Thursday, January 01, 2026

A More Detailed Historical Account of The Nashville - Charlotte Road (Charlotte Pike/Turnpike) in Middle Tennessee

The Charlotte Pike

This post presents a comprehensive and detailed narrative of a road widely regarded as one of the most historically significant transportation corridors in Middle Tennessee: the Nashville–Charlotte Road, more commonly known today as the Charlotte Turnpike or Charlotte Pike. This work is grounded in the research of numerous previous historians who have examined various elements of the road’s past, but to my knowledge, the informoation in this post represents the first attempt to compile such a comphensive and lenghty study of those findings into a single, expansive historical narrative that I hope this turns out to be. My hopes are that this work will serve as a centralized resource of extensive information both for researchers and future historians seeking a concise account of the Charlotte Pike’s history and evolution.


Shown above, mid-morning sunlight filters through the branches of this oak tree situated along Dog Creek Road in Southern Cheatham County. When the modern asphalt surface is conceptually removed and replaced with the earlier dirt and gravel roadway, the surrounding landscape likely appears much as it did for the greater part of the road’s more than two-century-long history. It is plausible that this scene has remained substantially unchanged since the road’s earliest years, potentially dating to a period when the oak—now rising approximately ninety to one hundred feet in height—was itself only a young sapling and a silent contemporary witness to the road’s earliest use.

About the author -

I was born in June of 1984 and was raised in a home in the small community of Shacklett, located on Highway 70, about two miles north of Kingston Springs in Southern Cheatham County. I currently live in the same house today, helping in running our family-owned canoe rental business that my parents began in 1988. My house sits less than 30 yards from Dog Creek on its south side. I can look out my bedroom window and see the creek. The spot from which I am writing these words is less than one hundred yards from where the Charlotte Road crossed Dog Creek, about 100 yards before it empties into the Harpeth River.

Accordingly, this study places particular emphasis on the central, or midpoint, segment of the Charlotte Road, focusing on a fifteen-mile corridor that constitutes its most geographically and historically significant section. Spanning from approximately six miles directly east of my home where the road climbed the first of several ridges—known as Sullivan’s Ridge—crossing the eastern boundary of what would become Cheatham County following its establishment in 1856. From there, the route of the road continued westward along the ridge just a couple of miles north of present-day Pegram, before descending into the Dog Creek valley, where it closely followed the course of Dog Creek for approximately two miles, all the way to the Harpeth River. After crossing the Harpeth River at the mouth of Dog Creek, the road passed directly through areas containing significant Native American archaeological sites located on both the north and south sides of Shacklett. From there, the road followed the general path of modern-day Highway 70 to White Bluff, where it then took a northwestwardly course, eventually reaching Charlotte after another eight to nine miles. In its entirety, the Charlotte Road extended approximately 37 to 38 miles, connecting downtown Nashville in Davidson County with the town of Charlotte in Dickson County.


Above: The general course the Charlotte Pike followed from Sullivan's Ridge in the east to the town of Charlotte in the west.

In providing such a comprehensive account of the road’s history, the narrative below has been broken down and organized into the following chapters:

 1.) A brief summary, along with a 1794 map, of a primitive roadway reportedly located in Middle Tennessee known as Glover’s Trace. Little documentary evidence survives regarding this early route, and the limited information that has been published is both scarce and difficult to access. Available accounts suggest that Glover’s Trace may have been established as early as the 1760s, predating the Nashville–Charlotte Road by approximately three to four decades.


This section also examines the earliest ironworks established in Middle Tennessee, with operations beginning circa 1796 in a region that would later become north-central Dickson County. Many of these early furnaces were owned by James Robertson, a prominent Tennessee pioneer whose roles encompassed surveyor, soldier, Indian agent, political leader, and co-founder of Nashville. Recognizing the necessity of a reliable transportation route to ensure the efficient and profitable operation of his forges and furnaces, Robertson undertook the planning and construction of a roadway linking his industrial enterprises to the nearest major urban center, Nashville, located approximately thirty-six miles to the east. Construction on this route likely commenced between 1800 and 1802, with the full length of the road completed around 1804.

2.) The early Native American history of the region that would later become southern Cheatham County, with particular attention to the Indigenous populations who occupied the area from approximately the mid-tenth century A.D. through the mid-fifteenth century. These inhabitants are associated with the Mississippian cultural tradition—often referred to as the “Mound Builders”—who established significant urban centers, most notably at Mound Bottom. This major settlement was connected to another important Mississippian site located several miles to the south, commonly known as the Pack Site. When the Charlotte Road was later constructed, its route was laid directly between these two prominent archaeological sites. References to the Charlotte Road appear in John Haywood’s 1823 work, The Aboriginal and Natural History of Tennessee, several excerpts of which are included in this section.

3.) An examination of the history of Dog Creek, situated in the present-day community of Shacklett in southern Cheatham County, and its close historical association with the Charlotte Road.


4.) The importance of the road as an official United States mail route between Nashville and Memphis upon which the mail was carried beginning as early as 1806 and up until at least the 1850's

 
5.) A section that examines the history of the road in the context of its role as a stagecoach route. Regular stagecoach service between Nashville and Charlotte was established in the late 1820s. Following the chartering of the Charlotte Turnpike Company in 1838, the roadway gained prominence as a primary stage line, facilitating the movement of passengers not only between local settlements but also to destinations across West Tennessee and beyond, including Memphis.

This section explores the often overlooked yet significant factors linking Montgomery Bell to the history of the road and explains the central role the route played in Bell’s commercial success, particularly in relation to his iron forge operations at the Narrows of the Harpeth. The viability and prosperity of the Narrows forge were heavily dependent upon access to a nearby major thoroughfare, especially one that provided the most direct and efficient connection to Nashville. Such a roadway was essential for the transportation of raw materials, equipment, construction supplies, labor, and visitors, as well as for the distribution of finished iron products.

Bell’s association with the road is further underscored by his selection of the remarkably young engineer Samuel Adkisson to assist in the construction of the tunnel at the Narrows of the Harpeth. Between 1818 and 1820, Adkisson—then only fifteen or sixteen years of age—supervised and directed the tunnel’s construction. Long after his professional relationship with Bell had concluded, Adkisson emerged as a prominent figure in regional transportation infrastructure, later identifying himself as a “turnpike builder.” Beginning in the late 1840s, his work on the Charlotte Turnpike, which included the supervision and maintenance of a fifteen-mile segment of the road, positioned him as one of the most influential individuals in the road’s development and alignment, second only to James Robertson in terms of lasting impact.


6.) The Charlotte Turnpike During the Civil War. Prior to the fall of Forts Henry and Donelson in February 1862, the Charlotte Turnpike functioned as a significant supply and transportation route for Confederate forces. Numerous firsthand accounts document military skirmishes and related wartime activity along the road, particularly within the area of present-day southern Cheatham County.

7.) The decline and eventual disappearance of the Charlotte Turnpike as a principal transportation artery through southern Cheatham County unfolded gradually over the course of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, driven by successive transformations in regional transportation infrastructure. The first major blow to the turnpike’s prominence came with the construction of the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad during the 1850s and 1860s. By offering a faster, more reliable, and increasingly cost-effective means of moving both passengers and freight, the railroad redirected a substantial portion of long-distance traffic away from traditional overland routes. As a consequence, traffic along the Charlotte Turnpike declined sharply, eroding toll revenues and undermining the financial stability of the turnpike company, which had depended upon steady usage to sustain road maintenance and operations.

Although the turnpike persisted in a diminished capacity into the late nineteenth century, its ultimate obsolescence was sealed by the rise of automobile transportation and the accompanying construction of modern highways. The development of the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway during the 1910s and 1920s—undertaken as part of Tennessee’s early state highway program and influenced by federal aid initiatives—provided a publicly funded, toll-free route designed to meet contemporary engineering standards. In southern Cheatham County, this new highway either incorporated or bypassed portions of the historic turnpike corridor, rendering the older road increasingly redundant. With the completion of the highway, remaining traffic shifted almost entirely to the improved roadway, effectively eliminating any practical or economic justification for the continued operation of the Charlotte Turnpike. Together, these developments illustrate how successive waves of transportation innovation—first railroads and later automobile highways—collectively brought about the downfall and final demise of the Charlotte Turnpike as a viable thoroughfare.


8.) Lastly, a section displaying various maps of Middle Tennessee, dating from 1826 - 1864, that depict the route of the Nashville - Charlotte Road in varying detail.

Before There Was a Road / Glover's Trace

The following information on early roads in Middle Tennessee comes from a paper titled "Tennessee’s Indigenous Geography" written by Zachary Keith (Middle Tennessee State University July 2020) A link to the entire paper will be given below.

