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- General Information | Town of Wartrace
You know when you need some general information on a location and you can never find it? Well, here's Wartrace's Local General information. General Information Our Community In and Around Wartrace Community COMMUNITY NEWS News from yesterday, for today, and about the future of the Town of Wartrace CALENDAR Find out when Town Hall is closed, when public meetings are being held, or a community event is happening, OR ask to add your public event! PARKS AND RECREATION Find out how to rent one of the many spaces in Wartrace! Need to use the Gym, one of the pavilions, or the Community Center? Click here!! HISTORICAL MARKERS This page will guide through all the historical markers that are in the vicinity of Wartrace. MUSICAL TRADITIONS The Well House, aka The Bandstand back in 1909, started music traditions early, continuing in 1979 with the 1st Pickin' & Fiddlin' Convention, and now Wartrace Music Festival! that's a long history in Music. LOCAL LINKS Get information on local Banking, Churches, Eateries, shopping and more! If you have a local business and want to list with this Town site, CONTACT US!
- Government | Town of Wartrace
The Board of Mayor and Aldermen is responsible for governing the Town of Wartrace, including approval or repeal of ordinances, supervision of tax collection, determining the annual budget, and more. Working for the People Elected by the People Town of Wartrace Governing Body TOWN OF WARTRACE GOVERNING BODY The following Governing Body for the Town of Wartrace are collected in four groups and are set forth by city charter and municipal code (see links below) These groups are: Boards, Committees, Commissions and Departments . C lick on the title of each for more information on that Governing Body. Board of Mayor and Aldermen Board of Zoning Appeals Beer Board Parks and Recreation Committee Public Works Committee Economic Growth Committee Gym Committee Loan Screening Committee Planning Commission Utilities Commission AGENDAS To learn more about Governing Bodies PLEASE CLICK HERE Town Charter & Municipal Code BEDFORD COUNTY OFFICIALS County Mayor - Chad Graham, 684-7944 County Assessor - Ronda Clanton, 684-6390 County Clerk - Donna Thomas, 684-1921 County Election Commission - Summer Leverette, 684-0531 County Highway Department - Mark Clanton, 684-4651 County Register of Deeds - Johnny Reed, 684-5719 County Sheriff - Austin Swing, 684-3232 (business) County Trustee - Tonya Davis, 684-4303 STATE OFFICIALS State Governor Hon. Bill Lee 1st Floor, State Capitol Nashville, TN 37243 (615) 741-2001 State Representative Hon. Pat Marsh 301 6th Avenue North Suite G-19A War Memorial Bldg. Nashville, TN 37243 Phone: (615) 741-6824 District Office: 2105 Hwy 130 East Shelbyville, TN 37160 State Senator Hon. Shane Reeves 425 5th Avenue North Suite 752 Cordell Hull Bldg.. Nashville, TN 37243 Phone: 615-741-1066 Fax: 615-253-0319 District Office: 352 W Northfield Blvd, Suite 3 Murfreesboro, TN 37129-1539
- Historical Markers | Town of Wartrace
The Town of Wartrace boasts amazing Queen Anne, Victorian, and Italianate architecture in the residential areas and is proud of keeping the charm their ancestors painstakingly established. Have fun on the "Walking Tour" finding the historical markers, learning about the history, and naming all the types of architecture in the lovely, little area. General Information Our Community Registered Historical Markers "Dedicated to Those Brave & Gallant Soldiers in Butternut & Gray." Dedicated By: Sergeant Major Larry E. & Mrs. Sheila M. Williams, US Army / Retired Commander Camp #72 (Manchester), Starnes DBE., TN Div., SCV 10 December 2011 Location: 35° 31.704′ N, 86° 20.071′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Memorial is at the intersection of Spring Street (Tennessee Route 269) and Bridgeview Street, on the right when traveling north on Spring Street. Marker is located in Wartrace Memorial Park. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Andrew Jackson" Erected By: Tennessee Historical Commission Marker Number 3G 43 Inscription: Wartrace is located on a 5000-acre North Carolina grant acquired by General Andrew Jackson at an 1802 marshal's sale in Nashville. In 1805, Jackson came to the area to establish his boundaries for the opening of the lands for settlement by the third Treaty of Tellico. In 1806, he returned to survey his property to sell to settlers on Wartrace Creek. The land is part of 85,000 acres on the Three Forks of Duck River granted to John Gray Blount and Thomas Blount in 1793. Location: 35° 31.698′ N, 86° 20.068′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is on Spring Street east of Bridgeview Street, on the right when traveling north. The marker is located in Wartrace Memorial Park. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Army of Tennessee" Erected By: Tennessee Historical Commission Marker Number 3G 7 Inscription: Hardee's Corps retired to the Wartrace-Fairfield defensive line, January, 1863. Here they remained until late June, when Rosecrans, moving the bulk of the Federal Army of the Cumberland around the right flank to Manchester, made Bragg withdraw from his strong positions to Chattanooga. Location: 35° 33.641′ N, 86° 17.386′ W. Marker is near Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is on Tennessee Route 64, half a mile west of Fairfield Pike, on the right when traveling west. