Tennessee
How to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary around East Tennessee
USA 250 – Take a video tour of the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia
The Liberty Bell draws visitors in Philadelphia as the nation celebrates the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
Being 250 years old is really something to celebrate! The 250th anniversary of the United States – the country’s Semiquincentennial – will be celebrated on July 4, marking 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
Beyond the usual Fourth of July celebrations, special events specifically honoring America’s 250th anniversary are happening in Knoxville and around East Tennessee all year long. Bring your family and friends to theses festivities happening in our community around Independence Day and throughout 2026.
Happy birthday, America!
If you would like your event celebrating America’s 250 anniversary added to this list, email hayley.choy@knox.news.com.
Museum of Appalachia’s TN 250 Museum Trail
Now through Dec. 31
- The Museum of Appalachia is joining the statewide Tennessee America 250 celebration by highlighting the people, objects and stories that connect Tennessee to the broader American story.
- The TN 250 Museum Trail is a curated, self-guided experience woven throughout the museum. It highlights a selection of artifacts across the grounds and exhibit buildings that reflect Tennessee’s role in shaping the country—through innovation, conflict, craftsmanship, and everyday life.
- The trail will continue to grow throughout the year, with new stops and stories added over time.
- Information: museumofappalachia.org
Marble Springs State Historic Site Statehood Day
May 29-30
- In commemoration of America’s 250th and the 230th anniversary of Tennessee Statehood, Marble Springs is celebrating with two fun-filled days.
- On May 29, Tennessee Field Day noon-5 p.m. will give children a chance to explore state history. Partners include Ijams Nature Center, the Museum of Cherokee People, the Birthplace of Country Music Museum, the National Park Service, the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame and more.
- May 30 will be filled with demonstrations, guest lectures, music, dancing, food and more 10 a.m.-4 p.m. in celebration of Statehood Day.
- Both events are free. Information: marblesprings.net
Farragut’s Red, White and Bluegrass Concert
June 13
- Celebrate one of America’s oldest musical genres with live music and food trucks 6-9 p.m. June 13 at Mayor Ralph McGill Plaza.
- Information: visitfarragut.org
Farragut’s The First Six Presidents History Hour
June 23
- Farragut Museum History Hour features renowned author/speaker/podcaster Dr. Tim Holder at 11 a.m. June 23 at Farragut Town Hall.
- Information: visitfarragut.org
Sevier County Celebrates America 250
June 29
- Celebrate America’s 250 with the Sevier County community through this free family-friendly event. Guests can enjoy an evening of community, celebration, and activities for all ages 6-9 p.m. in the heart of downtown Sevierville at the Sevier County Courthouse.
- The evening will conclude with a fireworks show at dusk.
Knoxville Festival on the 4th
July 4
- Festival on the 4th at World’s Fair Park in downtown Knoxville will have music, food and fireworks. Games and activities will start at 5 p.m., including axe throwing, mini golf, and paddle boats. Fireworks from the Henley Street Bridge will begin at 9:45 p.m.
- Leading up to the main event, Dirty Grass Soul will perform on the festival lawn at 5:45 p.m. The Knoxville Symphony Orchestra will present its 42nd annual Independence Day Concert at 8 p.m.
- Attendance is free and the event will take place rain or shine. There will be free parking at the World’s Fair and Blackstock parking lots, 11th Street, Locust Street, Walnut Street, State Street and Market Square garages.
- Pets, alcohol, personal tents and personal canopies are prohibited. Information: knoxvilletn.gov.
Mabry’s Hill at the Mabry-Hazen House
July 4
- Spend the evening of July 4 on the seven acres of Mabry-Hazen House to enjoy live music, food trucks, local beer, games and tours of the historic house. With downtown Knoxville to the west, and the Great Smoky Mountains to the south, Mabry’s Hill offers great views of the fireworks around the region.
- Join in three-legged races, watermelon seed-spitting contests, cornhole, croquet games and a cake walk. Activities will be 5-10 p.m.
- Admission is $5 for children and $20 for adults. Purchase tickets online at mabryhazen.com/fourthofjuly.
Farragut Independence Day Parade
July 4
- The America 250 theme for this year’s parade is “Americana.”
