]
Alphabetical list
County
FIPS code[ 8]
County seat [ 1]
Est. [ 1]
Origin[ 9]
Etymology[ 9]
Population
Area[ 10] [ 1]
Map
Anderson County
001
Clinton
1801
Knox and Grainger Counties
Joseph Anderson (1757–1837) , U.S. Senator from Tennessee and first Comptroller of the U.S. Treasury .
80,234
338 sq mi (875 km2 )
Bedford County
003
Shelbyville
1807
Rutherford County
Revolutionary War officer Thomas Bedford, a large landowner in the area
53,055
474 sq mi (1,228 km2 )
Benton County
005
Camden
1835
Humphreys County
Creek War veteran David Benton (1779–1860) , an early settler in the county.
16,103
394 sq mi (1,020 km2 )
Bledsoe County
007
Pikeville
1807
Roane County and Indian lands
Anthony Bledsoe (1739-1788), Revolutionary War soldier, surveyor, and early settler in Sumner County
15,060
406 sq mi (1,052 km2 )
Blount County
009
Maryville
1795
Knox County
William Blount (1749–1800) , governor of the Southwest Territory and later U.S. Senator
141,456
559 sq mi (1,448 km2 )
Bradley County
011
Cleveland
1836
Indian lands
Tennessee state legislator Edward Bradley .
111,579
329 sq mi (852 km2 )
Campbell County
013
Jacksboro
1806
Anderson and Claiborne counties
Virginia House of Burgesses member Arthur Campbell (1743–1811) , who was a negotiator of Indian treaties.
40,223
480 sq mi (1,243 km2 )
Cannon County
015
Woodbury
1836
Rutherford, Smith and Warren counties
Governor of Tennessee Newton Cannon (1781–1841) .
15,063
266 sq mi (689 km2 )
Carroll County
017
Huntingdon
1821
Indian lands
Governor of Tennessee William Carroll (1788–1844) .
28,860
599 sq mi (1,551 km2 )
Carter County
019
Elizabethton
1796
Washington County
Speaker of the "Lost State of Franklin" Senate Landon Carter(1760–1800)[ 11] .
57,022
341 sq mi (883 km2 )
Cheatham County
021
Ashland City
1856
Davidson, Dickson, Montgomery and Robertson counties
Tennessee state legislator Edward Cheatham and possibly Confederate General Benjamin F. Cheatham.
42,254
303 sq mi (785 km2 )
Chester County
023
Henderson
1879
Hardeman, Henderson, McNairy and Madison counties
Tennessee state legislator Robert I. Chester.
17,606
289 sq mi (749 km2 )
Claiborne County
025
Tazewell
1801
Grainger and Hawkins counties
Governor of Louisiana and Governor of Mississippi Territory William C. C. Claiborne (1775–1817) .
32,654
434 sq mi (1,124 km2 )
Clay County
027
Celina
1870
Jackson and Overton counties
U.S. Speaker of the House and Secretary of State Henry Clay (1777–1852) .
7,714
236 sq mi (611 km2 )
Cocke County
029
Newport
1797
Jefferson County
William Cocke (1747–1828) , one of Tennessee's first U.S. Senators .
37,404
434 sq mi (1,124 km2 )
Coffee County
031
Manchester
1836
Bedford, Warren and Franklin counties
John Coffee (1772–1833) , frontiersman, planter, and veteran of Creek War and War of 1812 .
60,633
429 sq mi (1,111 km2 )
Crockett County
033
Alamo
1871
Haywood, Madison, Dyer and Gibson counties
Davy Crockett (1786–1836) , frontier humorist, Congressman, and defender of the Alamo .
13,982
265 sq mi (686 km2 )
Cumberland County
035
Crossville
1855
White, Bledsoe, Rhea, Morgan, Fentress and Putnam counties
The Cumberland Mountains .
64,760
682 sq mi (1,766 km2 )
Davidson County
037
Nashville
1783
Part of North Carolina
William Lee Davidson (1746–1781) , a Brigadier General who died at the Revolutionary War Battle of Cowan's Ford .
712,334
502 sq mi (1,300 km2 )
Decatur County
039
Decaturville
1845
Perry County
U.S. naval officer and War of 1812 hero Stephen Decatur (1779–1820) .