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Beechwood Plantation" Erected By: Tennessee Historical Commission Marker Number 3G 42 Inscription: The Beechwood Plantation house, which formerly stood at this site, was an important Confederate headquarters during the Tullahoma Campaign. It was built for Col. Andrew Erwin, Jr. and family in 1826. The Erwins, who were southern sympathizers, lavishly entertained local society and Confederate officers during the Civil War. In 1863, Gen. Braxton Bragg's Army of Tennessee was camped along the Duck River line. Gen William J. Hardee camped at Wartrace and made Beechwood his headquarters. Location: 35° 31.15′ N, 86° 18.65′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is on Cortner Road (County Route 269), on the right when traveling south. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE Inscription: Cleburne's Division - Maj/Gen Patrick R Cleburne Liddell's Brigade - Brig/Gen St John Richardson Liddell 2nd Arkansas Infantry Regiment - Col Daniel C Govan 5th Arkansas Infantry Regiment - Col L. Featherston 6 & 7th Arkansas Regiment- Lt/Col Peter Snyder 8th Arkansas Infantry Regiment - Col J. H. Kelly 13 & 15th Arkansas Infantry Regiment - Col. J E. Josey Mississippi Warren's Light Artillery - Cpt Charles Swett Wood's Brigade - Brig/Gen Sterling Alexander Martin Wood Adams' Regiment - Col Samuel Adams Alabama Marks Artillery Battery - Cpt Henry G Semple 32nd & 45th Mississippi Infantry Regiment - Col Mark P. Lowrey Churchill's Brigade - Brig/Gen Thomas James Churchill At Liberty Gap Cleburne's forces and the skill of his sharp shooters with their Whitworth rifles held the 25,000 men of McCook's 20th Corps at the gap for three days until ordered by Gen. Bragg to withdraw to Tullahoma on June 27th 1863. As from Shiloh to Franklin and all battles in between with his strategic ability Cleburne's Division always stood out among others and the blue hordes dreaded the sight of the blue flag with the white circle facing them across battle lines. Upon Cleburne's death at Franklin, Gen William J. Hardee, Cleburne's former Corps Commander, had this to say when he learned of his loss: “Where this division defended, no odds broke its line: where it attacked, no numbers resisted its onslaught, save only once: and there is the grave of Cleburne.” To Gen. Robert E. Lee “he was a meteor shining from a clouded sky” "Skirmish at Liberty Gap" Front Side "Skirmish at Liberty Gap" Back Side Erected By: Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham Camp 72, Sons of Confederate Veterans in 2011 Inscription: Major General Patrick R. Cleburne Stonewall of the West Cleburne's Division 2nd Army Corps (Hardee) Army of Tennessee Dedicated December 10, 2011 Maj/Gen Benjamin F. Cheatham Camp 72 Sons of Confederate Veterans Manchester, Tennessee Location: 35° 31.707′ N, 86° 20.071′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Memorial is at the intersection of Spring Street (Tennessee Route 269) and Bridgeview Street, on the right when traveling north on Spring Street. Marker is located in Wartrace Memorial Park. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Skirmish at Wartrace" Erected By: Tennessee Historical Commission Marker Number 3G 45 Inscription: In April 1862, Major James M. Shanklin with 197 men of the 42nd Indiana Infantry campedon the west bank of Wartrace Creek, near the end of Bridgeview Street, to secure the supply line of the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad by guarding two bridges north and south of Wartrace. Early on the morning of April 11, 1862, Colonel James W. Starnes of the 8th Tennessee Cavalry Battalion with 200 Confederates attacked the camp. Several men, on both sides, were killed and wounded. Location: 35° 31.653′ N, 86° 20.247′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is on Bridgeview Street, 0.2 miles west of Spring Street, on the left when traveling west. Marker is located in Winnette-Ayers Park. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Strolling Jim" Erected By: Tennessee Historical Commission Marker Number 3G 34 Inscription: Strolling Jim, the first World's Champion Tennessee Walking Horse, is buried in a pasture directly behind the Walking Horse Hotel. Foaled in 1936, this former work horse was ridden to the championship by Floyd Carothers at the first Walking Horse Celebration at Shelbyville in 1939. Jim died in 1957 in the pasture where he spent his last years. Location: 35° 31.635′ N, 86° 20.05′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is on Blackman Boulevard West (State Highway 64) near Spring Street, on the right when traveling north. