Kingsport, Tennessee
Kingsport, Tennessee
City of Kingsport Broad Street in downtown Kingsport
Nickname: Location of Kingsport in Sullivan and Hawkins counties, Tennessee
Location of Kingsport in Tennessee
Show map of Tennessee Location of Kingsport in the US
Show map of the United States Coordinates: 36°32′N 82°33′W / 36.533°N 82.550°W / 36.533; -82.550 Country United States State Tennessee Counties Sullivan , Hawkins , Washington Settled 1771 Chartered/Rechartered 1822, 1917 • Type Council-Manager • Mayor Pat Shull • Vice Mayor Colette George • City Manager Chris McCartt • City 53.52 sq mi (138.62 km2 ) • Land 52.60 sq mi (136.23 km2 ) • Water 0.92 sq mi (2.39 km2 ) Elevation
1,211 ft (369 m) • City 55,442 • Rank US: 694th • Density 1,054.1/sq mi (407.0/km2 ) • Urban
106,571 (US: 291st ) • Metro
309,283 (US: 161st ) Time zone UTC−5 (EST ) • Summer (DST ) UTC−4 (EDT )ZIP codes 37660, 37662, 37663, 37664, 37665 & 37669
Area code 423 FIPS code 47-39560 GNIS feature ID1303478[ 4] Website www .kingsporttn .gov
Kingsport is a city in Hawkins and Sullivan counties in the U.S. state of Tennessee . Most of the city is in Sullivan County. Kingsport is the biggest city in each county but it is not the county seat of either. As of the 2020 census its population was 55,442.[ 3]
The name is based on "King's Port" which referred to the area around Ross's Landing. It is part of what is known as the "Mountain Empire," which includes a portion of southwest Virginia and the mountainous counties in Tennessee to the east.
Pal's Sudden Service , a regional fast-food restaurant chain, opened its first location in 1956 and is headquartered in Kingsport. In 2001, Pal's Sudden Service , won the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award , becoming the first restaurant company to receive the award.[ 5]
Geography
Kingsport's Long Island.
Kingsport is located at 36°32′13″N 82°32′32″W / 36.53694°N 82.54222°W / 36.53694; -82.54222 (36.536851, -82.542123)[ 6] where U.S. highways 11 and 23 meet. Kingsport is also the starting and ending point of Interstate 26 .
According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 53.5 square miles (138.6 km²), of which, 52.6 square miles (136.2 km²) of it is land and 0.9 square miles (2.4 km²) of it (1.72%) is water.
Education
People who live in Kingsport use the Kingsport City Schools public school system. The system has eight elementary schools, two middle schools, and one high school . Kingsport is also home to eight private academies . The city is also part of Sullivan county which has 2 other high schools in Kingsport.
While no college or university houses its main campus within the city, Northeast State Community College , East Tennessee State University , and University of Tennessee have branch campuses in Kingsport.
Neighborhoods
There are several neighborhoods located within or just outside of Kingsport, offering different ways of living:[ 1]
Allandale
Amersham
Bloomingdale
Borden Village
Carter's Valley
Cliffside
Colonial Heights
Cooks Valley
Downtown
Edinburgh
Fairacres
Fort Robinson
Gibson Town
Green Acres
Highland Park
Hillcrest
Huntington Hills
Indian Springs (Fall Creek & Airport )
Litz Manor
Lynn Garden
Malabar Heights
Meadowview
Midtown
Morrison City
Orebank
Preston Forest
Preston Hills
Ridgefields
Riverfront
Riverview
Rock Springs
Sevier Terrace
Sullivan Gardens
Tellico Hills
White City
Notable people
Lisa Alther , author, born and grew up in Kingsport
Edward L. Ayers , Bancroft Prize -winning historian and ninth president of the University of Richmond , raised in Kingsport
Barry Bales , Grammy Award-winning musician with Alison Krauss and Union Station
Fredrick 'Pal' Barger, founder of Pal's Sudden Service
James F. Barker , president of Clemson University (1999–2013)
Nick Castle , actor who played Michael Myers in the original Halloween , was born in Kingsport and makes appearances at the local haunted houses.
Jeff Chapman-Crane , Appalachian artist
Harry Coover , inventor of Super Glue
Denny Crawford , professional football player
Amy Dalley , country music artist
Bobby Dodd , College Football Hall of Fame inductee as both a football player (University of Tennessee ) and coach (Georgia Institute of Technology )
Bobby Eaton , professional wrestler
Elle and Blair Fowler , online beauty retailers who spent part of their childhoods in Kingsport
Daniel Kilgore , professional football player, Kansas City Chiefs
Cliff Kresge , Nationwide Tour golfer who splits his time between homes in Kingsport and Florida
Hal Lawton , President & CEO of Tractor Supply , graduate of Sullivan South High School
Blake Leeper , Paralympic silver medallist[ 7]
Cripple Clarence Lofton , noted boogie-woogie pianist and singer, born in Kingsport
Matt Mahaffey , musician, frontman of pop/rock band Self
Brownie and Stick McGhee , brothers and blues musicians, grew up in Kingsport and other East Tennessee towns
Ken Mellons , country music artist
John Palmer , former NBC News correspondent, born in Kingsport and a graduate of Dobyns-Bennett High School
Jimmy Quillen , member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Tennessee's 1st congressional district (1963–1997)
John Shelton Reed , sociologist and essayist, author or editor of eighteen books, most of them dealing with the contemporary American South
Selwa Showker "Lucky" Roosevelt , Chief of Protocol of the United States from 1982-1989 and former journalist for the Washington Post , married Archibald B. Roosevelt, grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt
Coty Sensabaugh , cornerback for the Pittsburgh Steelers
Gerald Sensabaugh , retired NFL cornerback, played for the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Dallas Cowboys
LeRoy Sprankle , high school multi-sport coach, author, and general manager of the Canton Independents
Adam Steffey , bluegrass artist
Bill Streever , biologist and author
Cyrus Thomas , entomologist and ethnologist
Steven Williams , actor who starred in 21 Jump Street and The Blues Brothers
Charles Wright , poet who spent part of his childhood and adult life in Kingsport
Sports
The Kingsport Axman of the Appalachian League , a rookie-level league, play in the city. The team has competed in the city since 1969, with the exception of 1983. The Mets play in Hunter Wright Stadium named after Mayor Hunter Wright. Previously the team was known as the Kingsport Mets. Their name changed in 2020.
References
Further reading
Long, Howard. Kingsport: A Romance of Industry. Overmountain Press (October 1993) ISBN 0932807895
Spoden, Muriel Millar Clark. The Long Island of the Holston: Sacred Island of the Cherokee Nation . ASIN: B0006WOGAM
Wolfe, Margaret Ripley. Kingsport Tennessee: A Planned American City. University Press of Kentucky (November 1987) ISBN 0813116244
Other websites