Last week, history was in the making as the City of Clarksville celebrated its 240th birthday with a special proclamation, recognizing the milestones that have shaped it since its establishment in 1785. At the December 4 regular session, Mayor Joe Pitts presented the city council with a recounting of the city’s origins, honoring the efforts of early explorers and settlers like John Montgomery and Moses Renfroe.
As commemorated in the proclamation, the journey towards the founding of Clarksville began when John Montgomery explored the Cumberland River alongside Kasper Mansker back in 1775. The aspiring vision of a settlement materialized with Moses Renfroe establishing “Red Paint Hill” near the mouth of the Red River in 1780, marking an early footprint of human habitation in the region. This crucial detail was presented by Mayor Pitts as part of the city’s storied chronicle during the event.
In 1784, John Montgomery joined forces with Martin Armstrong to carry out a survey of 640 acres, which eventually led to the formal layout of 44 lots the same year, thus shaping the blueprint of Clarksville. It was at this time that the town’s prominent cross streets received their historic names – Jefferson, Washington, and Franklin among them – while an application was made for a grant to secure the land, a process not completed by the state until December 8, 1787…