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Dyersburg, Tennessee

Dyersburg, Tennessee
City
The old Bank of Dyersburg
The old Bank of Dyersburg
Official seal of Dyersburg, Tennessee
Seal
Motto: "Dyersburg...the Gateway to Everywhere"
Location within Tennessee
Location within Tennessee
Coordinates: 36°2′N 89°23′W / 36.033°N 89.383°W / 36.033; -89.383Coordinates: 36°2′N 89°23′W / 36.033°N 89.383°W / 36.033; -89.383
Country United States
State Tennessee
County Dyer
Government
 • Mayor John Holden
Area
 • Total 17.5 sq mi (45.2 km2)
 • Land 17.3 sq mi (44.9 km2)
 • Water 0.1 sq mi (0.3 km2)
Elevation 292 ft (89 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 17,145
 • Density 988/sq mi (381.5/km2)
Time zone CST (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
ZIP codes 38024-38025
Area code(s) 731
FIPS code 47-22200
GNIS feature ID 1283267
Website www.dyersburgtn.gov

Dyersburg is a city and the county seat of Dyer County, Tennessee, in the United States. It is located in northwest Tennessee, 79 miles (127 km) northeast of Memphis on the Forked Deer River. The population was 17,145 at the 2010 census. Dyersburg and Dyer County offer many amenities including quality schools, a low crime rate, moderate climate, low cost of living, and close proximity to area recreation. Dyersburg is a regional retail, medical, employment and cultural center for more than 300,000 people who live in Tennessee, Arkansas and Missouri.

The lands that make up Dyer County once belonged to the Chickasaw people. The final treaty by which they relinquished all of West Tennessee was signed in 1818. Dyersburg was a steamboat town with economic growth coming up the Forked Deer River from the Mississippi River.

In 1823 the Tennessee General Assembly passed an act to establish two new counties immediately west of the Tennessee River, Dyer County being one of them. John McIver and Joel H. Dyer donated 60 acres (240,000 m2) for the new county seat, named Dyersburg, at a central location within the county known as "McIver's Bluff". In 1825, Dyer surveyed the town site into 86 lots. The first courthouse was built on the square in 1827. The current Classical Revival-style courthouse, designed by Asa Biggs in 1911, centers a downtown historic district listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

Situated as the hub of steamboat navigation on the Forked Deer River, Dyersburg grew as a river town, especially once the Grey Eagle made the first successful steamboat trip in 1836. The county's first industrial boom dates to 1879, when the steamboat Alf Stevens shipped timber from A. M. Stevens Lumber Company of Dyersburg to St. Louis, Missouri markets. The Stevens company established a large sawmill in 1880 and opened a planing mill in 1885. The Bank of Dyersburg opened in 1880, while another timber industry, Nichols & Co. Wooden Bowl Factory, began operations in 1881.


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