Tennessee (, ), officially the State of Tennessee, is a landlocked state in the Southeastern region of the United States. It borders Kentucky to the north, Virginia to the northeast, North Carolina to the east, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi to the south, Arkansas to the southwest, and Missouri to the northwest. Tennessee is the 36th-largest by area and the 15th-most populous of the 50 states. According to the United States Census Bureau, the state's estimated population as of 2024 is 7.22 million. 
Tennessee is geographically, culturally, and legally divided into three Grand Divisions of East, Middle, and West Tennessee. Nashville is the state's capital and largest city, and anchors its largest metropolitan area. Tennessee has diverse terrain and landforms, and from east to west, contains a mix of cultural features characteristic of Appalachia, the Upland South, and the Deep South. The Blue Ridge Mountains along the eastern border reach some of the highest elevations in eastern North America, and the Cumberland Plateau contains many scenic valleys and waterfalls. The central part of the state is marked by cavernous bedrock and irregular rolling hills, and level, fertile plains define West Tennessee. The state is twice bisected by the Tennessee River, and the Mississippi River forms its western border. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the nation's most visited national park, is in eastern Tennessee. 
Tennessee is rooted in the Watauga Association, a 1772 frontier pact generally regarded as the first constitutional government west of the Appalachian Mountains. Its name derives from Tanasi (ᏔᎾᏏ), a Cherokee town preceding the first European American settlement. Tennessee was initially part of North Carolina, and later the Southwest Territory, before its admission to the Union as the 16th state on June 1, 1796. It earned the nickname "The Volunteer State" due to a strong tradition of military service. A slave state until the American Civil War, Tennessee was politically divided, with most of its western and middle parts supporting the Confederacy, and most of the eastern region harboring pro-Union sentiment. As a result, Tennessee was the last state to officially secede from the Union and join the Confederacy, and the first former Confederate state readmitted to the Union after the war had ended during the Reconstruction era. (Full article...) 
 
 
 
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 Copper train in the basin (1939)  
The Copper Basin, also known as the Ducktown Basin, is a geological region located primarily in Polk County, Tennessee, that contains deposits of copper ore and covers approximately 60,000 acres (24,000 hectares). Located in the southeastern corner of Tennessee, small portions of the basin extend into Fannin County, Georgia, and Cherokee County, North Carolina. The basin is surrounded by the Cherokee National Forest, and the cities of Ducktown and Copperhill, Tennessee, and McCaysville, Georgia are located in the basin. 
Copper was first discovered in the basin in 1843, and by the 1850s large mining operations, spearheaded by German-born businessman Julius Eckhardt Raht, were taking place. The mines were seized by the Confederacy during the American Civil War and were the source of about 90% of the copper used by the Confederate Army. After the Civil War, smelting operations, which were used to separate sulfur from the copper ore, resulted in acid rain in the area. Combined with the logging of nearby forests to fuel the smelters, this resulted in a massive environmental disaster that left the surrounding landscape barren for more than a century. Several mines, the largest of which was the Burra Burra Mine, operated in the basin. (Full article...) 
  
 
The Tennessee State Guard (TNSG) is the state defense force of the state of Tennessee. The TNSG is organized as a military reserve force whose members drill once per month unless called to active duty. The TNSG is a branch of the Tennessee Military Department, alongside the Tennessee Army National Guard, the Tennessee Air National Guard, and the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency. The State Guard acts as a force multiplier for the state's National Guard. As a state defense force, the Tennessee State Guard cannot be federalized, and is not deployed outside the borders of Tennessee, as it is a purely state-level unit. It answers solely to the Governor of Tennessee, unlike the dual federal and state controlled National Guard. The creation of a state military force is recognized under Tennessee Code Annotated 58-1-401. (Full article...) 
 
