Early history Prehistoric
Native American habitation was common throughout the
Clinch River valley, especially during the
Woodland period (1000 B.C. – 1000 A.D.) and the
Mississippian period (1000–1550 A.D.). A number of such habitation sites were excavated in the 1930s and 1950s in anticipation of the construction of
Norris Dam and
Melton Hill Dam, respectively. The Melton Hill excavations uncovered two substantial Woodland period villages along the Clinch at Bull Bluff and Freels Bend, both approximately downstream from Clinton. By the time Euro-American explorers and
longhunters arrived in the Clinch valley in the mid-18th century, what is now Anderson County was part of a vast stretch of land claimed by the
Cherokee. Although the
Treaty of Holston, signed in 1791, was intended as a negotiation with the Cherokee to prohibit Euro-American settlement of the area including what is today Anderson County, the treaty became ineffective as more settlers moved through the
Appalachian Mountains from
Virginia and
North Carolina into Tennessee. The earliest settlers in Anderson County included the Wallace, Gibbs, Freels, Frost and Tunnell families. The flooding of white settlers into the Indian domain was cause for several skirmishes, which eased after the
Treaty of Tellico in 1798 (including an origination point for the land to be relinquished from the Cherokee being the
Tellico Blockhouse) allowed for greater ease in settling the area. Founded in 1801, the town of Burrville was named in honor of
Aaron Burr, first-term
Vice President under
Thomas Jefferson. Land was selected and partitioned for a courthouse, and Burrville was designated as the county seat for the newly formed Anderson County. The county was partitioned from portions of
Grainger County and
Knox County in 1801; neighboring
Roane County was also formed from a portion of Knox County in 1801. On November 8, 1809, by an act of the Tennessee State Legislature, the town of Burrville was renamed because of the disgrace of the
Burr–Hamilton duel, which resulted in the death of
Alexander Hamilton. The selection of the name "Clinton" was to honor
George Clinton, who was the U.S. Vice President at the time. George Clinton was one of Burr's New York political rivals who, along with
Alexander Hamilton, destroyed Burr's bid for the governorship of New York after his single-term vice presidency. George Clinton succeeded Burr as the second-term vice president for Jefferson in 1805 (and also served as
James Madison's vice president, making Clinton the first vice president to serve under two presidents and the first vice president to die in office). Because of the political position of George Clinton as vice president at the time of Burrville's name change, compared to DeWitt Clinton's position as the mayor of
New York City, most likely the residents of the town of Burrville would have been more readily identifiable and more honorable toward George Clinton than DeWitt; therefore, it is most likely Clinton was named after George Clinton, barring historical proof.
Growth and industry With the construction of Clinton's Southern Railway depot in the 1890s and the nearby booming coal industry, the population rose from about 325 in 1874 to 1,198 in 1890. During this time, the Southern Hotel accommodated overnight visitors arriving via passenger train until it burned down in 1908 in a fire that also affected most of Depot Street (now Market Street). Another Southern Railway depot was constructed in 1914 while coal mining continued to be a large enterprise for Anderson County. Clinton's first large manufacturing company, Magnet Knitting Mills, a
textile mill for men's socks, opened in 1906 with less than 60 workers. By 1910, the workforce grew to over 200 employees. In 1916, the mill employed over 500 workers, constructed an addition to its building, and started planning for the production of women's silk hosiery. Prior to the flooding cause by the
Tennessee Valley Authority's construction of the
Melton Hill Dam, the
Clinch River adjacent to Clinton was known for its freshwater pearl industry, however when river depths rose in the mid-20th century due to the dam, the warmer water temperature disrupted the mussels' habitat so that pearls were no longer harvestable.
World War II The
Clinton Engineer Works, named after Clinton, was the official name for the
Manhattan Project site in Tennessee which produced the
enriched uranium used in the 1945
bombing of Hiroshima, as well as the first examples of reactor-produced
plutonium. The site was also known by the name of its largest township, Oak Ridge. The works were located starting about southwest of Clinton, continued for towards
Kingston and contained roughly .
Clinton High School desegregation controversy In 1956, Clinton gained national attention when segregationists opposed the
desegregation of
Clinton High School. Following the
U.S. Supreme Court decision in the case of
Brown v. Board of Education, a court order required the desegregation of the high school. Twelve
African-American students enrolled in the high school in the fall of 1956. On August 27, 1956,
The Clinton 12 attended classes at Clinton High School for the first time, becoming the first African-Americans to desegregate a state-supported public school in the Southeast. While the first day of classes occurred without incident, pro-segregation forces led by
John Kasper and
Asa Carter arrived in Clinton the following week and rallied the city's white citizens. Riots broke out in early September, forcing Governor
Frank G. Clement to station National Guard units in Clinton throughout September. Sporadic violence and threats continued for the next two years, culminating in the bombing of Clinton High School on October 5, 1958. With an influx of outside aid, however, the school was quickly rebuilt. A museum dedicated to the desegregation crisis, the Green McAdoo Cultural Center, is housed in Clinton's segregation-era
Green McAdoo School. The Green McAdoo School served elementary school-aged black children, so until the desegregation movement, black high school-aged children were expected to travel to Knoxville for education.
Rogers Group quarry pushback In the 1990s, the Rogers Group, a firm specializing in road paving, began a campaign to reactivate an abandoned
quarry and build an
asphalt plant just east of Clinton near the community of Bethel. The initiative met with opposition from local and environmental groups, who were concerned that the plant would release cancer-causing toxins into nearby residential neighborhoods. Others were concerned about plummeting property values, noise pollution, damage from rock blasting, and environmental damage to Buffalo Creek. The company argued that it would follow stringent environmental and pollution guidelines,
retention ponds would limit runoff, and that the site would be surrounded by vegetation. Nevertheless, Anderson County refused to rezone the quarry property for industrial uses, and Rogers Group sued the county in 1995. In December 2006, after Rogers Group's lawsuit had stagnated, the city of Clinton voted to annex the quarry property.
Modern day In 2018, urban developers and city officials met with the proposal to redevelop the downtown and waterfront area of Clinton after the
Tennessee Department of Transportation began construction on a new bridge to carry
US 25W-
SR 9 across the Clinch River. The highlight of the project is the 7-acre site of the former Magnet Mills complex, having 1,400 feet of Clinch River frontage. Proposed additions to the site include improved commercial development and pedestrian access in the downtown area, and a waterfront esplanade and multi-story mixed-use buildings with upper-level residential space and ground level retail and restaurant space. The City of Clinton has also applied for grants towards the improvement of the streets and sidewalks in the city's downtown area, including the historical Depot Street (now Market Street). In early 2019, Aspire, a 370-acre multi-amenity park, was planned for development south of Clinton's downtown area. The park was proposed by the local non-profit organization, the Hollingsworth Foundation, which owns land for the site along with the
Tennessee Valley Authority. Construction work began in October 2019 and the park opened in October 2024. Aspire boasts a restaurant, The Pearl; an event venue, The Exchange; a boat and canoe/kayak put-in, The Launch; dog park; playground; mountain bike circuit; lawn, wildflower meadow, and shade gardens; 22 miles of hiking and biking trails; and a military monument. ==Geography==