Clayton Homes founder Jim Clayton, left, and his wife, Kay, display t-shirts during a ceremony on Thursday at the future site of Halls Park. The Claytons donated $300,000 to the Legacy Park Foundation to go towards the fundraising goal of $575,000 needed to buy the property.
Halls is a pastoral community in North Knox County, a high-growth location that ranks among the area’s 10 wealthiest ZIP codes.
The community’s annual median household income of approximately $58,000 is third highest in the Knoxville area. One-third of the household incomes are above $75,000.
With that kind of base, business analysts say Halls can support commercial and residential development. And that’s happening. New high-end subdivisions in the area include Timberlake and the adjoining Harbor Cove at Timberlake.
Businesses range from Halls Family Physicians to the headquarters of Prestige Cleaners, both located on Emory Road.
Halls started out as a little stop for settlers in the late 1700s. They were trickling over the mountains to set up homesteads on land grants from the State of Franklin.
The old buffalo trail they used cut across Black Oak Ridge. Previously Native Americans traveled through there to hunt and live.
Thomas Hall, for whom the community is named, was one of the earliest settlers. He arrived in the valley from Orange County, N.C. He had fought for freedom, but the British captured him in the siege of Charleston. To thank Hall for his service, the U.S. government gave him a piece of land in what’s now called East Tennessee.
A grandson’s general store became known as Halls Crossroads during the Civil War. Northern and Southern troops used the house as a military outpost, according to A History of Halls.
In 1903 the Avondale Farms Creamery sprang up on the corner across from where Hall’s store had been. Small farms played a big role in the community. By the late 1900s, Halls was booming with businesses, from fast-food restaurants to shops and movie theaters.
Geographically, Halls still lies at a crossroads: the intersections between busy Maynardville Highway, Emory Road and Norris Freeway. The growing community is also at a crossroads in time – between a sleepy past and a dynamic future.
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