"When waterways failed to provide a quick or direct enough route, individuals were forced to travel over land. Presently interstate highways host the majority of overland automobile traffic. These tend to follow older roads, as they were generally the easiest and most direct routes between two points. The great roads Tennesseans traversed in the 18th and 19th centuries include the Virginia Road in East Tennessee; Boone’s Trace through the Cumberland Gap; the Emory Road connecting Knoxville and Nashville; the Natchez Trace between Nashville and Natchez, Mississippi (touching the Cumberland, Tennessee, and Mississippi Rivers); the federal road connecting Nashville and Chattanooga; and Charlotte Pike (earlier called Glover’s Trace) extending westward from Nashville toward the Tennessee River. All five of these roads and their later iterations on which we still drive today were already in place at the time of white settlement. Most may have begun as buffalo and large game trails until Native groups carved them out of wilderness hundreds or thousands of years before European colonization and used them for travel, trading, and raiding… Glover’s Trace, an early path west from Nashville overlapped the “Lower Harpeth and West Tennessee Trail.” Native groups most likely used this path once again for trading, hunting, or warring between Middle Tennessee and West Tennessee with a more direct route to the Mississippi River."

From - https://jewlscholar.mtsu.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/26a5d9b8-be8f-45fd-b998-bfda94203b9b/content


John Russell's 1794 "
Map of the state of Kentucky : with the adjoining territories"

In the 1794 map of Middle Tennessee above, a road or path can clearly be seen leading west out of Nashville to the Tennessee River. This road is labelled as "Glover's Trace". The following information about Glover's Traces comes from an article posted on the website of the Lexington Progress, a newspaper in Henderson County, TN. The article is dated December 2, 2020.

“The western spur of the Natchez Trace, also called the Glover’s Trace or the Old Notchey, was an alternative West Tennessee route of the main trace that went from Natchez, Mississippi, through Middle Tennessee to Nashville. This western spur went through Henderson County and ended at a spot in West Tennessee across the river from the New Johnsonville area. In those days, there was a place to cross and a ferry at a spot called Reynoldsburg.

The route was used at least twice by troops raised by Andrew Jackson during the War of 1812 to return home and was federally surveyed by a group in 1816, who widened the Native American trail, and placed mile markers along the route.”

Link to the website where this information was obtained - https://www.lexingtonprogress.com/2020/12/02/natchez-state-trace-park-museum/

According to Cassandra Carr Cooper, Vice Regent of the Benton County, TN chapter of DAR, the roads name was "derived from an important early route laid out between Nashville and the Western District of Tennessee in 1797, by William Glover, a Native American whose mother was Chickasaw."

James Robertson -

The region that would become north-central Dickson County in 1803 (hereafter referred to as “Dickson County”) was initially explored and settled by some individuals as early as the 1780s. The county was formally established on October 23, 1803, when the Tennessee State Legislature passed a bill creating Dickson County from portions of Robertson and Montgomery Counties. During the 1780s, James Robertson received several thousand acres of land in this area from the State of North Carolina, which at the time governed the western territories. In addition, Robertson purchased substantial tracts of land in the region from North Carolina. Following Tennessee’s admission as a state in 1796, Robertson’s holdings spanned multiple sections of Middle Tennessee; however, his most valuable and strategically significant lands were concentrated in north-central Dickson County. This area of the Tennessee frontier was endowed with abundant natural resources, including significant deposits of iron ore, offering substantial economic potential to landholders engaged in mining and the extraction of raw iron.

Below: Image of the original February 1793 State of North Carolina land grant to James Robertson, assignee of Mary Campbell, heir of James Campbell, a soldier in the Continental Army.) This land, situated on Barton's Creek in what would later become Dickson County, was the site where Robertson established the Cumberland Furnace Iron Works in 1793. At the time, Robertson’s residence lay just west of Nashville, necessitating the use of rudimentary routes extending westward through the intervening wilderness to reach these early settlements approximately forty miles distant. It is probable that as early as the 1780s, Robertson had cut an initial, rudimentary path that would later evolve into the Nashville–Charlotte Road, a route reported to have been completed officially between 1804 and 1806.


The following information comes directly from the grant itself.

Details - State of North Carolina Land Grant

NARRATIVE: James Robertson, Assignee of Mary Campbell, Heir of James Campbell (Military Warrant No. 1274) was issued 640 acres of land on 23 Feb 1793 in TN Tennessee County, located on the "South side of Cumberland River on West fork of Bartons Creek". This was recorded in Land Patent Book 76 page 307 as TN Tennessee County Grant # 1590. The original request for this land was entered on 28 Oct 1784. It took 8 years and 4 months to issue the grant.

Text of the grant:

"Issued 23 Feb 1793 for 640 acres "S. side of Cumberland River on West fork of Bartons Creek"

No 1590 Know ye that we have granted unto James Robertson assignee of James Campbell a private in the Continental line of this State six hundred and forty acres of land in our County of Tennessee on the south side of Cumberland river on the west fork of Bartons creek beginning at an elm and hickory on the bank of the creek on William Blount’s west boundary line runs west three hundred and twenty poles to two black gums and hickory thence south three hundred and twenty poles to a Sugartree on the bank of the creek thence east three hundred and twenty poles to a stake thence north three hundred and twenty poles to the beginning

To hold to the said James Robertson his heirs and assignees forever dated the 23rd day of February 1793

J Glasgow (North Carolina Secretary of State)

Richard Dobbs Spaight (Governor of North Carolina from December 1792 to November 1795)


One of the principal motivations for Robertson’s acquisition of land in this region was his early recognition that many of the tracts he had been granted or purchased—located approximately forty miles west of Nashville in what would become north-central Dickson County—contained rich deposits of iron ore. On one such tract, Robertson established the Cumberland Furnace Iron Works in 1793, among the first iron forges in Middle Tennessee. It was not until the late 1790s and the early years of the 1800s that Robertson undertook the construction of a roadway through the challenging terrain and wilderness separating his residence in western Nashville from his ironworks near Charlotte. In 1804, Robertson sold the forge to Montgomery Bell.


The image pictured above is of the earliest North Carolina land grant that mentions Dog Creek, dated February 23, 1793. Robertson would later cut a section of the path of the Nashville Charlotte Road alongside Dog Creek. This grant was for a 640 acre tract of land on the Harpeth River "opposite the mouth of Dog Creek". It was issued to 
Alexander Green and James Robertson, assignees of Thomas Vallentine. An assignee was 
the person to whom a right or interest in land is transferred by the original holder, the assignor. The following information about this land grant comes from the website "North Carolina Land Grants Images and Data" (link below)

"NARRATIVE: Alexander Green and James Robertson, Assignee of Thomas Vallentine (Military Warrant No. 2697) was issued 640 acres of land on 23 Feb 1793 in TN Davidson County, located "No. side of Harpeth River opposite the mouth of Dog creek". This was recorded in Land Patent Book 76 page 313 as TN Davidson County Grant # 1602."

Below: A zoomed in view of the part of the grant that mentions Dog Creek, which is underlined in red. The way they wrote back in is hard to decipher, but in this image, it says " the west side of Harpeth River opposite the mouth of Dog Creek"





The link to this grant, comes from The North Carolina Land Grant Images And Data Website - https://nclandgrants.com/grant/?mars=12.14.2.1673&qid=1231165&rn=1

This website is quite interesting and easy to use. You just need to create a free account with a username and password, and you can search all of the early North Carolina Land Grants that are now the land in Kingston Springs, Pegram, and the entire South Cheatham County area. For example, you can search for land grants that included the words "Turnbull Creek" or Harpeth River" (See image below of what the site looks like) The link to the website's homepage is: https://nclandgrants.com 







Above: The original roadbed of the Charlotte Road. This photo was taken approximately 1 mile west of Sam's Creek Road, or about a mile and a half east of where Dog Creek Road dead ends today.


Above: The old roadbed of the Nashville - Charlotte Road can still clearly be seen, as shown in this video that I shot in 2016. The roadbed seen in the video was once part of the Turnpike that was located in the area about a mile west of what is today, the intersection of Old Charlotte Pike and Sam's Creek Road, and about one and a half miles east of where Dog Creek Road dead ends today.

The Building of the Road 

By the time Robertson first began cutting the path that the Charlotte Road would take, he was already nearing 60 years old. After he had completed the construction of this road sometime between 1800 - 1804, he named it after his wife, Charlotte Reeves Robertson, to whom he had been married since 1768. Charlotte, the town seat of Dickson County, was also named after Mrs. Robertson.

Below is the oldest map I have been able to find that depicts what I believe to be the Nashville - Charlotte Road. This map was made in 1805.



 The Charlotte Road & The Mound Bottom / Pack Sites

The wilderness through which the road was cut passed directly through lands that had previously been inhabited by various Native American peoples, the first of which having arrived here some 10,000 - 12,000 years ago, and possibly even 13,000 to 14,000 years ago. The area remained continuously inhabited by various Native American societies and cultures for many thousands of years, up until it was suddenly abandoned and completely evacuated by the last of the Native Americans to occupy the land, happening sometime around the late 14th to mid 15th century.