- History of Tennessee
 - List of Tennessee state symbols
 - Nashville, Tennessee
 - List of governors of Tennessee
 - Governor of Tennessee
 - East Tennessee
 - Middle Tennessee
 - West Tennessee
 - Knoxville, Tennessee
 - Tennessee River
 - Memphis, Tennessee
 - Chattanooga, Tennessee
 - Clarksville, Tennessee
 - Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
 - Cleveland, Tennessee
 - Dolly Parton
 - University of Memphis
 - Toqua (Tennessee)
 - Great Smoky Mountains
 - Great Smoky Mountains
 - Interstate 40 in Tennessee
 - Old Crow Medicine Show
 - Swaggerty Blockhouse
 - Unicoi Mountains
 - Old City, Knoxville
 - Nashville Americans
 - Valerie June
 - Battle of Fort Donelson
 - Battle of Fort Henry
 - Collierville, Tennessee
 - Vanderbilt University
 - Tennessee whiskey
 - Jack Daniel's
 - Grand Ole Opry
 - Battle of Nashville
 - Nashville Superspeedway
 - Johnny Cash
 - Carl Perkins
 - Tennessee Waltz
 - Morristown, Tennessee
 - Fainting goat
 - Bessie Smith
 - Cookeville, Tennessee
 - Murfreesboro, Tennessee
 - Bob Corker
 - Edgar Evins State Park
 - Graceland
 - Bledsoe Creek State Park
 - Dollywood
 - Tennessee Valley Authority
 - Black Patch Tobacco Wars
 - Great Smoky Mountains National Park
 
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The following are images from various Tennessee-related articles on Wikipedia. 
Image 1Fall Creek Falls, the tallest waterfall in the eastern United States, is located on the Cumberland Plateau (from  Tennessee)   
Image 2Reconstruction of  Fort Loudoun, the first British settlement in Tennessee (from  Tennessee)   
Image 3Vanderbilt University in Nashville is consistently ranked as one of the top research institutions in the nation (from  Tennessee)   
Image 4Interstate 40 traverses Tennessee from east to west, and serves the state's three largest cities. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 6Surveyor  Daniel Smith's "Map of the Tennassee State" (1796) (from  Tennessee)   
Image 7The  resort city of  Gatlinburg borders the  Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which is the most visited national park in the United States. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 8The  Ocoee River was home to the  1996 Summer Olympics whitewater slalom events, the only Olympic sporting event ever held in the state. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 9Offices of  The Tennessean in Nashville (from  Tennessee)   
Image 10Howard Baker served as  Senate Minority and Majority Leader from 1977 to 1985, and was known as "The Great Conciliator" (from  Tennessee)   
Image 11Detail of  Tanasi (spelled "Tennessee") on  Henry Timberlake's  Draught of the Cherokee Country (from  Tennessee)   
Image 12A View of Memphis, Tennessee, 1871 (from  History of Tennessee)   
Image 13Workers at the  Norris Dam construction camp site in 1933 (from  Tennessee)   
Image 14The  resort city of  Gatlinburg borders the  Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which is the most visited national park in the United States. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 15The Hermitage, plantation home of President  Andrew Jackson in Nashville (from  Tennessee)   
Image 16Map of counties in Tennessee by racial plurality, per the 2020 U.S. census 
 
 Non-Hispanic White
   50–60% 
   60–70% 
   70–80% 
   80–90% 
   90%+ 
  | 
 Black or African American
   50–60%    |  
   
  (from  Tennessee)   
Image 17Howard Baker served as  Senate Minority and Majority Leader from 1977 to 1985, and was known as "The Great Conciliator" (from  Tennessee)   
Image 18Memphis International Airport, the hub of  FedEx Corporation, is the busiest cargo airport in the world (from  Tennessee)   
Image 19Memphis International Airport, the hub of  FedEx Corporation, is the busiest cargo airport in the world (from  Tennessee)   
Image 21The Tennessee at Chattanooga, 1872, by  Harry Fenn  (from  History of Tennessee)   
Image 22A  Nissan Leaf, one of six models manufactured at the  Nissan Smyrna Assembly Plant, the largest automotive assembly plant in North America (from  Tennessee)   
Image 24Fall Creek Falls, the tallest waterfall in the eastern United States, is located on the Cumberland Plateau (from  Tennessee)   
Image 27The  Ryman Auditorium, home of the "Grand Ole Opry" in Nashville (from  History of Tennessee)   
Image 29The  Battle of Franklin, November 30, 1864 (from  Tennessee)   
Image 31Established in 1942,  Oak Ridge National Laboratory is the largest national laboratory in the Department of Energy system (from  Tennessee)   
Image 32Established in 1942,  Oak Ridge National Laboratory is the largest national laboratory in the Department of Energy system (from  Tennessee)   
Image 33Memphis became known as the "Cotton Capital of the World" in the years following the Civil War (from  Tennessee)   
Image 34The Hermitage, plantation home of President  Andrew Jackson, now a museum in  Davidson County  (from  History of Tennessee)   
Image 35Mount Le Conte in the  Great Smoky Mountains is the tallest mountain in eastern North America, measured from base to summit (from  Tennessee)   
Image 361861 Bank of Tennessee 1 dollar banknote (from  History of Tennessee)   
Image 38Reconstruction of  Fort Loudoun, the first British settlement in Tennessee (from  Tennessee)   
Image 39Calutron operators at the  Y-12 Plant in Oak Ridge during the  Manhattan Project (from  Tennessee)   
Image 40Conquistador Hernando de Soto, first European to visit Tennessee (from  History of Tennessee)   
Image 41in 1946 the U.S. Post Office issued a  commemorative stamp celebrating the 150th anniversary of Tennessee statehood. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 43Workers at the  Norris Dam construction camp site in 1933 (from  Tennessee)   
Image 44Memphis became known as the "Cotton Capital of the World" in the years following the Civil War (from  Tennessee)   
Image 45Map of counties in Tennessee by racial plurality, per the 2020 U.S. census 
 