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Tullahoma Campaign" Part One Erected By: Tennessee Backroads Heritage Anatomy of a Campaign: In late June of 1863, Union Major General William S. Rosecrans launched a massive offensive from his base in Murfreesboro in an attempt to drive Confederate General Braxton Bragg’s 43,000-man Army of Tennessee from its entrenchments at Shelbyville and Wartrace, and possibly out of the state. The Union commander planned to capture Chattanooga and, in his words, “rescue loyal East Tennessee from the hands of the rebels.” The campaign was bold and swift, with relatively few engagements. By July 4th, the Union’s Army of the Cumberland, 70,000 strong, had forced a Confederate retreat to Chattanooga, leaving nearly all of Tennessee in Union hands. Advance to Manchester: To maneuver Bragg out of his Shelbyville trenches, Rosecrans divided his army into four independent columns. The first column, under Major General Gordon Granger, advanced south from Murfreesboro, down what is today US 231, to threaten the main Confederate infantry at Shelbyville. The second, led by Major General Alexander McCook, moved south, through Liberty Gap. The third column, lead by Major General George Thomas, marched southeast, down the Manchester Pike (US 41), the main road to Chattanooga. A fourth column, commanded by Major General Thomas L. Crittenden, advanced due east along the McMinnville Turnpike (US 70) before turning south to cross the Highland Rim below Bradyville, at Gillie’s Gap. Rosecrans' goal was to get the bulk of his army here, to Manchester, push on to Tullahoma, and capture the road to Chattanooga before the Confederates had a chance to respond. Only rain and the poor conditions of the roads slowed the Union advance. CAPTIONS: {TOP RIGHT} Confederate General Braxton Bragg; Union Major General William S. Rosecrans {LEFT} Granger; McCook; Thomas; Crittenden TIMELINE: 1860: November 6; Lincoln Elected December 20; South Carolina Secedes 1861: April 12; Fort Sumter Attacked July 21; First Manassas 1862: April 1-7; Shiloh August 29-30; Second Manassas September 11; Antietam December 13; Fredericksburg December 31-January 3; Stones River 1863: May 1-4; Chancellorsville May 20-July 4; Vicksburg June 24-July 4; Tullahoma Campaign July 1-3; Gettysburg September 19-20; Chickamauga November 23-25; Chattanooga 1864: June 3; Cold Harbor September 2; Atlanta November 30; Franklin December 15-16; Nashville 1865: April 2; Petersburg April 9; Lee Surrenders April 18; Johnston Surrenders May 9; Forrest Surrenders Location: 35° 31.707′ N, 86° 20.072′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is at the intersection of Spring Street (Tennessee Route 269) and Bridgeview Street, on the right when traveling north on Spring Street. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE Part One Part Two "Tullahoma Campaign" Part Two Erected By: Tennessee Backroads Heritage Hardee's Corps at Wartrace: Following the Battle of Stones River in early January of 1863, Braxton Bragg's Army of Tennessee retreated south to Tullahoma before establishing a defensive line running from Shelbyville to the vicinity of Wartrace. Lieutenant General William J. Hardee, headquartered at nearby Beechwood, the plantation home of Colonel Andrew Erwin, held the line around Wartrace with two divisions, one commanded by Major General Patrick Cleburne, the other by Major General A. P. Stewart. From this position, his 14,000-man corps guarded both Liberty Gap above Bell Buckle and Hoover's Gap at Beech Grove. As the Union advance on June 24th and 25th pushed through the gaps toward Manchester, Hardee's position in Wartrace was turned and he ordered a general retreat south to Tullahoma. The two days of rain that marked the opening of the campaign turned the roads to mud. Often, the men marched without shoes. As Cleburne noted of the men, they "had no changes of clothing, no tents, and could not even light fires to dry themselves." Yet, spirits remained determined. Despite the "retrograde," as one Confederate soldier described it, "look out for hot work at Tullahoma...We are prepared for the Yanks at that place." Stonewall of the West: Patrick Cleburne was one of the most notable general officers the Confederacy produced. He was born in 1828 in Ireland and joined the British army when the Irish potato famine struck. In 1849 he emigrated to America, moving to Arkansas. Cleburne enlisted in the Confederate army as a private in 1861, but made a spectacular rise to Major General by late 1862, becoming one of the best division commanders in the western army. Never a conventional thinker, Cleburne proposed while at Wartrace that the Confederacy arm slaves with the guarantee they would be emancipated along with their immediate families. He assumed that a southerner would sooner "give up the negro slave rather than be a slave himself," and that slaves would make wonderful soldiers, for "the Negro has been dreaming of freedom, and his vivid imagination has surrounded that condition with so many gratifications that it has become the paradise of his hopes." Cleburne's suggestion found few supporters. Confederate Brigadier General William Bate, commander of a brigade at Hoover's Gap, called the idea "hideous and objectionable," nothing less than the "serpent of Abolitionism...revolting to Southern sentiment, Southern pride and Southern honor." The proposition was kept from the public, however, and seemed to stifle Cleburne's meteoric rise. He was never considered for further promotion. Leading a frontal assault, he was killed at the Battle of Franklin on November 