Mound Bottom and the adjacent Pack Sites comprise one of the most archaeologically significant Mississippian-period civic-ceremonial complexes in Middle Tennessee. Occupation of the core at Mound Bottom is generally dated to the Late Woodland–Mississippian transition and the height of Mississippian lifeways (approximately AD 1000–1300), during which time the site developed an organized plan of earthen constructions arrayed around a substantial central plaza. These places functioned as nucleated towns where political, economic, and ritual activities were concentrated, and they form part of a broader landscape of mound centers that mediated regional interaction along the lower Harpeth and Cumberland valleys.


The image shown above comes from a 1940's Nashville newspaper. Crudely drawn, yet still accurate, it depicts the Charlotte Road with Mound Bottom to the north, and the Pack site to the south. Also depicted on this map are Dog Creek, the location of the Dog Creek school house. the road leading to Kingston Springs, and the Bristol Highway.

The Native Americans often known as the "Mound Builders" had consistently occupied the area of Southern Cheatham County that includes both the Mound Bottom & Pack Sites, beginning sometime around the year 950 AD. Their occupation of these sites lasted approximately 500 years or so, up until sometime around 1450 AD. For reasons still unknown, beginning sometime around 1400 AD, these people suddenly and rapidly abandoned their lands and densely populated sites in Middle Tennessee, including Mound Bottom and surrounding sites, within a time span of only a few decades.


Above: Aerial view of Mound Bottom

Several leading theories have been proposed to explain the rapid and widespread evacuation of Native population of the Mound Bottom and Pack Sites. Among the most commonly cited explanations are the following: (1) large-scale warfare or territorial conflicts between neighboring tribes; (2) epidemics of disease to which the Indigenous population had no prior immunity; (3) the potential degradation of agricultural lands due to overuse or mismanagement, rendering the territory increasingly unsuitable for sustaining a stable population; (4) the depletion of natural resources, including a dramatic decline or local extinction of key species such as bison, deer, cougars, and black bears, which had long served as primary sources of food; and (5) possible religious or cultural motivations that influenced patterns of settlement and abandonment.

Following this period, Middle Tennessee remained largely uninhabited by Native Americans for at least two to three centuries. During this interval, the region was utilized primarily as hunting grounds by small, mobile groups from various tribes. These were the Indigenous peoples encountered by the earliest European explorers and settlers in the early to mid-1700s. When questioned, these Native groups possessed no knowledge of the monumental earthworks in the region—such as Mound Bottom—nor of the peoples who had constructed them several centuries earlier. The origins and purpose of these mounds remained as enigmatic to the Indigenous inhabitants encountered by early European settlers as they did to the newcomers themselves.

 The Charlotte Road & Haywood's 1823 History Book 

In 1823, the book "The Natural & Aboriginal History of Tennessee" was published, authored by John "Judge" Haywood, who was "an American jurist and historian known as the Father of Tennessee History." His book was, in part, an attempt to prove that the native tribes of Tennessee were descendants of ancient Hebrews, a popular idea among European Americans in the early 19th century." (Wikipedia)

In his book, Haywood mentions the Charlotte Road and Dog Creek multiple times in the chapter in which he discusses his findings after personally exploring both the Pack and Mound Bottom sites. In particular, he gives a rather detailed physical description of the Mound Bottom site and the surrounding area.

Of the Sun and Moon painted upon rocks -

"About two miles below the road, which crosses Harpeth River, from Nashville to Charlotte, is a bend of the river…About six miles from it is a large rock,, on the side of the river, with a perpendicular face of 70 or 80 feet altitude. On it below the top some distance, and on the side, are painted the sun and moon in yellow colors, which have not faded since the white people first knew it. The figure of the sun is six feet in diameter: The figure of the moon, is of the old moon…The painting on Big Harpeth, before spoken of, is more than 80 feet from the water, and 30 or 40 below the summit…The painting is neatly executed and was performed at an immense hazard of the operator. It must have been for a sacred purpose, and as an object of adoration. What other motive was capable of inciting to a work so perilous, laborious and expensive, as those paintings must have been? By what means (was the skilled artist) let down, and placed near enough to operate? And for what reward did he undertake so dangerous a work?” (pages 113 – 115)







Above: These are two of the best photographs ever taken of Paint Rock. Thanks to the latest drone technology many hard-to-reach archeological sites are now easily accessible via drone.

Haywood was thoroughly fascinated and quite enamored with the Mound Bottom and Pack Sites. He was very enthusiastic and eager to learn as much as he possibly could about these sites. When he wrote his book, he dedicated an entire chapter to the Native American sites in Southern Cheatham County. He gives what is very likely the most detailed and accurate archaeological description of the site that has ever been written. 

He began the section of his book in which he covers Mound Bottom by writing "On the Big Harpeth river, in a bend of the river, below the road which crosses near the mouth of Dog creek, from Nashville to Charlotte, is a square mound, 47 by 47 at the base, twenty-five feet high, and two others in a row with it, of inferior size, from 5 to 10 feet high...The top of this mound was ascended to from the west, where the height is not more than 5 or 6 feet. The platform is 60 feet over. Two large gateways are in the eastern wall. From the most southwardly of them, a road leads to the river and across it in a northwardly direction, near the mouth of Dog creek." (page 129)



He goes on to say that several other ancient roads and paths that were used by the mound builders to travel between their cities were still traceable, including another description of the road that ran from the Mound Bottom complex to the mouth of Dog Creek, where the Charlotte Road crossed the Harpeth. Haywood noted that this road was traceable for miles eastward following a course alongside Dog Creek in the direction of Nashville.

Haywood further states that he could make out the path of another road "leading to the mouth of Dog creek, and traceable for several miles beyond it....Higher up the river, and within a mile of the above-described enclosures, and above the road leading by the mouth of Dog creek to Charlotte, is another bend of the river, so formed as to leave a bend and bottom on the north or opposite side of the river..." (page 130)


This leads me to believe in the likely possibility that Robertson, when choosing the path of his Charlotte Road in this area, some 20 + years prior to the publishing of Haywood's book, took advantage of the still traceable ancient path that had been used by the Mound Builders hundreds of years earlier, as it would have been easier and saved a great deal of work to construct his road along this already existing path rather than cutting out a new one.

Haywood also wrote in the same chapter of his book, that along the old road that was traceable and led up Dog Creek for miles eastward in the direction of Nashville, an ancient Native American grave had been discovered, and that near to this grave, the grave of a dog had also been discovered. He writes, "On the side of the road leading from Nashville to Charlotte, one mile east of Big Harpeth, near the lower part of Mr. Lake's plantation, was a grave, with rocks set up at the feet and head, and containing the bones of a dog. The bones in another grave near it, were human". (page 192)

For a dog to be buried alongside his Native American human master in such fashion, it must have been a dog held in a much higher regard and deserving of even more respect than the average canine; one that must have been much cared for and looked after in order to deserve such an honorable burial. 

Haywood's book "The Natural And Aboriginal History Of Tennessee, Up To The First Settlements Therein By The White People, in the Year 1768"  has been made available to read for free on the Internet Archive website. It can be found at the following link - https://archive.org/details/naturalaborigina00hayw/page/n9/mode/2up

The History of Dog Creek & Its Link to The Charlotte Road 

As long ago as the mid 1800's, the first story that would eventually become the leading theory as to how Dog Creek got its name, began to spread by word of mouth among some lifelong Dog Creek residents. As the story goes, the creek got its name because of a run in between a black bear and a dog, which resulted in the bear killing the dog. If this story has any truth to it, the dog more than likely belonged to one of the first land surveyors who was passing through the area, as the fight is said to have taken place sometime in the 1780's, before there were any permanent settlers in the Dog Creek area. 

At the time, the creek had yet to be named, but it soon became known as the creek where the dog was killed by a bear. Whether or not this is the true story as to how Dog Creek got its name, the person who named it was probably one of the first people to permanently settle along the creek, in the first couple of years of the 1790's.

Several years ago, I uncovered the best and most reliable piece of evidence I have yet to find that best supports this story. It is the oldest document to mention the creek, and the oldest document I have found that uses the title "Dog Creek" to label it: a land grant dated February 23, 1793, issued by the State of North Carolina to two men—Alexander Green and none other than James Robertson himself. Both Green and Robertson were assignees of a man named Thomas Valentine. (See the photo section below for a photo of this land grant.)


Above - 1863 Map depicting the entire route of the Charlotte Turnpike, from Nashville in the east to the town of Charlotte in Dickson County to the west. Click on this map to make it larger. 

In addition to this, in Sarah Foster Kelley's 1987 book, "West Nashville, it's People and Environs", in the chapter in which Kelley discusses the history and genealogy of the families to settle along the Charlotte Turnpike, from West Nashville all the way to Shacklett in Southern Cheatham County, the account of the run in between a bear and a dog is also given as the reason the creek was named Dog Creek. In the section in which Kelley tells of the history of Shacklett, she says "A few miles northwest of Kingston Springs on the present Highway Seventy, North, is the crossing of the Big Harpeth River. A road which leads north connects the Dog Creek Community, also known as Shacklett, named for Doctor Shacklett, and the Narrows of Harpeth settlement. It has been said that a bear killed a dog on a branch which was later called Dog Creek." (page 142-43)


This is where the Charlotte Turnpike crossed Dog Creek, about one hundred yards east of its mouth.