 Non-Hispanic White
   50–60% 
   60–70% 
   70–80% 
   80–90% 
   90%+ 
  | 
 Black or African American
   50–60%    |  
   
  (from  Tennessee)   
Image 46A geomap showing the counties of Tennessee colored by the relative range of that county's median income. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 47The  1982 World's Fair in Knoxville (from  Tennessee)   
Image 48Al Gore served as a  United States Senator from Tennessee (1985–1993) and as  Vice President of the United States (1993–2001) (from  Tennessee)   
Image 49A geomap showing the counties of Tennessee colored by the relative range of that county's median income. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 50Vanderbilt University in Nashville is consistently ranked as one of the top research institutions in the nation (from  Tennessee)   
Image 51Chart showing poverty in Tennessee, by age and gender (red = female) (from  Tennessee)   
Image 52The  1982 World's Fair in Knoxville (from  Tennessee)   
Image 53Surveyor  Daniel Smith's "Map of the Tennassee State" (1796) (from  Tennessee)   
Image 54Calutron operators at the  Y-12 Plant in Oak Ridge during the  Manhattan Project (from  Tennessee)   
Image 56A  Nissan Leaf, one of six models manufactured at the  Nissan Smyrna Assembly Plant, the largest automotive assembly plant in North America (from  Tennessee)   
Image 57Interstate 40 traverses Tennessee from east to west, and serves the state's three largest cities. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 58Köppen climate types of Tennessee, using 1991–2020  climate normals. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 59in 1946 the U.S. Post Office issued a  commemorative stamp celebrating the 150th anniversary of Tennessee statehood. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 60Köppen climate types of Tennessee, using 1991–2020  climate normals. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 62The  Grand Ole Opry, which was recorded in  Nashville's  Ryman Auditorium from 1943 to 1974, is the longest-running  radio broadcast in US history. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 63Offices of  The Tennessean in Nashville (from  Tennessee)   
Image 64The Hermitage, plantation home of President  Andrew Jackson in Nashville (from  Tennessee)   
Image 65The  Ocoee River was home to the  1996 Summer Olympics whitewater slalom events, the only Olympic sporting event ever held in the state. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 66Chart showing poverty in Tennessee, by age and gender (red = female) (from  Tennessee)   
Image 67John Bell (from  History of Tennessee)   
Image 68Detail of  Tanasi (spelled "Tennessee") on  Henry Timberlake's  Draught of the Cherokee Country (from  Tennessee)   
Image 69The Southwest Territory in 1790 (from  Tennessee)   
Image 70Mount Le Conte in the  Great Smoky Mountains is the tallest mountain in eastern North America, measured from base to summit (from  Tennessee)   
Image 71Cedar glades are an ecosystem that is found in regions of Middle Tennessee where limestone bedrock is close to the surface (from  Tennessee)   
Image 72The Southwest Territory in 1790 (from  Tennessee)   
Image 73The  Battle of Franklin, November 30, 1864 (from  Tennessee)   
Image 74Cedar glades are an ecosystem that is found in regions of Middle Tennessee where limestone bedrock is close to the surface (from  Tennessee)   
Image 75The  Grand Ole Opry, which was recorded in  Nashville's  Ryman Auditorium from 1943 to 1974, is the longest-running  radio broadcast in US history. (from  Tennessee)   
Image 76Al Gore served as a  United States Senator from Tennessee (1985–1993) and as  Vice President of the United States (1993–2001) (from  Tennessee)   
Image 78Nashville's replica of the  Parthenon (built 1897) (from  History of Tennessee)   
  
  
 
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  Tennessee   Communications in Tennessee   Events in Memphis, Tennessee   Native American tribes in Tennessee   Professional wrestling in Tennessee   Science and technology in Tennessee   Tourist attractions in Tennessee   Transportation in Tennessee  
 
 
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