1900s (20th Century) Maps of Fairview, Tennessee

Explore 10 historic maps of Fairview from the 1900s (20th Century). These maps offer a rare glimpse into what life looked like during the 1900s — showing old roads, neighborhoods, homes, and landmarks that have changed or disappeared over time.

Whether you're researching your family's past, planning a metal detecting trip, or studying how Fairview's landscape evolved across the 1900s, these high-resolution maps are a powerful tool for exploring the history of this region.

  • Focus on a specific era: All maps on this page are from the 1900s, giving you a focused view of this time period.
  • See what’s changed: Compare century-old streets, trails, and buildings to today's modern landscape using overlays and satellite layers.
  • Research with precision: Use these maps for genealogy, historical research, land use analysis, or educational projects.
  • View, download, or print: Maps are fully viewable online in high resolution, and can be downloaded or printed for your own records.

Start exploring Fairview's history through authentic maps from the 1900s. This is your window into the past.


Fairview, TN maps

(10)
  1. 1936 Map of Bacon Gap
    1936 Map of Bacon Gap
    1936 Bacon Gap
    1936 Print · USGS
    Roane County in the mid-1930s shows a landscape shaped by its great river junction and rural ridge communities. Genealogists can locate family landmarks like Bethel Cem, Barnetts Narrows, and river crossings such as James Ferry and Hood Landing Ferry.
    2 unique versions available

  2. 1940 Map of Bacon Gap
    1940 Map of Bacon Gap
    1940 Bacon Gap
    1940 Print · USGS
    The Roane County riverfront is captured here just before the Watts Bar Reservoir floodwaters arrived in the early 1940s. Genealogists can trace family-named sites like Barnardsville and Bacon Ridge or locate community anchors such as Fairview Sch and Caney Ford Ch.
    2 unique versions available

  3. 1952 Map of Bacon Gap, 1955 Print
    1952 Map of Bacon Gap, 1955 Print
    1952 Bacon Gap
    1955 Print · USGS
    In the early fifties, the convergence of the Clinch and Tennessee Rivers at Kingston was being transformed by the waters of Watts Bar Lake. Researchers can trace ancestral sites like Bowman Cemetery, the historic Old Walton Road, and the rural Midway School.

  4. 1953 Map of Chattanooga
    1953 Map of Chattanooga
    1953 Chattanooga
    1953 Print · USGS
    Southeast Tennessee in the early fifties shows a landscape reshaped by river management and rail power. Trace the rail lines of the Southern Ry through riverside towns or locate the preserved grounds of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park.

  5. 1957 Map of Chattanooga, 1966 Print
    1957 Map of Chattanooga, 1966 Print
    1957 Chattanooga
    1966 Print · USGS
    East Tennessee in the mid-1960s shows a landscape of massive hydroelectric reservoirs and emerging industrial sites like the Atomic Energy Commission (Oak Ridge Area). Trace the rail networks of the Southern Ry through Chattanooga or locate family-named ridges across the Cumberland Plateau.
    3 unique versions available

  6. 1959 Map of Chattanooga
    1959 Map of Chattanooga
    1959 Chattanooga
    1959 Print · USGS
    Southeast Tennessee is shown here during a decade of industrial growth and hydroelectric development. Trace the regional rail networks of the Southern Ry and find landmark sites like Lookout Mountain, Fall Creek Falls State Park, and Chattanooga.

  7. 1960 Map of Chattanooga
    1960 Map of Chattanooga
    1960 Chattanooga
    1960 Print · USGS
    Southeast Tennessee and the southern Appalachians are shown here at the height of the river-management era. You can trace the valley rail lines and locate Lookout Mountain and the expansive waters of Chickamauga Reservoir.

  8. 1964 Map of Chattanooga
    1964 Map of Chattanooga
    1964 Chattanooga
    1964 Print · USGS
    Southeast Tennessee and the western Carolinas appear in the mid-sixties as a powerhouse of river-driven industry and mountain wilderness. Genealogists and historians can trace rail-town lineages along the Southern Ry or locate family landmarks near Watts Bar Lake and Tellico Plains.

  9. 1968 Map of Bacon Gap, 1971 Print
    1968 Map of Bacon Gap, 1971 Print
    1968 Bacon Gap
    1971 Print · USGS
    The confluence of the Clinch and Tennessee Rivers is captured here in the late sixties as the Roane County landscape evolved around the waters of Watts Bar Lake. Genealogists can locate numerous family burial sites such as Bacon Cem and De Armond Cem, alongside the historic Walton Road.
    4 unique versions available

  10. 1981 Map of Watts Bar Lake, 1984 Print
    1981 Map of Watts Bar Lake, 1984 Print
    1981 Watts Bar Lake
    1984 Print · USGS
    East Tennessee's river valleys and industrial corridors are captured here during the expansion of the TVA power system in the early eighties. Researchers can trace the legacy of the Southern Railway and the development of Watts Bar Lake and Tellico Lake.
    2 unique versions available

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