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Bays Mountain

Coordinates: 36°21′45″N 82°51′30″W / 36.36250°N 82.85833°W / 36.36250; -82.85833
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chimneytop Mountain, highest part of the Bays Mountain ridge.

Bays Mountain is a ridge of the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians, located in East Tennessee. It runs southwest to northeast, from just south of Knoxville to Kingsport.

Geography

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The southern segment of Bays Mountain is relatively low in elevation (up to about 1,300 feet (396.2 m)). In some places it essentially merges with the surrounding plains, especially where it is bisected by the French Broad River and the Nolichucky River. The northern segment of Bays Mountain reaches higher elevations, averaging above 2,000 feet (609.6 m) with peaks reaching up to 3,000 feet (914.4 m). It is not a single ridge but rather a series of closely related ridges, some of which have names of their own (e.g., Fodderstack, Lost, Stone, Browns). The highest peak is Chimneytop Mountain (3,117 feet (950.1 m)), a spur ridge south of the main Bays Mountain ridge.

Northernmost Terminus of Bays Mountain at Kingsport, Tennessee

Bays Mountain runs just south of the Holston River, which flows northeast to southwest. At Kingsport the Holston River curves east and south at the confluence of its three tributary forks that flow from Virginia to the northeast. Bays Mountain ends abruptly at this curve of the Holston River. Kingsport is on the north side of the river, across from the northern terminus of Bays Mountain, where two ridges meet in a "V" with an impounded lake between the ridges.

History

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Bays Mountain is named after two Bays brothers who settled in southwest Virginia in Russell and Scott counties around 1780.

Bays Mountain Park is a 3,550-acre (14.4 km2) nature park located on Bays Mountain in Kingsport. The park includes a planetarium, live native animal displays, a nature center, 19th-century living farm museum and adventure course.

References

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  • Williams, "Fort Robinson on the Holston," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, no.4 (1932)
  • Samuel C. Williams, Dawn of Tennessee Valley and Tennessee History (Johnson City, 1937)
  • Long, Howard. Kingsport: A Romance of Industry. Overmountain Press (October 1993)
  • Wolfe, Margaret Ripley. Kingsport Tennessee: A Planned American City. University Press of Kentucky (November 1987)
  • The Goodspeed Publishing Co., History of Tennessee 1887; pages 1252-1261; Greene County Biographical Sketches, Surnames M thru W; (D.W. Remine Biography)
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36°21′45″N 82°51′30″W / 36.36250°N 82.85833°W / 36.36250; -82.85833