Old Nancy Academy in
Sevierville was established by the Tennessee legislature in 1806, but did not
operate as a school until 1811. Then a site was donated to the schools trustees
by Isaac Thomas, Sevier's war guide, and James McMahan, one of Sevierville's
founders. Each men gave an acre of land and the two acres adjoined.
Here in 1811, a frame
building, 20 feet by 30 feet, was erected with funds and labor contributed by
local citizens. Copies of the Thomas and McMahan deeds prove that this first
Nancy Academy was located on the lot where the late George L. Zirkle lived, and
a handdug well for the school was on the adjoining lot owned by C. L. Thurman.
The school continued at this
site until 1816 when a fire of incendiary origin destroyed the building. A local
citizen, not indicating much interest in education and whose identity is
unknown, burned Sevierville's first school when the trustees secured the
services of the teacher whom he disliked.
The next record of the
operation of the school was in 1818 when the "Forks of Little Pigeon"
(Sevierville) Baptist Church appointed its Pastor, Rev. Richard Wood, William
Henderson, and George Oldham to meet with the Academy trustees at the courthouse
where an agreementwas reached for the school to use the Church building. The
Baptist Church, located then on the Cemetery tract on the East Fork of Little
Pigeon, was used until 1822 when the third and last site of Nancy Academy was
purchased from Micajah C. Rogers, early Sevierville merchant. He received
$400.00 for two Sevierville lots, on one of which was an unfinished brick
building. This building was repaired and used by the Academy until 1849 when a
frame building, "40 feet long, by 26 feet wide, 2 stories high," replaced it.
The latter building, as well
as the brick building, stood on the corner off Main Street, and Park Road, and
was the home of the late S. L. Atchley and family for many years. Many persons
still living remember it and many still living attended school there.
In 1842 the peace of the old
school was disturbed by a lawsuit which was instituted in the Sevier County
Chancery Court by John Brabson, Samuel Pickens, George McCown, and Isaac A.
Miller, all of whom were new trustees appointed by the Sevier County Court in
1841, against the following old trustees appointed earlier by the State
legislature: Thomas Hill, James P. H. Porter, John Sharp, Alexander Preston,
Micajah C. Rogers, William Henderson, Isaac Love, and Benjamin D. Brabson.
The complements bill charged
that the $400.00 paid to Rogers for the two lots and the "indifferent,
unfinished brick building" was an "wholly unnecessary waste of funds." It was
charged further that the old trustees lost the original Thomas and McMahan site
when it was "enclosed and occupied by others."
The old trustees proved that
the price of the lots and brick house was not exorbitant, and that Rogers was
compelled to wait 12 years before receiving final payment. It was proven also
that the hand-dug well on the ridge failed to provide sufficient water for the
students, and that the muddy road (the present Park Road) between town and
school worked a hardship on the students during the winter season.
The new trustees, however,
submitted proof that Henry M. Thomas, son of Isaac Thomas, and Abraham McMahan
and John McMahan, sons of James McMahan, actually had enclosed the original two
acres. Value of this land, now lost to the Academy, was set at $5.00 to $10.00
per acre by depositions of Andrew Lawson. Sr. and others; therefore, this loss
was not too great. The new trustees also made much of a crack in the brick wall
of the Academy which weakened the building so much that students and teachers
ran outside during storms.
About the same time as the
lawsuit, which resulted in vindication of the old trustees, a storm of scandal
and political controversy broke upon Nancy Academy. In 1842, Isaac A. Miller,
and Academy trustee and Sevier County lawyer, absconded to Texas with $720.00 of
the school's funds, and this scandal and other affairs of the school was exposed
before the whole of East Tennessee is a bitter Second Congressional campaign in
1843.
Lewis Reneau, prominent
Sevier County lawyer who lived at Henry s X Roads, was a Whig aspirant to
represent this District, to which Sevier County then belonged. James Cumming,
Methodist preacher who lived on Walden's Creek, started the quarrel when he
published a letter (March 8, 1843) over his pseudonym, "Little Kentucky," in the
Jonesboro Whig, edited by another Methodist preacher, William G. Brownlow,
just then starting his stormy career as editor-politician in Tennessee. Rev.
Cumming charged State Senator Reneau with assisting Representative Miller in
getting the legislature of 1841-1842 to enact a special law that permitted
Miller, as Academy trustee, to obtain the Nancy Academy funds from the State
Comptroller.
Reneau denied these charges
in a long letter to the Knoxville Register, March 29, 1843, and charged
Rev. Cumming with being the too of his old enemies, John Brabson and George
McCown, local Whig leaders and Academy trustees. He also stated that Cumming's
primary interest was to elect William C. Senter, from Grainger Coo, his Whig
opponent and the third Methodist preacher involved in the dispute. This
newspaper war in the Whig and the Register continued until Reneau
withdrew from the race in duly. Then Senter easily defeated his Democratic
opponent in the election of August 3,1843.
The history of Nancy Academy
after 1850 would justify another article. The school closed after the
establishment of Murphy College by the Methodists in 1890. On August 7, 1893,
the last Academy trustees, J. E. King, A. J. Hicks, J. A. Householder, L. S.
Trotter, and John Murphy sold to Pink Maples a "certain lot of land including
the building thereon situated in the town of Sevierville, on south side of Main
Street." The purchase price was $1200.00. This was the end of the old school.