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===Postwar-present=== [[Image:Lewis-buckner-design-sevierville.jpg|thumb|[[Waters House (Sevierville, Tennessee)|House at 217 Cedar]] in Sevierville, designed by Lewis Buckner]] Sevierville recovered quickly from the war, with a number of new houses and businesses being built in the 1870s. Two members of the town's African-American community — house builder [[Lewis Buckner]] (1856β1924) and brickmason Isaac Dockery (1832β1910) — played a prominent role in Sevierville's post-war construction boom. Buckner designed a number of houses in the Sevierville area over a 40-year period, 15 of which are still standing.<ref>Robbie Jones, "[http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entry.php?rec=157 Lewis C. Buckner]." ''The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture'', 2002. Retrieved: October 2, 2007.</ref> Dockery's contributions include the New Salem Baptist Church in 1886 and the [[Sevier County Courthouse (Sevierville, Tennessee)|Sevier County Courthouse]] in 1896, both of which are still standing.<ref>Robbie Jones, "[http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entry.php?rec=386 Isaac Dockery]." ''The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture'', 2002. Retrieved: October 2, 2007.</ref> By the 1880s, Sevierville was growing rapidly, as was the population of Sevier County. In 1887, the town had four general stores, two groceries, a jeweler, a sawmill, and two hotels. It was also home to the Sevierville Lumber Company, which was established to harvest trees in the area. Tourists also started to trickle into Sevier County, drawn by the reported health-restoring qualities of mountain springs. Resorts sprang up throughout the county, with Seaton Springs and Henderson Springs located just south of Sevierville.<ref>Jones, ''Historic Architecture of Sevier County'', 49-50.</ref> In 1892, a vigilante group known as the "Whitecaps" was formed to rid Sevier County of vice. The group wore white hoods to conceal their identities and used [[Ku Klux Klan]]-like tactics, although they were not considered a racist entity. The Whitecaps initially threatened women accused of prostitution, and the group began launching nightly attacks in the mid-1890s. In 1893, Sevierville physician J.A. Henderson took over an anti-Whitecap group, which he renamed the "Blue Bills." The two vigilante groups clashed at Henderson Springs in 1894, with deaths occurring on both sides. In 1896, the Whitecaps' murder of a young Sevierville couple led to widespread outrage, and in 1898, the Tennessee State Legislature banned "extra-legal conspiracies" and vigilante groups. Due to this measure and the efforts of Sevier County Deputy Sheriff Thomas Davis, the Whitecaps largely vanished by the end of the century.<ref>Jones, ''Historic Architecture of Sevier County'', 63-64.</ref> After a fire destroyed much of the downtown area in 1900, businesses shifted from the old town square at Main Street to the new Sevierville Commercial District, viz. Court Avenue and Bruce Street, which centered on the new courthouse.<ref>Jones, ''Historic Architecture of Sevier County'', 66.</ref> The town incorporated in 1901.<ref>J.A. Sharp, "[http://www.sevierlibrary.org/genealogy/drsharphis/sevierville.htm Sevierville, One Hundred Fifty-Five Years Old] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20031115220511/http://www.sevierlibrary.org/genealogy/drsharphis/sevierville.htm |date=November 15, 2003 }}." c. 1950. Retrieved: October 4, 2007.</ref> In 1910, Indiana entrepreneur William J. Oliver finished work on the Knoxville, Sevierville and Eastern Railroad, which was Sevier County's first [[standard gauge]] rail line. Known as the [[Smoky Mountain Railroad]], this line offered passenger service between Knoxville and Sevierville until 1962.<ref>Jones, ''Historic Architecture of Sevier County'', 67.</ref> With the opening of Great Smoky Mountains National Park in 1934, tens of thousands of tourists began passing through Sevierville, which was situated about halfway between the park and Knoxville. U.S. 441, initially known as Smoky Mountain Highway, was completed to Sevierville in 1934 and later extended to North Carolina.<ref>Jones, ''Historic Architecture of Sevier County'', 124-125.</ref> Entertainer [[Dolly Parton]] was born in Sevierville in 1946. Her Parton ancestors had migrated to [[Greenbrier (Great Smoky Mountains)|Greenbrier]] sometime around 1850 and later moved to Locust Ridge (near Pittman Center), where Parton was born, after the establishment of the national park. In more recent years, the town erected a statue of Parton on the lawn of the courthouse and named Dolly Parton Parkway after her. Much of [[Cormac McCarthy]]'s 1973 novel ''[[Child of God]]'' takes place in Sevierville and the surrounding area.
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