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==History== This area was long inhabited by indigenous peoples, including the historic Cherokee who encountered European and English traders and settlers. The mountainous terrain made it less attractive to subsistence farmers. Unicoi County was created in 1875 from portions of [[Washington County, Tennessee|Washington]] and [[Carter County, Tennessee|Carter]] counties. Its first European-American settlers had arrived more than a century earlier but the population had been small.<ref name=tehc /> The county remained predominantly agrarian until the railroads were constructed in the area in the 1880s.<ref name=tehc /> During the 1910s, the [[Clinchfield Railroad]] established a pottery in Erwin, which eventually incorporated under the name, "Southern Potteries." This company produced a popular brand of dishware, commonly called [[Blue Ridge (dishware)|Blue Ridge China]], which featured hand-painted [[underglaze]] designs. While the company folded in the 1950s, Blue Ridge dishes remain popular with antique collectors.<ref name=tehc /> On September 13, 1916, a circus elephant, [[Mary (elephant)|Mary]], was hanged in Erwin for killing her trainer in nearby Kingsport. The elephant was hanged by the neck from a railcar-mounted industrial derrick between four o'clock and five o'clock that afternoon. The first attempt resulted in a snapped chain, causing Mary to fall and break her hip as dozens of children fled in terror. The severely wounded elephant died during a second attempt and was buried beside the tracks. The hanging was the subject of a book, ''The Day They Hung the Elephant'' (1992), by Charles Edwin Price.
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