Mount Zion Church
Mount Zion Church
Mount Zion Cemetery
Mount Zion Church
Dogwood (Cornus) leaves
Diesel-Electric locomotive
View northeast from railroad museum
Nameplate of locomotive
Caboose
Bowling Green Railroad Museum
Pullman car
Shanty Hollow Lake, Kentucky
Shanty Hollow Lake, Kentucky
Shanty Hollow, Kentucky
Shanty Hollow, Kentucky
Red-bellied woodpecker
Path through the forest
Fallen leaves (mostly red maple)
Hooded mergansers on a foggy morning
Great blue heron on a foggy morning
Super Moon - 2017
Super Moon 2017
Super Moon - 2017
Mount Zion Church
Waterfowl at Tennessee NWR
Eastern bluebird by osprey nest
Eiffel Tower, Paris, TN
Plenty of free parking
Japanese honeysuckle
Drying the feathers
Asker Garip
Common mergansers
Bamboo grove
Bamboo grove
"Wilderness Park" bamboo forest in Prattville, Ala…
Branco's nose
Pond reflections
Preparing for winter
Gardenia
Branco on the forest path
Eastern phoebe
Color coordination
Floating sweet-gum leaves
Wrapping up the leftovers
Tulip-tree
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Memorial Plaque


This old “Church in the Wildwood” was once the center of a thriving community that lived here called the “23rd Voting District”. The Mount Zion Church was first established in 1852 as a log structure. The Western District Baptist Association minutes record that two members were sent to the 1853 associational meeting. These same minutes record that the church had 24 members at that time. The Mount Zion Church has only known two structures in its history, the original log church built in the 1850s and the present building constructed in 1893.
Mount Zion Church served rural agrarian pioneers who had settled in the wildlife rich land between the Tennessee and Big Sandy Rivers. The church remained active throughout the Civil War. However, no troops (Federal or Confederate) were believed to have used the log structure during the war. Early preachers to the Mount Zion Church were “circuit riders” who visited and preached to the congregations once per month.
During the creation of Kentucky Lake, the 2.7 acres of church property was purchased by the Tennessee Valley Authority in 1943 for $1,006. TVA agreed to let the present building stand so that an annual homecoming could be enjoyed. The community spirit has remained strong with the church, and former residents of the area have met for an annual reunion on the first Sunday of each July. The property is currently managed as part of the Tennessee Wildlife Refuge. The Mount Zion Church and Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 4th, 1975.
Memorial plaque donated in loving memory of W.C. and Steve McDaniel.
Mount Zion Church served rural agrarian pioneers who had settled in the wildlife rich land between the Tennessee and Big Sandy Rivers. The church remained active throughout the Civil War. However, no troops (Federal or Confederate) were believed to have used the log structure during the war. Early preachers to the Mount Zion Church were “circuit riders” who visited and preached to the congregations once per month.
During the creation of Kentucky Lake, the 2.7 acres of church property was purchased by the Tennessee Valley Authority in 1943 for $1,006. TVA agreed to let the present building stand so that an annual homecoming could be enjoyed. The community spirit has remained strong with the church, and former residents of the area have met for an annual reunion on the first Sunday of each July. The property is currently managed as part of the Tennessee Wildlife Refuge. The Mount Zion Church and Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 4th, 1975.
Memorial plaque donated in loving memory of W.C. and Steve McDaniel.
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