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Located in East Tennessee in the Great Smoky Mountains, Smokies
Investors Real Estate and Auction is proud to call Sevier
County our home. It is surrounded by mountains and waterways.
The French Broad River, which bisects the county east to west,
has historically been a political dividing point for Sevier
Countians. Sevierville, Kodak, Seymour, Pigeon Forge, Gatlinburg,
Pittman Center, Jones Cove, Cades Cove, and the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park are the primary local communities.
History of Sevier County
Sevier County was founded September 28, 1794 from Jefferson
County. It is bordered on the west by Blount County, with
Knox to the northwest, Jefferson on the north and Cocke County
on the east. The south and southeast borders of Sevier County
are bordered by Swain County, North Carolina.
Sevier County was named in honor of John Sevier, state senator
and first governor of Tennessee.
The public records of Sevier County were almost completely
destroyed by fire on March 25, 1856. In tracing the early
residents of the County it is advisable to search the records
of the adjoining counties of Blount, Cocke, Jefferson, and
Knox. As of the year 2000, Sevier County had a land area of
592 square miles and the population was estimated in 2002
at 74,456.
Economy of Sevier County
From its beginnings as a traditional subsistence-based farming
society, Sevier County has grown into a major tourist destination
since the establishment of the Great Smoky Mountains National
Park, which dominates the southern portion of the county.
One of the very reasons for the park's creation, however,
was also one of the county's first major economic engines:
the lumber industry. Establishments in what is now the National
Park felled large amounts of timber in the early 1900's. Though
the park effectively killed the then-lagging industry in the
late 1930's, it spurred the development of one of the largest
tourist resorts in the United States of America, as the Great
Smoky Mountains National Park is now the most visited National
Park in the country. In recent years the tourism bubble has
expanded beyond the city of Gatlinburg, which borders the
northwestern segment of the National Park, and into the nearby
cities of Pigeon Forge and Sevierville.
Tourist Attractions ( Top 4 )
The tourism industry drives the county's economy. The following
destinations are among the most lucrative for the area:
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, southern Sevier County:
Established in 1936 and propelling the tourism industry in
Sevier County ever since, the National Park is the most visited
in the entire system, welcoming over 10 million nature enthusiasts
every year, most of which arrive through Sevier County.
Dollywood, Pigeon Forge: The theme park named for part-owner
Dolly Parton admits 2.2 million guests a year, making it both
the most popular theme park and most frequented attraction
(after the Great Smoky Mountains National Park) in Tennessee.
Ripley's Aquarium of the Smokies, Gatlinburg: Opened in 2000
and designated the most visited aquarium in the United States
in 2001, when over 2 million tourists passed through its galleries,
Ripley's Aquarium of the Smokies is the largest single tourist
draw in Gatlinburg.
Ober Gatlinburg, Gatlinburg: The Ober Gatlinburg ski resort
sits above Gatlinburg, offering numerous attractions for visitors
unique to the county, including winter ski slopes and an indoor
ice skating rink. The tramway that takes visitors to and from
the Gatlinburg Parkway is touted as "America's Largest Aerial
Tramway".
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total
area of 1,548 km² (598 mi²). 1,534 km² (592
mi²) of it is land and 14 km² (5 mi²) of it
(0.91%) is water.
As one of the largest counties in Tennessee, Sevier County's
terrain varies from one of the most rugged portions of the
Appalachian Mountains to the river valley of the French Broad
River and Douglas Lake. Inasmuch, the maximum elevation differential
in Sevier County is the greatest in Tennessee, ranging from
a high of 6,643 feet (2,025 metres) at Clingmans Dome (the
highest point in the entire state), to 850 feet (259 meters)
at the French Broad River.

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