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==History== One of the earliest settlers at Fall Branch was Isaac White, a Revolutionary War veteran who arrived in the area in 1781. He eventually established a farm at what is now the intersection of Interstate 81 and State Highway 93. Another early settler, Gabriel Morgan, built a [[grist mill]] at Fall Branch in the early 1800s. The mill stood until the 1930s, when it was torn down.<ref name=fbhs>"[http://www.fallbranchtn.com/history.asp History of Fall Branch] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220125015907/http://www.fallbranchtn.com/history.asp |date=January 25, 2022 }}," Fall Branch Historical Society website. Retrieved: July 25, 2015.</ref> By the early 1800s, Fall Branch was known as "Crouch Town", after a family of early settlers. The name had changed to "James' Cross Roads" by 1830, when a post office was established. The name "Falls Branch" had been adopted by 1854, and the "s" was dropped from "Falls" in 1883, giving the community its current name. The name was inspired by the waterfall the community's main creek, also called Fall Branch, spills over just before it empties into Horse Creek.<ref name=fbhs /> In 1836, Fall Branch was designated as the county seat of the proposed "Powell County", which would have consisted of parts of Washington, Greene, [[Sullivan County, Tennessee|Sullivan]], and [[Hawkins County, Tennessee|Hawkins]] counties. While voters approved of the new county, it was rejected by the [[Tennessee Supreme Court]] on the grounds that it failed to meet the minimum size required by the state constitution for new counties.<ref>Bob Cox, "[http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/Community/2013/08/12/A-history-mystery-What-happened-to-Powell-County.html A History Mystery: What Happened to Powell County?] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170224054345/http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/Community/2013/08/12/A-history-mystery-What-happened-to-Powell-County.html |date=2017-02-24 }}," ''Johnson City Press'', August 19, 2013.</ref><ref>Bob Cox, "[http://www.bcyesteryear.com/node/652 History Mystery: More Specifics about What Happened to Powell County] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511203538/https://www.bcyesteryear.com/node/652 |date=2021-05-11 }}," ''Bob Cox's Yesteryear'', September 23, 2013.</ref><ref>Andrew Johnson, LeRoy P. Graf (ed.), Ralph Haskins (ed.), "[https://books.google.com/books?id=lMoRuOfzjeYC&dq=%22powell+county%22+bradly&pg=PA26 Letter to John Young, March 10, 1840]," ''Letters of Andrew Johnson'', Vol. 1 (University of Tennessee Press, 1967), p. 26.</ref><ref>John Moore, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=luwKAQAAMAAJ&dq=%22powell+county%22+tennessee+supreme+court&pg=PT209 Reports of Cases At Law and In Equity Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Arkansas]'', Volumes 28 and 29 (Pilot Printing, 1894), no. 384.</ref> A school, Fall Branch Seminary, was established at Fall Branch in 1842. Fall Branch High School, initially a two-year school, was established before 1900. The high school was consolidated with several other smaller schools to form [[Daniel Boone High School (Tennessee)|Daniel Boone High School]] in nearby [[Gray, Tennessee|Gray]] in 1971.<ref name=fbhs /> A number of buildings dating to the 19th century still stand in Fall Branch. The Masonic Lodge, home to Johnson Lodge No. 274, was completed in 1869. The Joseph Sheppard House, constructed in the late 1850s, was believed to have been used to hide Confederate soldiers during the Civil War. The Bud White Home was constructed by a local physician, Jonathan Blair White, in 1869. The Hopper House, used as a boarding home for early Fall Branch Seminary students, was constructed in the first half of the 19th century.<ref name=fbhs />
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