Above: This map shows the location where the Charlotte Road crossed Dog Creek about 100 yards east of the mouth of the creek. Also shown on this map are the paths of Dog Creek (traced in light blue), and the original path of the Charlotte Road (dark blue.)

Going back to Haywood's account of the discovery of the gravesite of the Native American and his canine companion - If not for the many accounts of the story of the unfortunate dog who lost his life somewhere along the creek in a battle against a black bear (a species of animal that was still a common sight here and that still inhabited the woods of Middle Tennessee up until the early - mid 1800's) one might be inclined to believe the creek was so named because of the discovery of the gravesite beside the creek that contained the remains of the ancient Native American and his dog.

The Charlotte Pike & The US Mail

Beginning not long after the road had been completed and the town of Charlotte was established as the seat of the new County of Dickson in 1804, the road was already being used as a route to carry the United States Mail between Nashville, Charlotte, and areas further to the west in Middle Tennessee. It continued to serve as an official United States Mail route from 1806 all the way up until sometime in the 1890's, when the road ceased existing as a turnpike road after the Nashville - Charlotte Turnpike Company was sold to a private individual, which is when the road first became a toll-free road. Below, mail schedule is detailed in a newspaper announcement.


Above - This announcement of the first United States mail routes in Middle Tennessee appeared in the June 14, 1806 edition of The Impartial Review & Cumberland Repository. According to the announcement, the mail route between Nashville and Charlotte was designated as Route 70. The mail ran once a week from Nashville to Charlotte, leaving every Friday at 6 a.m. and arriving in Charlotte six hours later at noon. Curiously it appears that the return trip to Nashville took only five hours, leaving Charlotte at 3 p.m. and arriving at Nashville at 8 p.m.



Above - By 1839, the mail was running three times a week between Nashville and Charlotte. This schedule of the mail is detailed in the Nashville newspaper announcement shown above, dated April 29, 1839.


The Nashville and Charlotte Turnpike Company - The Stagecoach Years



Above: This notice concerning the construction of a portion of the Charlotte Turnpike appeared in a Nashville newspaper on January 30, 1838. It is an announcement by the owners of the Nashville & Charlotte Turnpike Company, in which they state that they will be accepting bids from private contractors for the construction of the section of the turnpike "from the termination of the fifth mile to the top of the hill about one mile beyond Elijah Robertson's." (This would be at the top of Sullivan's Ridge)




In 1838, the Charlotte Road was acquired by the Nashville–Charlotte Turnpike Company, which had been chartered earlier that year. This marked the first instance in which travelers were required to pay a toll to use the roadway. Shortly after the company’s charter, toll booths were constructed at designated points along the Turnpike. Ownership of the company was vested in Jetton, Walker & Co.

Following its conversion to a turnpike in the 1830s, the road became the principal stagecoach route linking Nashville and Charlotte. According to a contemporary advertisement in a Nashville newspaper, stagecoaches departed Nashville every Friday at 6:00 A.M. and arrived in Charlotte by noon, indicating an approximate travel time of six hours over a distance of thirty-six to thirty-eight miles.

About eight - nine years prior to this charter, a December 1829, advertisement in The Arkansas Gazette announced the initiation of stagecoach service between Nashville and Memphis, scheduled to commence in January 1830. Service was to operate three days per week, with coaches drawn by teams of four horses and outfitted in “superior style” for passenger comfort (see image below).



An excerpt from H.W. Crew’s 1890 work, A History of Nashville, Tennessee, provides further context regarding the establishment of turnpike companies and the construction of roads and bridges throughout Davidson County, situating the development of the Charlotte Turnpike within the broader framework of regional transportation infrastructure.

“The Nashville and Charlotte Turnpike Company was chartered somewhere between 1835 and 1840, for the purpose of constructing a turnpike from Nashville towards Charlotte. The road as constructed (as of 1890) is ten miles long, and cost about $60,000.00. It was a very important road previous to the building of the railroads, and it was no uncommon thing to see twenty teams at a time traveling on this pike, as it was the main road leading to Memphis. Since the railroads have come in, this pike has become a mere local road. In 1880 it was purchased very cheaply by A.L. Demoss (who lived in the vicinity of Newsom’s Station). It was sold by him in 1887 to Dr. H.M. Pierce, who afterward turned it over to the West Nashville Land Company, its present (as of 1890) proprietors." (https://nashvillehistory.blogspot.com/2014/07/turnpikes-and-bridges-in-davidson.html?m=1#:~:text=The%20Nashville%20and%20Charlotte%20Turnpike,him%20in%201887%20to%20Dr)


Above: This 1833 map of Davidson and Dickson Counties shows the route of the Charlotte Pike. According to this map, the main Charlotte Road crossed the Harpeth River at the mouth of Dog Creek, which is seen on the map. Another road is shown branching off of the main Charlotte Road in the vicinity of Sullivan's Ridge, leading westward and crossing the Harpeth somewhere near the Narrows, in what was at the time western Davidson County. I believe this road may have later been chartered as "The Big Harpeth Turnpike Company" (see image further below)

According to historian Sarah Foster Kelley, after a tornado devastated the town of Charlotte and nearly destroyed (the) Charlotte Road in 1830, plans were set in motion to charter a turnpike company to re-establish and maintain the thoroughfare. As part of a stagecoach route running from Nashville through Charlotte to Memphis, the road between the two towns appeared as an “important road” on the “1832 Map of the State of Tennessee, Taken from Survey, by Matthew Rhea (Columbia, TN).


The Nashville-Charlotte Turnpike was chartered in 1838. (Kelley, 42) Often shortened to “Charlotte Turnpike” or referred to simply as “Charlotte Road,” the turnpike commenced near Nashville’s western corporation limits. 

After the Civil War, railroad lines running through southern Dickson County shifted growth away from Charlotte toward the town of Dickson, and the use of the Nashville-Charlotte Turnpike began to diminish. “Before the construction of the railroads it was an important road, as it was the main road leading toward Memphis.” (“Turnpike History,” The Nashville American, Monday, 14 October 1901, Page 7)  

By 1901, the "Free Turnpikes" movement was well underway in Davidson County, and the County Court began acquiring turnpikes with plans to open them as free, public thoroughfares. In October 1901, the Turnpike Committee of the Davidson County Court valued the Charlotte Turnpike property at $8,000. By December 1901, the County Court had purchased the Charlotte Turnpike for the same amount.  The county continued to operate the Charlotte Turnpike and other purchased roads “at the regular rates of toll” with grand plans to “throw all of the gates open on Jan. 1.”  On Wednesday morning, January 1, 1902, The Nashville American announced “Turnpikes of the county will be open to the public today.”

As Davidson County faced the transition to open public thoroughfares, the City of Nashville faced the ongoing struggle of duplicate and mismatched street names. The issue was particularly challenging each time the City of Nashville annexed new territories from Davidson County into the city government. The Cedar Street to Charlotte Turnpike road was no exception. As a major thoroughfare through the western part of the city and county, the road was located within or adjacent to some of the most significant annexations to the city, from 1830 to 1952, including the annexation of West Nashville."   More on the decline of the Charlotte Turnpike is discussed in another section below.


The following information comes from the website "A History of Humphreys County" 

"In 1824 the Nashville – Memphis Stage Line ran once a week, making six major stops before arriving in Memphis. The first stop was at Chestnut Grove, 18 miles west of Nashville; Charlotte in Dickson County, 40 miles from Nashville; Reynoldsburg on the river, 38 miles from Charlotte, Huntingdon, 31 miles from Reynoldsburg; Jackson, 38 miles from the last stop, Bolivar, 28 miles from Jackson; and then on into Memphis.

By the 1830’s the coach left Nashville every Tuesday and Friday at 6 a.m. and was scheduled to arrive at Jackson, Tennessee, every Thursday and Sunday by 6 p.m. Mail was carried by these early stage coaches."


