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==== Doe River ==== [[File:The City of Power 37643.jpg|left|thumb|180px|"The City of Power" electric sign that was erected over the old Elk Avenue Bridge (circa 1912β1913).<ref name="ReferenceA"/>]] The [[Doe River]] forms in [[Carter County, Tennessee]], near the [[North Carolina]] line, just south of [[Roan Mountain State Park]]. The river initially flows north and is first paralleled by State Route 143; at the community of [[Roan Mountain, Tennessee]], it then turns west and is at this point paralleled by [[U.S. Route 19E]]. The Doe River flows to the east of Fork Mountain; the [[Little Doe River]] flows by Fork Mountain to the west. Below the confluence of the Doe River and the Little Doe River at [[Hampton, Tennessee|Hampton]], the Doe River then travels roughly in a northern downstream direction through the Valley Forge community, and is rejoined by U.S. Route 19E. Pushing through a mountain gap just north of Hampton, the volume of the river is amplified by the waters flowing from McCathern Spring. [[File:Broad Street Bridge 37643.jpg|right|thumb|180px|Broad Street Bridge]] Further downstream, the Doe River flows by the East Side neighborhood parallel with [[Tennessee State Route 67]] and then underneath the historic [[Elizabethton Covered Bridge]], built in 1882 and located within the Elizabethton downtown business district. Connecting 3rd Street and Hattie Avenue, the covered bridge is adjacent to a city park and spans the Doe River. The covered bridge, although now closed to motor traffic, is still open for bicycles and pedestrians. Most of Elizabethton's downtown is listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] for its historical and architectural merits. The Elizabethton Historic District contains a variety of properties ranging in age from the late 18th century through the 1930s. The Elizabethton Covered Bridge is an important focal point and a well-known landmark in the state. In addition to the covered bridge, the downtown historic district contains the 1928 Elk Avenue concrete arch bridge, and just a little further downstream on the Doe River, Tennessee State Route 67 passes another similar concrete arch bridge locally known as the Broad Street Bridge. Elizabethton celebrates in the downtown business area for one week each June with the Elizabethton Covered Bridge Days featuring country and gospel music performances, activities for children, Elk Avenue car club show, and many food and crafts vendors.
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