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Nutbush, Tennessee

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Country
  
United States

Counties
  
Haywood

Elevation
  
109 m

Area code
  
Area code 731

State
  
Tennessee

Time zone
  
CST (UTC-6)

Population
  
259 (2000)

Local time
  
Tuesday 1:43 AM

Nutbush, Tennessee

ZIP code
  
38063 (Ripley, Tennessee)

Weather
  
21°C, Wind SW at 16 km/h, 73% Humidity

Nutbush is a rural unincorporated community in Haywood County, Tennessee, in the western part of the state. It was established in the early 19th century by European-American settlers who brought along or bought enslaved African Americans as workers to develop the area's cotton plantations. The African Americans built the fine houses and churches that still stand.

Contents

Map of Nutbush, TN 38012, USA

Agriculture is still the dominant source of income in the area, focused on the cultivation and processing of cotton. This was the commodity crop in the antebellum years, when its cultivation depended on slave labor. As of 2006, cotton was processed in one cotton-processing plant in the community.

Nutbush is best known as the birthplace and childhood home of singer Tina Turner, who described the town in her 1973 song "Nutbush City Limits". In 2002, a segment of Tennessee State Route 19 near Nutbush was named "Tina Turner Highway" in her honor. This is also the home town of blues pioneer musicians and recording artists Hambone Willie Newbern and Sleepy John Estes.

Demographics

In 2000, the population of the Nutbush voting precinct (TN 3976) was 259. Of those, 215 were White (83.01%), 42 Black (16.22%), and two were of another ethnicity (0.77%). At that time 190 people (73.36%) were aged 18 or older.

Economy

The community's main source of income is agriculture (especially cotton).

After the abolition of slavery, freedmen worked at sharecropping as the primary means of income. They cultivated plots of land, mostly for growing cotton, in return for paying a share of the crop to the landowner.

Modern machines such as the cotton picker have superseded manual cultivation; many farm workers left the area for cities during the Great Migration of the early 20th century. As of 2006, one cotton-processing plant in Nutbush is the only agricultural industry in the community.

Lagoon Creek Peaking Facility is run by the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) in Nutbush. From eight gas turbines, the power plant generates electric power for the area in times of high demand.

History

The Nutbush community was established in the early 19th century by settlers from Virginia and North Carolina. Descended from immigrants from England, they traveled westward to the Mississippi River delta in western Tennessee. They developed this area for cotton and were dependent on the use of slave labor.

These settlers founded Trinity United Methodist Church was founded in 1822. During the slavery years, black slaves were encouraged to attend the church under white supervision. More than 50 Civil War soldiers, both Confederate and Union, are buried in the Trinity Cemetery associated with the church. The Trinity Cemetery is mentioned as one of the best-kept cemeteries in the county.

They also had a white Woodlawn Church (it is no longer active). Under state law, most slave congregations had to be ministered by white pastors. In 1846, the young slave Hardin Smith, who was sold from Virginia, was allowed to preach to a slave congregation at an evening service at the white Woodlawn Church; it was the first time an area congregation was pastored by a slave.

After the American Civil War, the Woodlawn Missionary Baptist Church was established in 1866 by Hardin Smith and other freed slaves of the community, aided by some members of the white Woodlawn Baptist Church. The freedmen soon withdrew from white supervision, as did most black Baptists in the South, establishing their own regional and national associations by the end of the century.

Woodlawn Baptist Church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1996 for its historical significance.

In 1881 a U.S. Post office was opened in Nutbush; it was closed in 1905.

Geography

Nutbush is located at 35°41′53″N 89°24′29″W (35.6981330, -89.4081280), at an elevation of 358 feet (109 m).

Cotton fields and hills dominate the landscape of the surrounding area. Nutbush is situated on the southeastern edge of the New Madrid Seismic Zone, an area with a high earthquake risk.

Postal and telephone

The U.S. ZIP Code for Nutbush is 38063 (Ripley, Tennessee) and the telephone area code is 731.

Music

The early Black musicians and singers from the Nutbush churches recorded and influenced an international audience. Prominent recording artists include Hambone Willie Newbern and Sleepy John Estes. Harmonica player Noah Lewis of Henning, Tennessee is buried in an area cemetery near Nutbush.

Nutbush is best known as the childhood home of singer Tina Turner, then known as Anna Mae Bullock. At age 16, she moved to St. Louis, Missouri.

After her birth in 1939, Bullock was raised in Nutbush, Brownsville, and Ripley by her maternal grandmother and extended family in the area. The houses she lived in as a child no longer exist. Wood from her Nutbush/Flagg Grove home was used to build a barn.

Both Woodlawn Missionary Baptist Church and Spring Hill Baptist Church in Nutbush were family churches of Tina Turner. She attended and sang in both choirs growing up. Her family members were church officials, musicians and singers; various members are buried in these two cemeteries.

In 2002, Tennessee State Route 19 between Brownsville and Nutbush was officially designated as "Tina Turner Highway" in her honor.

Representation in other media

  • Tina Turner's song "Nutbush City Limits" (1973, produced by Ike Turner) is about her home town. The line dance "The Nutbush" is performed to the song "Nutbush City Limits".
  • Nutbush is mentioned on the TV show Brainiac: Science Abuse. An impersonator of Tina Turner is introduced as "Tina Turner and her Bunsen Burner". She uses explosives to destroy automobiles like she "used to do in her lab in Nutbush".
  • References

    Nutbush, Tennessee Wikipedia


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