11,656
333 sq mi (862 km2 )
DeKalb County
041
Smithville
1837
Franklin, Cannon, Jackson and White counties
Johann de Kalb (1721–1780) , a German-born baron who assisted the Continentals during the American Revolutionary War .
21,225
304 sq mi (787 km2 )
Dickson County
043
Charlotte
1803
Montgomery and Robertson counties
U.S. Representative William Dickson (1770–1816) .
56,729
490 sq mi (1,269 km2 )
Dyer County
045
Dyersburg
1823
Indian lands
Tennessee state legislator Robert Henry Dyer.
36,498
510 sq mi (1,321 km2 )
Fayette County
047
Somerville
1824
Indian lands
Gilbert du Motier, marquis de La Fayette (1757–1834) , a French-born general in the American Revolutionary War .
44,175
705 sq mi (1,826 km2 )
Fentress County
049
Jamestown
1823
Morgan, Overton and White counties
Tennessee state legislator James Fentress .
19,696
499 sq mi (1,292 km2 )
Franklin County
051
Winchester
1807
Rutherford County and Indian lands
Publisher, scholar, orator, and Founding Father Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) .
44,654
553 sq mi (1,432 km2 )
Gibson County
053
Trenton
1823
Indian lands
John H. Gibson, a soldier of the Natchez Expedition and the Creek War .
51,045
603 sq mi (1,562 km2 )
Giles County
055
Pulaski
1809
Indian lands
U.S. Senator and Governor of Virginia William B. Giles (1762–1830) .
30,721
611 sq mi (1,582 km2 )
Grainger County
057
Rutledge
1796
Hawkins and Knox counties
Mary Grainger Blount, wife of William Blount and "first lady" of the Southwest Territory , which later became Tennessee.
24,681
280 sq mi (725 km2 )
Greene County
059
Greeneville
1783
Washington County
American Revolutionary War general Nathanael Greene (1742–1786) .
72,577
622 sq mi (1,611 km2 )
Grundy County
061
Altamont
1844
Coffee, Warren and Franklin counties
U.S. Attorney General Felix Grundy (1777–1840) .
13,955
361 sq mi (935 km2 )
Hamblen County
063
Morristown
1870
Jefferson, Grainger and Greene counties
Early settler Hezekiah Hamblen.
66,216
161 sq mi (417 km2 )
Hamilton County
065
Chattanooga
1819
Rhea County and Indian lands
First U.S. Secretary of the Treasury and Founding Father Alexander Hamilton (1755 or 1757–1804) .
379,864
543 sq mi (1,406 km2 )
Hancock County
067
Sneedville
1844
Hawkins and Claiborne counties
President of the Continental Congress John Hancock (1737–1793) .
6,956
222 sq mi (575 km2 )
Hardeman County
069
Bolivar
1823
Hardin County and Indian lands
Thomas Jones Hardeman, Creek War and War of 1812 soldier, later a member of the Republic of Texas legislature.
25,567
668 sq mi (1,730 km2 )
Hardin County
071
Savannah
1819
Indian lands
Joseph Hardin, legislator of the Southwest Territory and State of Franklin .
27,229
578 sq mi (1,497 km2 )
Hawkins County
073
Rogersville
1786
Sullivan County
U.S. Senator Benjamin Hawkins (1754–1816) .
58,600
487 sq mi (1,261 km2 )
Haywood County
075
Brownsville
1823
Indian lands
Judge John Haywood (1762–1826) , called "the father of Tennessee history."
17,328
533 sq mi (1,380 km2 )
Henderson County
077
Lexington
1821
Indian lands
James Henderson, an officer of the War of 1812 .
28,070
520 sq mi (1,347 km2 )
Henry County
079
Paris
1821
Indian lands
Revolutionary-era orator and Virginia legislator Patrick Henry (1736–1799) .
32,554
562 sq mi (1,456 km2 )
Hickman County
081
Centerville
1807
Dickson County
Edwin Hickman, a longhunter killed by Native Americans near the present-day site of Centerville .
