
Last modified: 2023-11-11 by rick wyatt
Keywords: cannon county | tennessee | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
![[Flag of Cannon County]](../images/u/us-tn-cn.gif) image by Jens Pattke, 13 June 2019
 
image by Jens Pattke, 13 June 2019
See also:
Cannon County, Tennessee, USA adopted a county flag in 1993. The authority to do so was challenged locally and upheld by the Tennessee Supreme Court in 1994.
Danny Nichols, 21 March 2011
On July 17, 1993, the Cannon County Commission voted unanimously to adopt an 
official flag with the intentions of flying it regularly on the flag pole in 
front of the court house.
The flag immediately became the center of 
controversy and after a lot of negative publicity, on October 16, 1993, the 
County Commission amended their previous action by providing for the flag to fly 
362 days a year at the Confederate Monument erected by the United Daughters of 
the Confederacy in 1926; and directed that the flag be flown at the County 
Courthouse on Robert E. Lee Day (January 19), Memorial or Confederate Decoration 
Day (June 3) and Nathan Bedford Forrest Day (July 13), all of which are official 
Tennessee days of special observance.
Although I first came to Woodbury 
in 1993, and move there shortly after, I have never seen the flag fly from the 
court house. County Executive Harold Patrick refused the commission's order to 
fly the flag at the courthouse because he thought tensions in the community were 
too high.
A judge ruled that the action by the County Commission creating 
the flag and flying it would be legal after lawsuit was filed against the county 
by a group of residents opposing the flag. For some, the ruling came as a 
relief, but others refused to give up the fight and appealed the case losing in 
1995. "It's been a frustrating experience for everybody because of the 
insensitivity of the county commissioners," said Vince O'Brien, a member of 
Concerned Citizens of Cannon County, the group that sued to prevent the county's 
adoption of the flag.
"I wasn't the least bit surprised at the ruling," 
said attorney Mike Corley, who represented the county. "The county was well 
within its rights in adopting this flag, and it's an event that needs 
memorializing. Nathan Bedford Forrest was a noteworthy person who touched our 
aunty's history, and I'm proud of that fact"
[...]
County commissioners 
and historical society members appear to stand by the design. They have said the 
battle flag was included to honor Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest's 
rescue of Confederate soldiers from a Murfreesboro jail.
[...]
http://www.cannoncounty.net/flag.html 
About Nathan Bedford Forrest:
July 13, 1862 was an important day for Forrest, it was his 41st birthday and 
he celebrated with the first independent victory of his controversial military 
career. Col. Nathan Bedford Forrest came knocking on the Rutherford County 
Courthouse door and liberated a number of citizens who were facing the hangman’s 
noose. Several were from Woodbury.
Forrest, who was born in nearby Chapel 
Hill, has been both been mythicized and demonized by history. To followers of 
the “Lost Cause,” Forrest was a brilliant commander who would have won the war 
for the Confederacy, if only he had been placed in charge. To his detractors, 
Forrest was a racist responsible for the worst massacre of the Civil War and is 
still vilified for his part in the founding the Ku Klux Klan.
http://www.cannoncounty.net/forrest.html 
Ivan Sache, 14 June 
2019
![[Flag of Cannon County, Tennessee]](../images/u/us-tn-cn).gif) image located by Paul Bassinson, 4 March 2019
 
image located by Paul Bassinson, 4 March 2019
Source:
https://cannoncountytn.org
Paul Bassinson, 4 March 2019
Cannon County Sheriff’s Office; Woodbury, Tennessee, has confirmed it does 
not have a flag.
Paul Bassinson, 17 October 2023