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McMinn County, Tennessee

1819 establishments in TennesseeCounties of AppalachiaEast TennesseeMcMinn County, TennesseePages with non-numeric formatnum arguments
Populated places established in 1819Tennessee countiesUse mdy dates from December 2018
Mcminn county courthouse1
Mcminn county courthouse1

McMinn County is a county in the U.S. state of Tennessee. It is located in East Tennessee. As of the 2020 census, the population was 53,794. The county has a total area of 432 square miles (1,120 km2). Most of the county is within the Ridge and Valley province of the Appalachian Mountains. Its county seat is Athens. McMinn County comprises the Athens, TN Micropolitan Statistical Area.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article McMinn County, Tennessee (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

McMinn County, Tennessee
County Road 703,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: McMinn County, TennesseeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.42 ° E -84.62 °
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Address

County Road 703

County Road 703
37303
Tennessee, United States
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Mcminn county courthouse1
Mcminn county courthouse1
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Nearby Places

Trinity United Methodist Church (Athens, Tennessee)
Trinity United Methodist Church (Athens, Tennessee)

Trinity United Methodist Church is a historic Methodist church in Athens, McMinn County, Tennessee. The congregation was founded in 1824-5 as the Methodist Episcopal Church of Athens. Its first meeting house was a structure of hewn logs built by slaves. It stood at the southwest corner of West Washington and Church Streets in Athens. It was eventually replaced by a brick building. When the Civil War resulted in a split within the Methodist Episcopal denomination, the congregation affiliated with the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. After the 1939 merger between that denomination and the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Protestant Church, the church became known as Trinity Methodist Church. It became a United Methodist church in 1968, when the Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church combined to form that denomination.The present church building was completed in 1910 at a cost of $32,449.28; its education wing was added in 1926. The Gothic Revival architectural design of the 1910 church was provided by Badgley and Nicklas, a Cleveland, Ohio, architecture firm. The building design features two towers, stained glass windows with stone tracery, an octagonal dome ceiling, and eight columns to represent the eight people who survived Noah's flood. It has an Akron floor plan, which allows the sanctuary to be expanded to accommodate large events.In 2009, the church building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.