Above - Information containing one historical account of the stagecoach routes that ran between Nashville and Memphis from 1824 up through the 1830's. This information and corresponding image come from the 1963 book "A History of Humphreys County, Tennessee" authored by Jill Knight Garrett. This book has been made available online to read for free and can be found on the Internet Archive website at the following web address - https://archive.org/details/historyofhumphre00garr/page/60/mode/2up 


"The General Assembly of 1838 chartered a company to construct a road from Charlotte to Reynoldsburg; the commission for this road included men from Humphreys County, they were empowered to sell stock at fifty dollars a share. Regulations for the road required that the turnpike be thirty feet wide, except in mountainous terrain where width of fifteen feet would be permitted. Ditches had to be dug along the side of the road and no more than seven toll gates could be maintained on this turnpike, no toll gates were to be allowed within two- and one-half miles of Charlotte, Waverly, or Reynoldsburg." (from the section located on page 59 that is shown in its entirety below)



A section further detailing the early roads of Humphrey's County, which was the county that bordered Dickson County on the west. As is stated in the section shown above, "Another common road entered the county (Humphrey's) from Dickson County and ran parallel with the stage road, only it's terminus was Reynoldsburg." Reynoldsburg was later known as Johnsonville, or New Johnsonville, beginning around the year 1864, which is when the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad was completed between Nashville and this town that sat directly on the Tennessee River. The common stage road referred to above was in fact the portion of The Nashville - Charlotte Stage Road that continued on west after it passed through Charlotte in Dickson County and continued on to the west, where some 10 miles after it departed Charlotte, it entered Humphrey's County at the Dickson County / Humphrey's County border. From there, it was only another 12 - 15 miles until the stage route reached Reynoldsburg (later renamed New Johnsonville) in Humprey's County on the Tennessee River.


Again, the entire 1963 book by Jill Knight Garrett, "A History of Humphreys County" is available to read on the Internet Archive Website at the following link - https://archive.org/details/historyofhumphre00garr/page/58/mode/2up

It is a very interesting and very well researched piece of work, providing a wealth of information on the history of Middle Tennessee.  I would recommend anyone interested in learning more about the area's history to at least take a quick look at the contents of this book.


After the Civil War, railroad lines running through southern Dickson County shifted growth away from Charlotte toward the town of Dickson, and the use of the Nashville-Charlotte Turnpike began to diminish. “Before the construction of the railroads it was an important road, as it was the main road leading toward Memphis.” (“Turnpike History,” The Nashville American, Monday, 14 October 1901, Page 7)  

By 1901, the "Free Turnpikes" movement was well underway in Davidson County, and the County Court began acquiring turnpikes with plans to open them as free, public thoroughfares. In October 1901, the Turnpike Committee of the Davidson County Court valued the Charlotte Turnpike property at $8,000. By December 1901, the County Court had purchased the Charlotte Turnpike for the same amount.  The county continued to operate the Charlotte Turnpike and other purchased roads “at the regular rates of toll” with grand plans to “throw all of the gates open on Jan. 1.”  On Wednesday morning, January 1, 1902, The Nashville American announced “Turnpikes of the county will be open to the public today.”

As Davidson County faced the transition to open public thoroughfares, the City of Nashville faced the ongoing struggle of duplicate and mismatched street names. The issue was particularly challenging each time the City of Nashville annexed new territories from Davidson County into the city government. The Cedar Street to Charlotte Turnpike road was no exception. As a major thoroughfare through the western part of the city and county, the road was located within or adjacent to some of the most significant annexations to the city, from 1830 to 1952, including the annexation of West Nashville."   




Above: One of the newspaper articles referenced above pertains to a proposal enabling Davidson County to purchase all turnpike roads within its jurisdiction. If adopted, this measure would effectively eliminate toll collection on roads that had operated as tollways since the establishment of the first turnpikes in the county some seventy to eighty years earlier, thereby allowing residents to travel these routes without paying fees. A primary anticipated benefit of this proposal was the improvement and more consistent maintenance of these formerly toll-operated roads. By 1901, when the proposal was first introduced, the usage and popularity of most turnpikes had declined sharply, resulting in minimal traffic and correspondingly negligible toll revenue—the sole source of funding for road repairs. County acquisition of the turnpikes promised to provide a stable and sufficient source of funds for the maintenance and restoration of these deteriorating roads. This article appeared in the Tennessean on May 27, 1901.



Stagecoaches had been transporting passengers along the Charlotte Road since the 1820s; however, it was not until 1838, with the chartering of the Charlotte Turnpike Company, that the road assumed its role as the principal stagecoach line and official United States Mail route, linking Nashville to destinations across West Tennessee, extending as far as Memphis.

The Turnpike’s passage through rugged terrain, coupled with the poor condition of the roadway itself, imposed significant physical demands on the horses tasked with pulling the heavily loaded stagecoaches. Teams frequently became fatigued and overheated, necessitating frequent rest and recovery periods. The distance a fully loaded stage could travel between rest stops was often limited to ten to fifteen miles, and travel times between stops could exceed one hour due to the challenging conditions.

The first such rest station west of Nashville was situated at the base of Sullivan’s Ridge, the initial of several steep ridges traversed by the road. In her study West Nashville, Its People and Environs, Sarah Foster Kelley notes:

"One stagecoach stop was located at the base of Sullivan's Ridge from 1821 until after 1858, known as Elijah Robertson's Tavern and Blacksmith Shop....Horses were exchanged at the old waystation before fresh ones sped on their way across country. The heated, tired horses were placed in the stables nearby to rest and to cool down in an attempt to prevent the animals from taking pneumonia..." (p. 41).

This account illustrates both the logistical challenges of early stagecoach travel along the Charlotte Turnpike and the critical role of waystations in maintaining the efficiency and safety of mail and passenger transport.



Later in her study, Kelley elaborates on the operations of the stagecoach stop, noting that “Elijah Robertson took operation of the stagecoach stop about 1821 when his brother moved westward. He built a stage stand and blacksmith shop across the road from his home in what was known as Stage Hollow. The Robertson home served as a tavern where the passengers rested while waiting on fresh horses. It was customary when the coach was approaching, the stage driver would sound a bugle signaling negro slave, Harry Robertson, to make ready. Reports state that when the coach was going over the ridge on its way to Charlotte, most of the passengers under forty years of age walked over the steep hill to lighten the load for the horses. Some of the older women did not want to tell their age, so they walked too” (Kelley, West Nashville, Its People and Environs, p. 134).

Kelley further observes that the road network in the region predates the Charlotte Turnpike itself. She notes, “As early as 1783 the Chickasaw Trace, which led from General Robertson’s farm in West Nashville to the site of present-day Memphis, known then as the Chickasaw Nation, was in existence. A deed refers to the old road on the north of the Nashville–Charlotte Turnpike and calls it the Nashville–Dickson Road. It is evident then that there were roads leading west from Nashville in the earliest years” (Kelley, p. 41).

Ridley Wills II also addresses the significance of the stagecoach stop in his 2017 work, Nashville Pikes, Volume 4. He writes, “When the Elijah Robertson's lived on the Charlotte Road, it was considered the second most important road leading out of Nashville, second only to the Murfreesboro Road. It led west and was greatly traveled by immigrants. The stop at Elijah’s stage stand was the only stop between Nashville and Charlotte” (Wills, 2017, p. 115).

Collectively, these accounts underscore the Charlotte Road’s importance as a principal transportation corridor in early Middle Tennessee, its reliance on strategically located waystations, and the integral role of the Robertson family in supporting both passenger travel and mail transport along the route.

Above: This passage concerning the Charlotte Pike comes from the 1880 book "History of Davidson County with Illustration's and Biographical Sketches of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers" by Professor W.W. Clayton, page 75. The entire book has been made available to read by TNGenWeb for free, and can be found at the following web address - https://www.tngenweb.org/records/davidson/history/clayton/1-192_PT_1.pdf



Montgomery Bell & The Charlotte Road 

A more detailed discussion will follow later in this narrative of the Charlotte Road; however, it is important to note that Montgomery Bell likely played a significant role in the development and utilization of the Charlotte Turnpike. The operation of Bell’s iron forge at the Narrows of the Harpeth required a well-constructed, reliable, and conveniently located thoroughfare to ensure both efficiency and profitability. Access to a dependable main road in close proximity was essential for the transport of raw materials, finished goods, and labor to and from the forge. The success and scale of Bell’s Patterson Forge at the Narrows would likely have been substantially diminished without the Nashville–Charlotte Road, which passed approximately one mile south of the forge’s location along the Harpeth River.


Above: This picture of Montgomery Bell was likely taken in the early 1850's, when Bell would have been in his early 80's. He was 86 years old when he died on April 1, 1855.

The Charlotte Turnpike & Cheatham County 

The creation of Cheatham County, as told in the book “Cheatham County Tennessee History and Families”.

“An Act of the General Assembly passed February 26, 1856, created the county of Cheatham, composed of parts of Davidson, Robertson, Montgomery and Dickson counties.” (page 7) As a result of the creation of the new county, situated in between Davidson and Dickson Counties, resulted in nearly half of the entire length of the Charlotte Turnpike now existing in Southern Cheatham County, which spanned an approximate 16 to 18 miles from the Davidson County line to the Dickson County line." 


Above: One of the earliest maps depicting the route of the Charlotte Pike, dating from 1862, that also includes the then 6 year old county of Cheatham on the map


Montgomery Bell's second link to the narrative of the Charlotte Road - Samuel Adkisson

An additional and noteworthy connection exists between Montgomery Bell and the broader history of the Charlotte Turnpike through the figure of Samuel Adkisson. Bell selected Adkisson, remarkably only fifteen or sixteen years of age, to serve as the engineer responsible for the construction of the principal tunnel at the Narrows of the Harpeth between 1818 and 1820, as well as a subsequent partial tunnel that was never completed. Ironically, Adkisson was born in 1803, the same year that Dickson County—where the Narrows tunnel would later be constructed—was established.