- The parade starts at 9:30 a.m. in front of Farragut High School on Kingston Pike.
- Information: visitfarragut.org
Museum of Appalachia’s Independence Day Anvil Shoot Celebration
July 3-4
- The Museum of Appalachia will celebrate America’s 250th anniversary with an expanded two-day Independence Day Anvil Shoot Celebration. Thanks to a grant from the Tennessee State Museum, the event will span two days this year.
- At the center of the celebration is the museum’s signature anvil shoot, a rare frontier tradition in which an anvil is launched high into the sky using gunpowder. Once used by pioneers to celebrate holidays, elections, military victories, and other major occasions, anvil shooting has become one of the museum’s most anticipated annual traditions.
- Anvil shoots are scheduled for 10 a.m., 11 a.m., noon and 2 p.m. each day.
- The expanded celebration will feature a Revolutionary War encampment, militia drills and historical presentations from reenactors portraying figures such as John Sevier, Henry Knox, and David Hall. Guests can experience colonial and pioneer life through demonstrations and hands-on activities including blacksmithing, basket making, broom making, leatherworking, quilting, rug hooking, coopering, wood carving, lye soap making, candle dipping, pioneer cooking, wash tub canning, flintknapping, powder horn demonstrations, storytelling, crosscut sawing, shape note singing, sassafras tea demonstrations, and more.
- Additional highlights will include a liberty pole raising, colonial seamstress demonstrations, live music, Southern food, a flag procession, and a national bell ringing ceremony commemorating America’s 250th anniversary.
- Advance tickets are available at museumofappalachia.org. The event is free for museum members.
Farragut’s Admiral Farragut Birthday Party
July 8
- Celebrate Farragut’s favorite admiral and listen to the national reading of the Declaration of Independence at 6 p.m. July 8 at Farragut Town Hall.
- Information: visitfarragut.org
Knox County’s America’s 250th Celebration and Expo
July 11
- Knox County will host a free community celebration designed to be a “living history” experience, blending a classic summer park outing with a showcase of local history, community organizations, and family-friendly activities right on the water. Event will conclude with a firework display.
- Events at the Cove at Concord Park will include an expo and community activation 11 a.m.–5 p.m. and the Concert at the Cove 7–9 p.m.
- Information: visitknoxville.com
East Tennessee History Center’s East Tennessee History Fair
Aug. 15
- Join the East Tennessee History Center’s return of the East Tennessee History Fair to celebrate the Semiquincentennial. This day-long celebration will take place in and around the East Tennessee History Center in downtown Knoxville and will include living history demonstrations, live music, crafts, film screenings, children’s activities and more.
- Event details can be found at easttnhistory.org
Farragut History Tour
Aug. 20
- Local historians will offer perspectives on historic Farragut sites 9 a.m.-1 p.m. This event includes a light lunch.
- Pre-registration is required at visitfarragut.org
Our American Stories: Voices from Tennessee
Sept. 9-Oct. 16
- The Farragut Museum will feature this traveling exhibit from the Tennessee State Museum sharing the stories of remarkable Tennesseans from throughout the state’s history
- The exhibit will be open 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday.
- Information: visitfarragut.org
Farragut’s Art Fest
Sept. 12
- Families can enjoy outdoor art activities with an America 250 theme of “A Tribute to America” 9-11 a.m. Sept 12 at Farragut Community Center.
- Information: visitfarragut.org
Tennessee
Tennessee reduced training in IV placement in new lethal injection protocol
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The protocol that took effect in 2025 sheds new light on Tony Carruthers’ botched execution, when Dr. Mark Fowler spent nearly an hour trying, and failing, to place a secondary IV line.
Tennessee
Wild ride for temperatures: A look at Middle Tennessee’s first major heat wave of 2026
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – Oppressive heat is done, but high humidity remains.
The jaw-dropping heat wave that closed the month of June and kicked off July is now officially complete. A heat wave is defined as a period of three or more consecutive days with temperatures in the 90s. Today, Sunday, July 5, Nashville’s high temperature was only 88 degrees, marking the end of the blistering seven-day stretch.
During our record-setting round of summer sizzle, Nashville achieved many notable milestones.
First, the low temperature last Sunday, June 28, was only 79°. That’s remarkably warm for a minimum temperature. Since 2013, there were only three other times the low in Nashville was that high.

