Hastings-Locke Ferry Explained

Hastings-Locke Ferry
Coordinates:35.5375°N -84.8781°W
Added:January 5, 1983
Area:9.1acres
Mpsub:Meigs County, Tennessee MRA
Refnum:83003056

The Hastings-Locke Ferry, on the Tennessee River near Decatur, Tennessee, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. It has also been known as Washington Ferry. It is located east of Dayton, Tennessee on Tennessee State Route 30.

The listing included two landings, the c.1940 boat/barge which can transport six cars, and the waterway across the river. The ferry was established around 1807 by Conley Hastings. The ferry was operated by the Locke family from about 1820. Solomon Henry and Sons operated the ferry through the 1870s and 1880s. It was once one of many ferries across the Tennessee River and tributaries, but in 1982 it was one of only five ferries still in operation in Tennessee.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=83003056}} Tennessee Multiple Resource Nomination Survey: Hastings-Locke Ferry ]. National Park Service. Steve Rogers . Ann Toplovich . September 20, 1982 . June 15, 2018. With