25,826
613 sq mi (1,588 km2 )
Houston County
083
Erin
1871
Dickson, Humphreys, Montgomery and Stewart counties
Sam Houston (1793–1863) , Tennessee governor and congressman, president of the Republic of Texas , U.S. Senator from Texas , and Texas governor.
8,393
200 sq mi (518 km2 )
Humphreys County
085
Waverly
1809
Stewart County
U.S. Representative Parry Wayne Humphreys (1778–1839) .
19,209
532 sq mi (1,378 km2 )
Jackson County
087
Gainesboro
1801
Smith County and Indian lands
U.S. President Andrew Jackson (1767–1845) .
12,363
309 sq mi (800 km2 )
Jefferson County
089
Dandridge
1792
Greene and Hawkins counties
U.S. President and Founding Father Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826) .
57,838
274 sq mi (710 km2 )
Johnson County
091
Mountain City
1836
Carter County
Thomas Johnson, an early settler of Carter County along the Doe River .
18,375
299 sq mi (774 km2 )
Knox County
093
Knoxville
1792
Greene and Hawkins counties
Henry Knox (1750–1806) , the first U.S. Secretary of War .
500,669
509 sq mi (1,318 km2 )
Lake County
095
Tiptonville
1870
Obion County
Reelfoot Lake
6,347
163 sq mi (422 km2 )
Lauderdale County
097
Ripley
1835
Haywood, Dyer and Tipton counties
James Lauderdale, who was killed in the War of 1812 .
24,610
470 sq mi (1,217 km2 )
Lawrence County
099
Lawrenceburg
1817
Hickman County and Indian lands
U.S. naval officer and War of 1812 hero James Lawrence (1781–1813) .
46,114
617 sq mi (1,598 km2 )
Lewis County
101
Hohenwald
1843
Hickman, Lawrence, Maury and Wayne counties
Meriwether Lewis (1774–1809) , explorer of the American West.
13,066
282 sq mi (730 km2 )
Lincoln County
103
Fayetteville
1809
Bedford County
U.S. Secretary of War Benjamin Lincoln (1733–1810) .
36,169
570 sq mi (1,476 km2 )
Loudon County
105
Loudon
1870
Roane, Monroe, Blount and McMinn counties
Fort Loudoun , which was named for John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun , who led British and American forces during the French and Indian War .
60,591
229 sq mi (593 km2 )
Macon County
111
Lafayette
1842
Smith and Sumner counties
U.S. Senator Nathaniel Macon (1758–1837) .
26,793
307 sq mi (795 km2 )
Madison County
113
Jackson
1821
Indian lands
U.S. President James Madison (1758–1836) .
99,193
557 sq mi (1,443 km2 )
Marion County
115
Jasper
1817
Indian lands
Francis Marion (1732–1795) , the "Swamp Fox" of the American Revolutionary War .
29,382
500 sq mi (1,295 km2 )
Marshall County
117
Lewisburg
1836
Giles, Bedford, Lincoln and Maury counties
U.S. Chief Justice John Marshall (1755–1835) .
36,961
375 sq mi (971 km2 )
Maury County
119
Columbia
1807
Williamson County and Indian lands
Tennessee state senator Abram Maury, Sr. (1766–1825) , father of U.S. Representative Abram Poindexter Maury .
110,760
613 sq mi (1,588 km2 )
McMinn County
107
Athens
1819
Indian lands
Governor of Tennessee Joseph McMinn (1758–1824) .
55,678
430 sq mi (1,114 km2 )
McNairy County
109
Selmer
1823
Hardin County
John McNairy, judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Tennessee.
26,163
560 sq mi (1,450 km2 )
Meigs County
121
Decatur
1836
Rhea County
Return Jonathan Meigs (1740–1823) , an officer in the Continental Army who was for many years a federal Indian and military agent in Tennessee.
13,691
195 sq mi (505 km2 )
Monroe County
123
Madisonville
1819
Indian lands
U.S. President James Monroe (1758–1831) .
48,594
635 sq mi (1,645 km2 )
Montgomery County
125
Clarksville
1796
Tennessee County
John Montgomery (c. 1750–1794) , leader of the Nickajack Expedition .