After his services were no longer required by Bell at the Narrows, Adkisson acquired land in close proximity to that site. In the 1820s, he settled along Dog Creek on several acres situated south of the Charlotte Road, opposite the future location of Dog Creek Cemetery, which was established in the 1850s. (In his last will and testament, early Dog Creek settler and prominent community figure Mastin Ussery donated the tract of land on which the cemetery was later located. The following link will take you to a post on my local South Cheatham County Facebook page which describes this act in much more detail - https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Ys1sYmSni/

Adkisson’s professional talents were matched by an equally pronounced and ambitious personality. Although he demonstrated considerable skill and ingenuity in engineering—constructing tunnels, iron forges, bridges, turnpikes, and various other innovations—his personal character was marked by traits that were conspicuous even to his contemporaries. Dozens of editorials, speeches, and other extensive writings that he composed and published in Nashville newspapers later in life reveal an individual keenly concerned with his reputation and standing in the community. These writings, which addressed a broad range of topics, frequently conveyed his own assessments of his achievements and importance. Adkisson was easily offended and displayed a pronounced sensitivity, if not outright paranoia, regarding how others perceived him and his inventions. Nonetheless, it is evident that he possessed a strong sense of self-satisfaction.

Adkisson’s early engineering accomplishments conferred upon him a degree of confidence and self-regard that few individuals attain, particularly at such a young age. It is plausible that his enduring attachment to the Narrows of the Harpeth stemmed in part from pride in that early achievement, which he later described as his most significant professional accomplishment. In his twenties, Adkisson made the consequential decision to establish his permanent residence in the Dog Creek neighborhood. This decision ultimately positioned him to exert a substantial influence on the subsequent development and course of the Nashville–Charlotte Road.




In 1850, the Tennessee State Legislature passed an act granting Samuel W. Adkisson control over a fifteen-mile section of the Nashville–Charlotte Turnpike, a provision contingent upon his construction of a bridge over the Harpeth River near the mouth of Dog Creek at his own expense. The eastern terminus of this segment began at the summit of Sullivan’s Ridge, where Adkisson had already erected at least one toll gate. Section 11 of the Act authorized him to charge tolls at a gate located one mile east of the Harpeth River at rates double those permitted at his gate on Sullivan’s Ridge or at any other Charlotte Turnpike toll gate, provided that the bridge remained free to the public and that only one toll gate was maintained over the final ten miles of the road. The route under his supervision extended westward from Sullivan’s Ridge through the territory that would later become southern Cheatham County, passing north of Pegram, crossing the present-day Sam’s Creek Road, and descending into the valley where the headwaters of Dog Creek converge. Section 12 stipulated that if any party paid Adkisson a fair valuation for his work on the bridge and graded road by January 1, 1851, all privileges and immunities conferred upon him by the Act would cease.

Adkisson’s supervision of this portion of the Turnpike reflected not only his engineering skill but also his assertive personality and desire for professional recognition. His numerous letters published in Nashville newspapers between the early 1850s and the mid-1860s provide further insight into his character and his engagement with regional infrastructure. These writings reveal a man both ambitious and forthright, often polemical in tone, who sought to assert his reputation and defend his accomplishments. A recurrent theme in his correspondence was the presentation of personal grievances; Adkisson frequently portrayed himself as having been wronged or inadequately recognized for his contributions. These tendencies are particularly evident in letters addressed to the president of the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad, in which he delivered detailed, pointed criticisms, asserting his professional and moral authority with rhetorical force.

Taken together, the legislative record and Adkisson’s public writings illuminate the interplay between individual agency and infrastructural development in mid-nineteenth-century Middle Tennessee. Adkisson’s personal ambition, engineering expertise, and outspoken engagement with both civic and commercial authorities played a defining role in shaping the Charlotte Turnpike, demonstrating how the character and initiative of a single actor could materially influence the trajectory of regional transportation networks.


The following letter about the president of the railroad, Mr. Stevenson, written by Adkisson, comes from The Nashville Daily Patriot, Saturday March 1861, page 3. 
 
"Pacific Railroad -

Mr. V.K. Stevenson : Sir – I have spent some time and money about said road, and have a little interest in it, and look on it as a great national road, which you should be under control of a man worthy of confidence at home and has not too many irons in the fire. As such, I will state some facts for you and others, at home and abroad, to think about.

You said in 1858, the directors of the N.W. Railroad gave you $6,000 per year for a little part of your time, to get them out of a difficulty they had got in. (you having two other roads and your private matters on hand.) I told you I thought the country and people could not build and support the road, for I had been twice applied to, to be President of it. You said your statements about it were made under oath, and was worthy of more respect than those made by me. Mr. B. Douglas and others, and that you knew more about such things.

In February 1859, on page 6 in the report by the committee, you said there were 24 miles graded and bridged from Nashville on the east end. I say there were not 8 miles done then, and it was in February 1861 before 24 miles was completed -  two years later. You said, on page 13, you had means to build the road and leave a surplus of $1,437,270; if so, why not pay the debts against the mortgage bonds and quit drawing State aid before the road is graded?

From Various Reports, the  road Commissioner has just got himself in  a bad condition about your road, as well as some others, that may have to account to their acts next fall. You said there were but three bridges over Harpeth river; I said seven; you said I had three toll-gates to catch the old woman’s eggs and chickens; I said but one; and when you correct these statements I will give you others. And as you took the liberty of speaking feely about the people of Louisville, Clarksville, and Memphis, while you were contradicting and slandering me, Mr. Douglas and others, I want you to go there with me, and let me tell them before your face what you said about them. I will take good care of you, and hope you may live long to thing of what you have said and done; for hatching slander is like hatching buzzards, which will return to drop their filth and litter, to be felt, smelt seen and tasted by those that hatched them. And if you don’t pay them debt’s, and take in them second mortgage, bonds, and explain what you did with that large surplus of $1,437,270, some of the contractors or workmen may get hold of you; for men do not like to work in mud and rain, at their expense, for you to spend time and money with the Lords and Ladies in France and England, trying to get married at their expense, to a rich woman, (from rumor) I hope you will submit to the truth as calmly as I did to your slander for two years, and think about what you have brought on yourself and others, by slandering me and others to get $6,000 for a part of your time.

And you would do well to close your contracts here, before you go to Texas or France again, to get money, or to marry, for you can find debts to pay, work to do, and women to marry, nearer home. You said Mr. Douglas’ report was worse to you than tartar. I think this is better. I gave the publishing house $25 to publish a book on lying, for such men as you. Read it, for it is the best of the three.

I went twice to Texas at my own expense, and know a little about the road, and other things there, as well as you, and I invite all persons to examine your repots and work here, and then judge us by our words and acts.

And why do not the Directors of the N.W. R. R. give the stock-holders a report once a year, as the law directs, in the Acts of 1851 and 52, and then judge us by our words and acts.

And why do not the directors of the N.W. R. R. give the stock-holders a report once a year, as the law directs, in the Acts of 1851 and 52, on page 86, sec. 17? I suppose Governor Harris could tell, as he is paid to see that the laws are faithfully executed, and fully compiled with before he gives out State bonds; and he said it would be hard to say that State bonds were not bills of credit, and the law says State bonds shall not be sold for less than their par value.

Though this is in an age of progression and secession, in which very little regard is paid to the Constitution, laws or oaths, as if there were neither God, devil nor country; though I think by next fall many will learn a lesson long to be remembered, for the party lines are broken, and the people are looking and thinking. As my health and education are bad, and I have other such men as you to contend with in this and four other States, at my expense, I hope you and others will forgive what you or they may think is amiss; for I am ready and willing to explain or correct mistakes. For your protection for the women’s eggs and chickens. Yours with regret and kindness, to clip the wings of your imagination, and get the people to look and think.

S.W. Adkisson, a Mechanic

Chestnut Grove, Cheatham Co., Tenn.,. March 15th, 1861.

N.B. if Mr. J.M. Newsom and family will meet me at Hanner’s Ford Meeting House, on Sunday, 17th inst., at 10 o’clock in the morning, I will treat them friendly and kindly, and give them and others some good advice, and help them to complete the Road to Tennessee River.

S.W.A."

The entirety of this letter is shown below.








Below, a letter written by Adkisson, dated September 17, 1861, that appeared in a September 19, 1861 Nashville newspaper.