Then, on Thursday, July 2, Nashville soared to 100 degrees for the first time in nearly a year. That day’s high missed the record by one.
Friday, July 3, turned even hotter. The airport thermometer peaked at 101° that afternoon setting a new record high for the date.
Finally, today, July 5, the high temperature was only 88 degrees. For the first time in a week, the temperature was held below 90. However, what’s stunning is that the high was set at 9:41 a.m., well before the typical high temperature time of day — mid-to-late afternoon.
In the coming days, we’ll get a break from what we endured last week. Expect spotty showers and storms. Clouds and rain in the area will hold temperatures to more seasonable levels, in the upper 80s and low 90s.
For life-saving weather alerts, customized messages on conditions and forecasts, and videos detailing upcoming weather events, download the WSMV 4 First Alert Weather app for iPhone or Android. Have weather pictures or videos? Share them here.
Tennessee
Tennessee Man Reaches For Item At Lowe’s. Then He Runs Into A Surprising New Touchscreen: ‘No Need To Wait’
Anyone who’s ever needed something locked behind a glass door (or some other security measure that makes it hard to just grab an item off the shelf) knows the drill. You try to click the button to call an employee, wait for an employee to show up, hope the employee isn’t busy with someone else first, and maybe even leave without your item because you’re tired of waiting or just frustrated at the friction of the shopping experience.
One Tennessee electrician went to grab wire for a job and expected the usual wait. Instead, he found Lowe’s had quietly changed the system to seemingly give customers more autonomy in the store.
Lowe’s Gets a Security Upgrade
In a trending video with more than 55,000 views, content creator and contractor Tim, of Tri Cities Electric (@tricities.electric), stopped at a Lowe’s in Tennessee to pick up some wiring for a job.
“One of my least favorite things about coming to Lowe’s was that I’ve obviously got to buy wire, and they keep it behind these cages,” he says, showing what look like wire doors on the retailer’s shelves.
This time, though, there was a touchscreen mounted right on the metal doors, so Tim tried it out.
“We simply click ‘use your cell phone,’ agree to whatever that is, put your phone number in,” he said.
A code landed on his phone seconds later, and he typed it back into the screen.
The screen accepted it, and two electromagnets holding the cage shut released on their own. No waiting for an associate required.
“Case is now unlocked. Got two electromagnets up here; they release. Now, I have all the access in the world to this. How neat. Good job, Lowe’s,” he said.
“No need to wait for wire at @Lowe’s anymore!” he wrote in the caption.
Why Stores Are Locking Everything
The National Retail Federation says that retail theft costs the industry about $95 billion across sectors, and stores have responded by locking down anything with resale value, Business Insider reported.
Visits by an Insider reporter to Walmart, Target, and Home Depot found the same pattern everywhere: power tools sealed in cages, spider-wrap alarms clipped onto smaller items, and security cameras trained on entire aisles.
Lowe’s specifically has cages on power tools, alarms on display units, and—as of last year—some tools that won’t even power on until they’re activated at checkout.
Retail Theft: Is It That Bad?
The “retail theft crisis” narrative is a lot messier than it sounds. Retail executives spent a solid year sounding alarms about “shrink”—inventory loss from theft, employee error, and accounting mistakes combined—but by 2024, several major chains were quietly walking those claims back, according to NPR.
Walgreens’ own finance chief admitted the company might have “cried too much” about theft the year before. And the industry’s go-to shrink figure, sourced from a National Retail Federation survey, has barely moved over the past decade—hovering around 1.4% to 1.6% of sales for years.
That hasn’t stopped the security theater, though: Nearly a third of shoppers say locked-up products make them think worse of a store, and more than a quarter say it’s enough to make them walk out without buying anything.
‘Better Than Home Depot’
The comments filled up with a mix of impressions about the tech.
“So then what’s the point of the cage….” a top comment read.
“Bout time because finding one of them associates isn’t easy,” a person said.
“Until someone leaves it open….” another wrote.
“And now you will be all kinds of marketing text or in that permissions agreement you gave them access to your contacts and to install software,” a commenter added.
Motor1 reached out to Tim via email and Instagram direct message for comment. We’ll be sure to update this if he responds.
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