239,872
539 sq mi (1,396 km2 )
Moore County
127
Lynchburg
1871
Bedford, Lincoln and Franklin counties
Tennessee state legislator William Moore.
6,748
129 sq mi (334 km2 )
Morgan County
129
Wartburg
1817
Anderson and Roane counties
American Revolutionary War officer Daniel Morgan (1736–1802) .
21,573
522 sq mi (1,352 km2 )
Obion County
131
Union City
1823
Indian lands
The Obion River .
30,411
545 sq mi (1,412 km2 )
Overton County
133
Livingston
1806
Jackson County and Indian lands
John Overton (1766–1833) , one of the cofounders of Memphis, Tennessee .
23,327
433 sq mi (1,121 km2 )
Perry County
135
Linden
1819
Humphreys and Hickman counties
U.S. naval officer and War of 1812 hero Oliver Hazard Perry (1785–1819) .
8,891
415 sq mi (1,075 km2 )
Pickett County
137
Byrdstown
1879
Fentress and Overton counties
Tennessee state legislator Howell L. Pickett (1847 - 1914).
5,128
163 sq mi (422 km2 )
Polk County
139
Benton
1839
McMinn and Bradley counties
U.S. President James K. Polk (1795–1849) .
18,033
435 sq mi (1,127 km2 )
Putnam County
141
Cookeville
1854
Fentress, Jackson, Smith, White and Overton counties
American Revolutionary War officer Israel Putnam (1718–1790) .
83,844
401 sq mi (1,039 km2 )
Rhea County
143
Dayton
1807
Roane County
U.S. Representative John Rhea (1753–1832) .
33,924
316 sq mi (818 km2 )
Roane County
145
Kingston
1801
Knox County and Indian lands
Governor of Tennessee Archibald Roane (1759 or 1760–1819) .
56,096
361 sq mi (935 km2 )
Robertson County
147
Springfield
1796
Tennessee and Sumner counties
James Robertson (1742–1814) , Tennessee state legislator and founder of the Watauga Settlements.
76,776
477 sq mi (1,235 km2 )
Rutherford County
149
Murfreesboro
1803
Davidson, Williamson and Wilson counties
Griffith Rutherford, chairman of the legislature of the Southwest Territory .
367,101
619 sq mi (1,603 km2 )
Scott County
151
Huntsville
1849
Anderson, Campbell, Fentress and Morgan counties
US. Army general and hero of the Mexican–American War Winfield Scott (1786–1866) .
22,171
532 sq mi (1,378 km2 )
Sequatchie County
153
Dunlap
1857
Hamilton, Marion and Warren counties
Cherokee word believed to mean, opossum, he grins or runs .
17,161
266 sq mi (689 km2 )
Sevier County
155
Sevierville
1794
Jefferson County
John Sevier (1745–1815) , governor of the State of Franklin and first Governor of Tennessee .
99,415
592 sq mi (1,533 km2 )
Shelby County
157
Memphis
1819
Chickasaw Nation lands acquired through the Jackson Purchase .[ 12]
Isaac Shelby (1750–1826) , commander at Kings Mountain , first governor of Kentucky , and negotiator of the purchase of the western district from the Chickasaws .
910,042
755 sq mi (1,955 km2 )
Smith County
159
Carthage
1799
Sumner County and Indian lands
American Revolutionary War officer and U.S. Senator Daniel Smith (1748–1818) .
20,538
314 sq mi (813 km2 )
Stewart County
161
Dover
1803
Montgomery County
Duncan Stewart, Tennessee state legislator and lieutenant governor of Mississippi Territory .
14,222
458 sq mi (1,186 km2 )
Sullivan County
163
Blountville
1779
Washington County
Governor of New Hampshire John Sullivan (1740–1795) .
162,135
413 sq mi (1,070 km2 )
Sumner County
165
Gallatin
1786
Davidson County
Jethro Sumner (1733–1785) , an American colonist who defended North Carolina against the British in 1780.
