Tennessee Statutes

§ 4-2-105 — Georgia boundary

Tennessee § 4-2-105

This text of Tennessee § 4-2-105 (Georgia boundary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-2-105 (2026).

Text

The boundary line between this state and the state of Georgia begins at a point in the true parallel of the thirty-fifth degree of north latitude, as found by James Carmack, mathematician on the part of the state of Georgia, and James S. Gaines, mathematician on the part of this state, on a rock about two feet (2') high, four inches (4") thick, and fifteen inches (15") broad, engraved on the north side thus: "June 1st, 1818, Var. 63/4 East," and on the south side thus: "Geo. 35 North, J. Carmack," which rock stands one (1) mile and twenty-eight (28) poles from the south bank of the Tennessee River, due south from near the center of the old Indian town of Nick-a-Jack, and near the top of the Nick-a-Jack Mountain at the supposed corner of the states of Georgia and Alabama; thence running due

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Legislative History

Code 1858, § 67; Shan., § 78; Code 1932, § 89; T.C.A. (orig. ed.), § 4-205.

Nearby Sections

15
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Bluebook (online)
Tennessee § 4-2-105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/tn/4-2-105.