This pictorial history illustrates the Tennessee River's influence on
Northwest Alabama and people, places, and events that have shaped the
area's cultural and natural history.
For centuries, the Tennessee River has shaped the lives of northwest
Alabamians. Native peoples made their homes on its shores, living on the
rich resources found in its waters and on its banks. Early Europeans and
Americans recognized the river's importance in connecting east with
west, although traveling the 40-mile stretch of rocky shoals between
present-day Decatur and Florence was difficult. Overcoming that
navigation challenge led to such 19th-century technological advances as
the Tuscumbia, Courtland & Decatur Railroad--the first rail line west of
the Appalachian Mountains--and the Muscle Shoals Canal. During the Civil
War, skirmishes over control of factories, rail lines, and bridges
characterized most military activity in northwest Alabama. In the 20th
century, the construction of Wilson Dam and the creation of the
Tennessee Valley Authority improved the quality of life and increased
economic opportunities in northwest Alabama.