Showing posts with label Tennessean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tennessean. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Zoning board denies quarry request


Zoning board denies quarry request
 Click here for article published Sunday July 17, 2011 in Gallatin News Examiner
After hearing comments for more than an hour and a half from both sides of a proposed rock quarry in Castalian Springs, the Sumner County Board of Zoning and Appeals took less than 20 minutes to deny the request of Hoover, Inc. to build a rock quarry, a rock crushing plant, an asphalt plant and a concrete plant on more than 350 acres of land currently zoned for residential and agriculture use.
Board member and local developer Bruce Rainey said during the July 14 meeting that while a mining quarry may be considered in some instances an agricultural business, the other businesses presented in Hoover's site plans were industrial uses.
According to Sumner County Executive Anthony Holt, Hoover is expected to take the matter through Sumner County Chancery Court to request a ruling.
"That was overheard and if that's the case, the county is going to vigorously fight this,"
Holt said after the meeting. "The Board of Zoning and Appeals made the right decision."
The board's decision was unanimous.
Reporter Sherry Mitchell can be reached at 575-7117 or shmitchell@mtcngroup.com.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Tennessee's State Historian Weighs In...

Lines Drawn over Castalian Springs Quarry
Published in the TennesseanBy Walter T. Durham
Tennessee State Historian
July 13, 2011

The announced intention of Hoover Inc. Crushed Stone to open a rock quarry, crusher, ready-mix concrete plant and hot-mix asphalt operation in Castalian Springs has met a hostile reception from the community and historical organizations.

Neighbors to the 350-acre pastoral farmland on Corum Hill Road at State Highway 25 in Sumner County are incensed because Hoover acquired the land by setting up a front company called Western Farm Products LLC so that local people would not suspect that a rock quarry was about to settle among them. Many in the community were further incensed when Hoover posted no-trespassing signs along the property line in what appeared to be an effort to deter opponents from investigating the property for Indian burials and artifacts.

People with homes and farms surrounding the proposed quarry believe that their
property values will plummet. They ask, “Who will want to buy homes on land near a
rock crusher and asphalt plant?”

Neighbors and outdoorsmen object because of the impact of the quarry on the
natural resources of the area — fields, forests, streams and clean air. How will air
pollution affect lives of the young and the elderly? They question the effects of the
Hoover operation on Bledsoe Creek State Park, a popular camping facility.

And the quarry could have an adverse impact on a long-range plan by the Tennessee State Historical Commission to develop Castalian Springs into a historical park. 

Wealth of historic homes

Marveling at the tenure and scope of the Castalian Springs story, historians deplore the location of a rock crusher near so many historic sites and structures. The first known humans in the area were American Indians of the Mississippian Period, Stone Age mound builders, about 1500 A.D. Although resisted by Indians, colonial settlers and African slaves (1795) prevailed, and their men participated in the War of 1812, the Seminole War of 1836, and the 1846 Mexican War. During the Civil War, Union and Confederate armies visited the town periodically.

William Brimage Bate enlisted local Confederate companies that fought throughout the war. He rose to the rank of major general. H.L. Hunley left Castalian Springs to build the first submarine to sink an enemy ship in combat. The CSS H.L. Hunley sank the Housatonic, a 1,240-ton steamship, in Charleston Harbor in 1864.

Several historic houses stand today. Cragfont, built 1798-1802, was the home of James Winchester, a brigadier general in the War of 1812. The largest historic log house in the state, Wynnewood, was built in 1828-1830 to be a stagecoach inn. Hawthorne Hill is the birthplace of General/Governor/Senator Bate; his cousin, who became the Italian countess Eugenia Bate Bertinatti, and Dr. Humphrey Bate, whose string band performed on the first WSM Grand Ole Opry broadcast.

These houses are all owned by the state. Nearby on Rock Springs Road are the residences of early settler Francis Weatherred and Governor Bate, both privately owned.

In Bledsoe’s Fort Park are three houses built by pioneers: the 1795 stone cottage of Hugh Rogan, the log house of the same vintage of Nathanial Parker, and the 1812 log house birthplace of H.L. Hunley.

Today the pleasant, tranquil community of Castalian Springs with its American Indian roots in the Stone Age faces a distasteful intrusion of the 21st century. The citizens are resisting even as the Indians and Confederates did. But this time, the resisters plan to win.


Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Quarry Plan Irks Castalian Springs Residents

Full Story with great photos here.


The Tennessean
By Matt Anderson
July 5, 2011

Castalian Springs has survived wars between Native Americans and early settlers. It survived a 2008 tornado outbreak that damaged homes, the post office and a historic log home.

Now, Hoover Inc. and a group of residents are in a fight over the Sumner County community’s future, with the La Vergne-based company proposing a rock quarry and asphalt plant on more than 350 acres surrounded by about 50 homes and state historic sites.

Lynn Smith, who lives across the street from the proposed quarry, worries about its effect on her home and family. Her husband has lung cancer.

During a recent town hall meeting in Gallatin, she confronted representatives of the quarry.

“You’re building this right across the street from my house. You’re going to bomb right in front of my house,” Smith said. “Who the heck is going to take care of all the cracks in my house and all of the above? Can you answer that?”

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Quarry Now Knocks on Castalian Springs’ Door

By Mike Towle
The TENNESSEAN
June 29, 2011

It was too good an offer to pass up. In pouring rain locals call a "frog strangler," I jumped into the front passenger seat of the minivan and buckled up. Sitting next to me was the driver and one of Sumner County's most entertaining raconteurs, Gallatin historian and furniture maker extraordinaire John Garrot.

The occasion was a guided tour of that part of Castalian Springs concentrated with some of Middle Tennessee’s most historical landmarks and hallowed grounds. Some of this, such as Wynnewood and Bledsoe's Fort Historic Park, I knew about; other gems such as the Bate House, log-cabin homes tucked into newer structures, and ancient Indian burial grounds, well, let's just say I was among the historically malnourished. Garrott cured me of that. 

One of the contemporary homes we passed belongs to John and Allyson Simons. About a year ago they invested their life savings to buy 10 serene acres off Corum Hill Road and move here from Virginia, unwitting to the life-changing pile of rocks now apparently on the verge of landing at their front doorstep. More on the Simons in a minute.