The Charlotte Pike & The Civil War in Southern Cheatham County
"Another Mule Story"
The following anecdote details an incident that took place on the Charlotte Turnpike along Dog Creek near the Harpeth River during the middle of the Civil War. It involves a little Civil War humor, at least in the eyes of the war veteran who recalls the story.
The article pictured below appeared in the January 12, 1899 National Tribune in Washington D.C. In it, a former Union officer tells of an incident that had occurred 36 years earlier in February of 1863, in which a few sneaky Union soldiers belonging to the 1st Missouri Engineer regiment managed to get the better of some local Cheatham County citizens who were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
The soldiers were part of a wagon train consisting of 1,200 men and 43 wagons, pulled by 6 mules each (that's a total of 258 mules) who were marching west out of Nashville on the Charlotte Pike. Once they reached the Harpeth, where the Turnpike forded the river at the mouth of Dog Creek, the regiment was forced to temporarily halt their march, due to the water being too cold to cross the river, and there being no bridge over the river at the time.
While a small detail of men went to work building a foot bridge across the Harpeth, the rest of the men in the wagon train were said to have been stretched out for quite a distance on the Charlotte Pike along Dog Creek.
It was during the time that the men were waiting for the footbridge to be completed so that they could cross the river, that a group of local citizens passed by the stopped regiment, driving a team of 30 to 40 mules eastward along the Pike in the direction of Nashville.
As the locals were trying to make their way along the crowded road beside Dog Creek, they inevitably lost track of some of their own mules among the long line of the 250 + mules in the wagon train. This provided the opportunity for a few of the men of the 1st Missouri Engineers to relieve some of the boredom that must have been building up during what must have been a long wait, at the expense of the locals.
The article below details the rest of the story of how this unexpected stop resulted in the regiment coming out ahead by one mule, with the local's down by one.



Samuel Adkisson's Account of the behavior of the Union Soldiers who passed by his farm on the Charlotte Turnpike during the war - 

The following text reproduces Samuel Adkisson’s January 1865 letter to Vice President Andrew Johnson, in which Adkisson articulates his grievances against the Federal army for the treatment he and his family received from Union soldiers who traversed the Charlotte Turnpike and passed his farm on multiple occasions during the Civil War.

Addressed to Vice President Andrew Johnson and dated January 1865, Adkisson’s letter offers a detailed personal account of alleged property seizures, mistreatment, and other indignities perpetrated by Union troops stationed or operating in the vicinity following the Confederate defeat at Fort Donelson in February 1862. At the time, Dog Creek Road formed a portion of the Charlotte Turnpike, the principal thoroughfare between Nashville and Dickson. 

The letter should be read against the broader military context: between 1862 and December 1864, the Dog Creek area witnessed a number of skirmishes between localized Confederate guerrilla bands and various Union forces, a period of intermittent violence that culminated with the Confederate defeat at the Battle of Nashville.





General Nathan Bedford Forrest & The Charlotte Pike

The following is an account of General Nathan Bedford Forrest and his men camping at the Harpeth River where Charlotte Turnpike crossed the river, in February 1862, after the fall of Fort Henry and Donelson, as Forrest was making his way towards Nashville using the Charlotte Road. “After this, moving on, Forrest halted for the night some eighteen miles from Nashville, on the Harpeth river, at a point where food and forage were liberally supplied by a gentleman most zealous in his devotion to the Confederate cause, in whose house a sumptuous supper was set for the Colonel and his officers. That night, after their severe work at Fort Donelson, many of his officers were disposed to enjoy the comforts of a bed under this hospitable roof ; but Forrest, ever watchful, soon missing them from the encampment, had all roused, and inflexibly required them to remain with their respective companies, the men of which, with horses saddled and arms by their side, slept in the open air on the ground, as a precaution against the possibility of surprise.”


This comes from the book “The Campaigns of Liet. -Gen N. B. Forrest, and of Forrest’s Cavalry, with portraits, maps, and illustrations” by General Thomas Jordan and J.P. Pryor 1868. This book has been made available to read online for free on the Internet Archive website. Here is the link to this part of the book : https://archive.org/details/abj6714.0001.001.umich.edu/page/100/mode/2up?q=charlotte+harpeth


The downfall, decline, and eventual demise of the Charlotte Turnpike 

With the advent and rapid expansion of railroad construction during the mid-nineteenth century, particularly by the 1850s, traffic along turnpike roads throughout Middle Tennessee experienced a pronounced and sustained decline. Long-established routes such as the Charlotte Pike, which had for decades functioned as critical arteries for commercial exchange, postal service, and passenger travel, were increasingly marginalized as railroads reshaped regional transportation patterns. The principal force behind this shift was the construction of the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad, which offered travelers and shippers a mode of transportation that was not only faster and more reliable than stagecoach travel, but also less physically taxing and less dependent upon road conditions.



By the beginning of the Civil War, the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad had been completed from Nashville westward to Kingston Springs, placing it in direct competition with the Charlotte Pike and other turnpike roads for both freight and passenger traffic. Despite wartime disruptions, the line was extended to Dickson by 1863, further accelerating the decline of turnpike usage. Travel times illustrate the magnitude of this transformation: a journey between Dickson and Nashville, which typically required approximately six hours by stagecoach under favorable conditions, could be completed in roughly three hours by train. This dramatic reduction in travel time, combined with the increased comfort and predictability of rail travel, rendered stagecoach service increasingly obsolete.


Above: This ad for passenger rail service on The Nashville & Northwestern Railroad appeared in the November 9, 1866 edition of The Tennessean. The ad states that the departure time from train leaving Nashville bound for Kingston Springs leave Nashville at 4:15 PM, arriving at Kingston Springs by 6:10 PM (A one hour and fifty-five-minute journey) The ad also provides the departure and arrival times for the "Express Passenger" train service between Nashville and Johnsonville (now known as New Johnsonville)

The economic consequences of this transition were significant for turnpike companies and the communities that had long depended upon road-based travel. As traffic volumes diminished, toll revenues declined correspondingly, undermining the financial viability of turnpike corporations that relied on consistent income to maintain road surfaces, bridges, and tollhouses. Many turnpike companies found themselves unable to meet maintenance obligations or service outstanding debts, leading to deferred repairs, deteriorating road conditions, and, in some cases, eventual abandonment or state acquisition of the roadways. Local inns, taverns, blacksmith shops, and stage stops situated along the Charlotte Pike likewise suffered economic losses as the steady flow of travelers and freight shifted to rail lines. Collectively, these developments reflect a broader mid-nineteenth-century transformation in Middle Tennessee’s transportation economy, in which the rise of the railroad precipitated the gradual eclipse of the turnpike system that had once underpinned regional mobility and commerce.

Some 50 to 60 years later, the construction of the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway had a profound and ultimately transformative effect on the Charlotte Turnpike, marking the road’s final major transition from a nineteenth-century turnpike to a modern component of Tennessee’s state highway system.

Decline of the Turnpike System


Above: This article appeared in December 8, 1917 edition of The Nashville Banner

By the early twentieth century, the Charlotte Turnpike—like most privately operated toll roads—had already suffered decades of decline following the rise of railroads. However, the emergence of automobile travel after 1900 created renewed interest in overland routes. This revival did not benefit turnpike companies themselves, but rather hastened their demise. The Memphis-to-Bristol Highway, promoted as a continuous east–west automobile route across Tennessee, required public ownership, standardized construction, and free access, all of which were incompatible with the old toll-based turnpike model.

Absorption into the State Highway Network

The Memphis-to-Bristol Highway largely followed existing road corridors where possible, and in Middle Tennessee it incorporated substantial portions of the former Charlotte Turnpike. As a result, the Charlotte Turnpike was absorbed into the new state highway system, eventually becoming part of State Route 1 and later U.S. Highway 70. This transition effectively ended the Charlotte Turnpike’s identity as a toll road. Tollgates were removed, remaining turnpike charters were dissolved or allowed to expire, and maintenance responsibilities shifted to county and state authorities.


Above: This article appeared in the September 16, 1916 edition of The Tennessean

Physical and Functional Changes

To accommodate automobile traffic, sections of the old turnpike were widened, straightened, graded, and resurfaced, often departing from the original nineteenth-century alignment designed for wagons and stagecoaches. Bridges were rebuilt or replaced, curves softened, and roadbeds improved to meet emerging highway standards. While some portions of the Charlotte Turnpike survived intact beneath later improvements, others were substantially altered or bypassed entirely.

Economic and Social Impact

The designation of the route as part of the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway revitalized travel along the corridor, but in a fundamentally different form. Automobile traffic brought new businesses—garages, filling stations, roadside cafes, and tourist courts—while older turnpike-era establishments such as inns and tollhouses disappeared. The road once again became a major transportation artery, though now firmly embedded within a state- and federally supported highway network rather than a privately financed infrastructure.


Above: 1921 newspaper article on the debate over which route the new Memphis to Bristol Highway was to take

Historical Significance

In effect, the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway did not merely replace the Charlotte Turnpike—it completed its evolution. What had begun as a Native path and frontier road, then matured into a nineteenth-century toll turnpike, was finally transformed into a modern highway serving twentieth-century motor traffic. The construction of the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway thus represents the final chapter in the Charlotte Turnpike’s long transportation history, preserving its corridor while permanently altering its purpose and character.

The incorporation of the Charlotte Turnpike into the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway was the product of a series of state and federal legislative actions between roughly 1915 and the mid-1920s, which collectively dismantled Tennessee’s remaining private turnpike system and replaced it with a publicly funded highway network.

