West Knoxville

It stretches from Sequoyah Hills on the east to the city's border with Farragut on the west.West Knoxville's first economic boom came in the 1920s and 1930s, when Kingston Pike was part of a merged section of two popular cross-country tourist routes, the Dixie Highway and the Lee Highway.[7] West Knoxville's most recent major shopping complex, the 358-acre (145 ha) Turkey Creek, opened in 2002.[8] The annexation of large parts of West Knoxville in 1962 brought into the city large numbers of voters who helped elect one of Knoxville's most progressive city councils in decades in 1964.[citation needed] Notable people Betsy Henderson school board chair
Knoxville, Tennesseedowntown areaSequoyah HillsFarragutKingston PikeBeardenWest HillsFort SandersUniversity of TennesseeDixie HighwayLee HighwayWest Town MallTurkey CreekConcordDixie Lee JunctionSolwayCity of KnoxvilleDowntownEmory PlaceFourth and GillLonsdaleMechanicsvilleOakwood-Lincoln ParkOld CityOld North KnoxvilleEast KnoxvilleChilhowee ParkParkridgeStrawberry PlainsNorth KnoxvilleFountain CityNorth HillsNorwoodPowellSouth KnoxvilleColonial VillageIsland Home ParkLake ForestLindbergh ForestCedar BluffForest HeightsRocky HillAlcoa HighwayJames White ParkwayKnoxville Area TransitMcGhee Tyson AirportPellissippi ParkwayKnox County SchoolsAustin-East HSBearden HSCentral HSFulton HSWest HSTennessee School for the DeafBerean ChristianChristian Academy of KnoxvilleKnoxville Catholic HSWebb SchoolPellissippi State Community CollegeRoman Catholic Diocese of KnoxvilleOld City HallWorld's Fair ParkKnoxville Museum of ArtSunsphereTennessee AmphitheaterTennessee TheatreZoo KnoxvilleKnoxville Christian School