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The tale of how Gatlinburg, Tennessee came to be the thriving city that it is today actually starts in Edgefield, South Carolina. In the 1790's, the widow, Jane Huskie Oglesby, and her seven children decided to make their new home in the "far west". The extended family went as far west as the valley at the foot of Mt. Le Conte, Tennessee.

The area that the Oglesby family (who later changed their name to Ogle) settled became known as White Oaks Flats. At first, White Oaks Flats was wild to the core; it had never been settled before and bore trees that had accumulated into thriving forests. In between fighting the local American Indian tribes, the Creeks and the Cherokees, and common accidents; they managed to tame the valley and came to call it "home."

The next big surge of people who came to settle in White Oaks Flats were primarily North Carolinians. A lot of these new settlers were men who had fought in the Revolutionary War and had been given fifty-acre land grants in Tennessee by the state of North Carolina.

The first community structure built in the small, but growing, community was the church. Though the citizens of White Oaks Flats were primarily Presbyterian, Baptist missionaries convinced the town to build a Baptist church first; so the White Oaks Baptist Church was constructed in 1835. Soon after the church was built, the schoolhouse was assembled. The first free school in the area was completed in 1867. The school was only open for two-three months a year.

Though it was soon a prosperous community, communication beyond the valley was restricted because of the geographical boundaries of the Appalachians. In 1860 an official post office was located in White Oak Flats, the new postmaster was to be Richard Reagan. Reagan located his office in the town's prosperous mercantile, owned by Radford Gatlin. In appreciation for Gatlin's offer of office space, he renamed the office Gatlinburg. Soon the name spread to become the appellation of the mercantile, and soon after the town. In the late 1800's, White Oak Flats became obselete; replaced indefinitely by Gatlinburg.

Thought to be the kinsman of the inventor of the Gatlin gun, Radford Gatlin became a true entrepreneur, making the best of his keenly business-like personality. His shrewdness did not pursue him outside of the store, however, as he enjoyed speaking his mind. He was very straightforward in his advocacy of the Confederate cause, and often spoke out about his political views. It was this unabashed feeling that earned him a severe beating by a group of masked men and was ordered to leave the community immediately. Though forced to leave in 1860, a poor widowed man, the town still bears his name today.