207,994
529 sq mi (1,370 km2 )
Tipton County
167
Covington
1823
Shelby County (previously Chickasaw lands)[ 12]
Jacob Tipton, father of Armistead Blevins, who supervised the organization of Shelby County; Tipton was killed by Native Americans in 1791 in a conflict over the Northwest Territory .[ 12]
62,015
459 sq mi (1,189 km2 )
Trousdale County
169
Hartsville
1870
Wilson, Macon, Smith and Sumner counties
William Trousdale (1790–1872) , Creek and Mexican–American War soldier and officer, state senator and Governor of Tennessee .
12,271
114 sq mi (295 km2 )
Unicoi County
171
Erwin
1875
Washington and Carter County
Native American word for the southern Appalachian Mountains , probably meaning white or fog-draped
17,756
186 sq mi (482 km2 )
Union County
173
Maynardville
1850
Grainger, Claiborne, Campbell, Anderson and Knox counties
Either for its creation from parts of five counties or to memorialize East Tennessee 's support for preservation of the Union
20,741
224 sq mi (580 km2 )
Van Buren County
175
Spencer
1840
Warren and White counties
U.S. President Martin Van Buren (1782–1862)
6,493
247 sq mi (640 km2 )
Warren County
177
McMinnville
1807
White, Jackson, Smith counties and Indian lands
American Revolutionary War officer Joseph Warren (1741–1775) , who sent Paul Revere on his famous midnight ride
42,638
433 sq mi (1,121 km2 )
Washington County
179
Jonesborough
1777
Part of North Carolina
U.S. President George Washington (1732–1799)
138,420
326 sq mi (844 km2 )
Wayne County
181
Waynesboro
1817
Hickman County
American Revolutionary War General "Mad" Anthony Wayne (1745–1796)
16,066
734 sq mi (1,901 km2 )
Weakley County
183
Dresden
1823
Indian lands
U.S. Representative Robert Weakley (1764–1845) .
33,084
580 sq mi (1,502 km2 )
White County
185
Sparta
1806
Jackson and Smith counties
John White, Revolutionary War soldier and the first European-American settler in the county
28,692
377 sq mi (976 km2 )
Williamson County
187
Franklin
1799
Davidson County
U.S. Representative Hugh Williamson (1735–1819) .
264,460
582 sq mi (1,507 km2 )
Wilson County
189
Lebanon
1799
Sumner County
David Wilson, a member of the legislatures of North Carolina and the Southwest Territory .
163,674
571 sq mi (1,479 km2 )
Defunct counties
There are two defunct counties in Tennessee:
Consolidated counties
Three Tennessee counties operate under consolidated city–county governments, a city and county that have been merged into one jurisdiction. As such, these governments are simultaneously a city, which is a municipal corporation , and a county, which is an administrative division of a state.
See also
References
^ a b c d e National Association of Counties. "NACo – Find a county" . Archived from the original on April 10, 2005. Retrieved July 22, 2007 .
^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Tennessee" . United States Census Bureau . Retrieved April 3, 2023 .
^ State, County, and Municipal Data Tennessee Blue Book 2005-2006, pages 616-626
^ "Population centers of each U.S. state, 2020" . census.gov . United States Census Bureau. Retrieved March 31, 2022 .
^ "Geographic Center of Tennessee" . rutherfordchamber.org . Rutherford County - Chamber of Commerce. Archived from the original on December 13, 2007. Retrieved January 1, 2008 .
^ "Indian Lands" . FindLaw.com . Archived from the original on December 30, 2007. Retrieved January 20, 2008 .
^ "Treaties" . Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture . University of Tennessee Press . Archived from the original on August 30, 2011. Retrieved January 20, 2008 .
^ a b "EPA County FIPS Code Listing" . EPA. Archived from the original on September 28, 2004. Retrieved April 9, 2007 .
^ a b Origins Of Tennessee County Names Archived August 21, 2010, at the Wayback Machine , Tennessee Blue Book 2005-2006, pages 508-513
^ Keen, Judy. "2010 Census Shows Population and Diversity Trends" . USA Today . Archived from the original on March 9, 2011. Retrieved March 17, 2011 .
^ "Landon Carter | Entries | Tennessee Encyclopedia" . Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved February 6, 2014 . "Landon Carter"
^ a b c Angela Wallace Finley, "Tipton County" , Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture , University of Tennessee Press , archived from the original on May 31, 2013
External links