Tennessee State Aid Road Law (1915)

A decisive turning point came with the passage of the Tennessee State Aid Road Law in 1915, which created the Tennessee Department of Highways and Public Works. This legislation marked the state’s first systematic effort to construct and maintain roads suitable for automobile traffic. Crucially, the law encouraged counties to cooperate with the state in improving existing roadways, many of which followed former turnpike alignments, including the Charlotte Turnpike. Under this framework, privately operated toll roads were increasingly viewed as obsolete impediments to progress.

Federal Aid Road Act (1916)

The Federal Aid Road Act of 1916 further accelerated this transformation by providing federal matching funds to states that developed designated highway systems meeting federal standards. To qualify for this funding, roads had to be public, toll-free, and uniformly improved, conditions that effectively precluded the continued operation of private turnpike companies. Tennessee officials consequently prioritized routes of statewide importance, among them the east–west corridor linking Memphis and Bristol.

Designation of the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway (c. 1917–1920)

By the late 1910s, Tennessee had formally designated the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway as one of its principal trunk routes, commonly referred to as State Route No. 1. In Middle Tennessee, this designation incorporated long segments of the former Charlotte Turnpike, which already provided a well-established and graded route between Nashville and points west. As a result, the Charlotte Turnpike ceased to function as a distinct entity and instead became part of a continuous, state-managed highway corridor.

Dissolution of Turnpike Companies

As state and federal funding flowed into highway construction, remaining turnpike charters—many of which had already lapsed or were financially insolvent—were formally dissolved or allowed to expire. Tollgates were removed, and maintenance responsibilities transferred to county and state authorities. By the early 1920s, the Charlotte Turnpike no longer existed as a toll road in either legal or practical terms, though its physical alignment remained central to the new highway.

U.S. Highway System (1926)

The final institutional confirmation of this transition came in 1926 with the establishment of the United States Numbered Highway System. The Memphis-to-Bristol Highway, including the former Charlotte Turnpike corridor, was designated as part of U.S. Highway 70, solidifying its role as a major interstate automobile route. This designation permanently embedded the old turnpike within a national transportation framework and erased its nineteenth-century identity.

Historical Implications

Legislatively and functionally, the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway completed the Charlotte Turnpike’s evolution. What began as a frontier road and later became a privately financed toll turnpike was, by the 1920s, fully transformed into a public, state-maintained highway, shaped by Progressive-Era reform, the Good Roads Movement, and federal transportation policy. The corridor endured, but its economic model, governance, and physical character were irrevocably altered.
Ultimaltley, the construction of the Memphis-to-Bristol Highway through southern Cheatham County in the early 1920s effectively marked the final stage in the turnpike’s long history. Designed to accommodate automobile traffic and constructed under the auspices of state and federal highway programs, the new highway incorporated portions of the historic corridor while bypassing others. As traffic shifted almost entirely to the improved highway, remaining sections of the old Charlotte Turnpike—many of which no longer met modern engineering standards—were abandoned or formally closed to public use. Among these were approximately two miles of the former turnpike running between present-day Sam’s Creek Road and the point where Dog Creek Road now terminates. The closure of these segments symbolized the definitive end of the Charlotte Turnpike as a functioning transportation route and underscored the broader transition from privately operated toll roads to publicly funded, automobile-oriented highways in early twentieth-century Tennessee.

The Nashville - Charlotte Turnpike - Maps


Below are several different maps of varying detail, appearing in no particular order, ranging in date from 1826 though 1864. Half of the maps shown depict a broader, more general route of the Charlotte Road between Nashville and Charlotte, while the others provide a much more detailed depiction of its route, including some place names along the path of the road, such as Dog Creek and the Narrows of the Harpeth. The first map below is the most detailed of the maps. (Remember to click on each map, which will make the map larger and the details easier to read.)

The edited map below is a Civil War era map showing the route of The Charlotte Turnpike (Outlined In Blue) as it passed out of Western Davidson County, through Southern Cheatham County (approximate Cheatham County borders shown in orange) including the area that would eventually become Shacklett at the mouth of Dog Creek, and into Eastern Dickson County, passing through White Bluff and then taking a northwestward direction towards Charlotte in Dickson County. Shown also is the route of the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad (outlined in Yellow) 

1864 Civil War Map



Above: This early map of Middle Tennessee, made in 1826, is one of the earliest maps to depict the Nashville - Charlotte Road, which accounts for the large discrepancy in the path of the road as drawn compared to the true location of the road. The road in this map is shown some 10 - 15 miles further to the north than where it should be.



Above - This is one of the earliest known maps of the Harpeth River drawn by Matthew Rhea in 1832, shown passing through what is now Cheatham County. Rhea also drew and labelled some of the larger tributaries along this section of the Harpeth, as well as a faintly sketched Charlotte Road, shown crossing the Harpeth at the mouth of Dog Creek, which Rhea labeled as well. (This also makes it one of the earliest maps depicting Dog Creek.)



Above: This 1839 map of Davidson and Dickson Counties in Middle Tennessee comes from The Library of Congress online catalog of historic early Tennessee maps. (This is just a portion of a much larger map of Middle Tennessee, below is the link to the map on the Library of Congress website where the entire map can be viewed.) On this map, the Charlotte Turnpike is shown passing through the village of Chestnut Grove, which was located in the area where Shacklett is located in Southern Cheatham County today.

To view the entire map on The Library of Congress website, click on the following link - https://www.loc.gov/resource/g3950.rr002240/?r=0.318,0.465,0.096,0.058,0




Above: This 1860 map shows the portion of Middle Tennessee through which the Charlotte Turnpike traversed. It comes from The Library of Congress online catalog of historic early Tennessee maps. On this map, we can see several roads depicted that branch off of the Charlotte Turnpike between Nashville and Charlotte. The road that branches of just to the west of Indian Creek, where “Mrs. Nichols” is written, was the road that led to Sam’s Creek Springs. You can also see that once the Charlotte Turnpike reached the Harpeth River, a road leading north towards the Narrows of the Harpeth branches off.


Above: This 1863 map depicts the Charlotte Turnpike in red., Note that Dog Creek is written on the map near where the Turnpike crossed the Harpeth River. It also appears that the Nashville & Northwestern Railroad had only been built west out of Nashville to the South Harpeth River. Click on the map to make it larger.


This map is titled "Military Map of the States of
Kentucky and Tennessee," created by Charles E. Swann in November 1863.

The map can be found at the following web address - 
https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~4197~340026:Military-Map-of-the-States-of-Kentu


Above: On this 1940's map showing Cheatham County Civil Districts, I have edited it to show the location of three specific roads. In red I have tried to plot the approximate location of modern-day Sams Creek Road. In orange I have highlighted the portion of the Charlotte Turnpike that was still used as a road in 1940. In blue is modern day Dog Creek Road.


This aerial view that I shot from my drone, shows the path that the Charlotte Pike followed after it crossed modern day Sam's Creek Road (outlined in yellow) This is where the Pike descends the ridge and runs down into the Dog Creek Valley. 


This areal video shot from my done, shows the area just west of Sams's Creek Road where the old Charlotte Road once ran through. The Dog Creek valley, and the outline of the old roadbed itself is visible in this video.


Above: The same 200-year-old oak tree that stands alongside Dog Creek Road and that is pictured at the top of this blog post as it appears during the warmer days of Summer, is pictured here as it appears in the colder days of Winter.


Above: Myself (DJ Hutcherson) Pictured beside the old oak tree in 2018, which I have given the nicknamed "The Shacklett Tree".



Below - The gravestone of Samuel Adkisson, located in Dog Creek Cemetery, which also includes the names, and dates of birth and death of his wife Nancy, son Jospeh, daughter Mary, and another son. SW Adkisson died at the age of 72 on July 28, 1875. He is buried along with several of his family members in the Adkisson Family plot in the middle of Dog Creek Cemetery, only a few yards to the north of Dr. Shacklett's grave. He had lived at least 50 years of his life on his farm which was located just across Dog Creek from the cemetery.






The Adkisson Family plot at Dog Creek Cemetery. Photo taken in 2016.




Above: Sunset over Dog Creek Road near the site of the former Dog Creek Schoolhouse, which stood from the late nineteenth century until its removal in the 2010s. Immediately beyond the school site, and contrary to the pronounced right-hand curvature of the modern Dog Creek Road, the original alignment of the Charlotte Turnpike continued in an almost straight line across the field north of Dog Creek. That historic alignment crossed the creek at the western edge of the field and proceeded in a generally direct course to the Harpeth River, meeting it just south of the mouth of Dog Creek.


Above - The old roadbed can clearly be made out in this video, even though it is overgrown with trees and brush. I filmed this as I was descending the ridge east of the head of Dog Creek.



As I am able to, I will continue to update this blog post with new or updated information about the history of the Charlotte Road, whenever I am lucky enough to discover it.








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