Singles
Coat hangers and clothes are just a few of the items that remained at Billy and Jean Spencer's farm on Clifton Road in Anderson County after tenant farmers moved out more than 30 years ago. Samuel Hutton and his wife built the log cabin in 1790 as part of the newly formed U.S. government's plan to settle land west of the Appalachians and remove the Indian population. History tells that once, when Hutton was traveling, his wife saw feathers sticking out of the spring under the house, took an axe, and killed the Indian hiding below. The Spencer's only use the cabin for storage now.

Coat hangers and clothes are just a few of the items that remained at Billy and Jean Spencer's farm on Clifton Road in Anderson County after tenant farmers moved out more than 30 years ago. Samuel Hutton and his wife built the log cabin in 1790 as part of the newly formed U.S. government's plan to settle land west of the Appalachians and remove the Indian population. History tells that once, when Hutton was traveling, his wife saw feathers sticking out of the spring under the house, took an axe, and killed the Indian hiding below. The Spencer's only use the cabin for storage now.