Paris, Tennessee

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This article is about Paris, Tennessee. For other uses of the term Paris, please see Paris (disambiguation).
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Paris, Tennessee (USA) is a small town of about 10,000 people in West Tennessee. It was founded and incorporated in 1823. Paris is in the geographic center of Henry County (which has 32,363 residents in 2021, including Paris[1]). The county is in the upper right corner of West Tennessee bordered by Kentucky (north) and the Tennessee River (east), and its legal and administrative seat is Paris. As with most county seats in the region, Paris grew up around a "court square", a special city block on which stands an imposing court house.

The court house in Paris is now more than a hundred years old[2]. Standing on the courthouse lawn is a statue which is a Confederate monument[3] targeted for consideration of removal by the InvisibleHate.org website.

This is a placeholder reference[4]

Image gallery

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Henry County, TN, court house, Nov. 24, 2005
Confederate monument, dating from 1900, standing on the courthouse lawn in Paris, TN, as described by the Henry County Historical Society on it's Facebook page in 2020.
   
       
       
       

References

  1. Henry County, Tennessee Population 2021 on World Population Review, last access 1/27/2021
  2. Per the National Geographic Tennessee River Valley website (last access on 11/30/2020), the 1897 Richardsonian Romanesque courthouse in Paris is the oldest working judicial building in West Tennessee.
  3. Waymarking: Henry Co. Confederate Monument, Paris, TN, last access 1/17/2021
  4. Antebellum Henry County by Roger Raymond Van Dyke, West Tennessee Historical Society, Papers 1947-2015, Vol 33, 49pp; see page (tbd)