30, 1864. The Whitworth Rifle: While stationed here in Wartrace, Major General Cleburne trained Confederate sharpshooters with five new Whitworth rifles, an English weapon made from the design of Joseph Whitworth, one of the most important mechanical engineers of the 19th century. The weapon fired a .45-caliber bullet accurately to a range of 1,500-1,800 yards using a telescopic site, making it ideal for sharpshooters. At Wartrace, Cleburne organized contests of marksmanship to determine who would use these rifles. Once selected, he engaged the men in intensive shooting drills, to the point that, as one officer remembered, the division "had the finest and most effective body of sharpshooters in the army." (Captions) (Top left) Confederate Lieutenant General William J. Hardee (Right) Major General Patrick R. Cleburne Location: 35° 31.707′ N, 86° 20.072′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is at the intersection of Spring Street (Tennessee Route 269) and Bridgeview Street, on the right when traveling north on Spring Street. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Valley Home" Erected By: United States Department of the Interior Inscription: Built 1835 has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior Location: 35° 31.821′ N, 86° 18.783′ W. Marker is near Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is on Potts Road, 1.3 miles south of Tennessee Route 64, on the left when traveling south. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE "Wartrace" Erected By: Tennessee Historical Commission Marker Number 3G 44 Inscription: In 1850, Rice Coffey gave eight acres to the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad on which the main line would run with a depot and freight house at the junction of the branch line to Shelbyville. In 1851, town lots were laid off. The following year, a post office was established. In 1853, the town was incorporated as Wartrace Depot after Wartrace Creek. Twenty years later, the name was changed to Wartrace after Wartrace Creek, which was named for the War Trace, a buffalo path used by Indians at war with Nashville settlers in the 1790's. Location: 35° 31.526′ N, 86° 20.04′ W. Marker is in Wartrace, Tennessee, in Bedford County. Marker is on Blackman Boulevard (Tennessee Route 64), on the right when traveling south. Touch for map . For more information CLICK HERE
- Water & Sewer | Town of Wartrace
Need to report a water leak? Need to pay a bill? Need other answers you can't find anywhere else? Try visiting this page for your answers. The Town of Wartrace Water and Sewer department is here to help you. Services Utility Information - Water and Sewer Utility and Public Works Offices located at Town Hall Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 7:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:30 a.m. - 12:00 noon Utility Manager Jeremy Garrett WartraceUtilities@townofwartrace.com Crew Robert Baker - Lead Water Operator Kenneth Phillips - Water Operator Billing and Payment Information Utility bills go out the last day of the month and are due by the 12th. There is a drop box located in the front door for your convenience. The water department will, however, not be responsible for cash payments placed in the night deposit box. Payments received after the 12th will include a penalty. We allow 3 days after the 12th to pay your bill. Cut-offs can be performed anytime after the 3rd day. We do not send out notices. Bills are due the same time each month. Failure to receive a bill does not relieve customer from payment and penalty. PAY WATER BILL HERE Reconnection Fees Leak Adjustments Reconnection Fees due to non-payment is $50. An additional call-out fee of $60 will be charged to have water turned back on after 4:00. All reconnection fees must be paid in cash or money order. It is the customer’s responsibility to make sure they receive a receipt for all cash payments & retain a copy of that receipt for their records. The water department will not be responsible for any cash payment not accompanied by a Wartrace Receipt. The Wartrace Waterworks and Sewer System is currently undergoing a rate study, performed by the Municipal Technical Advisory Service (MTAS). When the study is complete, the Board of Mayor and Aldermen will revisit the rates charged to water and sewer customers. The water department grants one leak adjustment a year. The year begins when you receive your adjustment. (example: You receive an adjustment in May of 2024 your will not be able to take another adjustment until May of 2025.) These adjustments are based on a 6-month’s average including the leak month. The adjustment is based on consumption and not the monetary transactions. If the customer makes his usual payment during the leak month, all penalties will be adjusted as well as the consumption. Water and Sewage Rates Water and Sewage Rates Documents and Resources Municipal Code Title 18 Water and Sewer Wartrace Municipal Code Water Service Application Backflow Prevention Project HELP Well User Agreement Water Quality Report 2025 Water Quality Report 2024 Water Quality Report 2022 Water Quality Report 2021 Water Quality Report 2023 Water Quality Report 2020 Water Quality Report 2019 Water Quality Pt 2 2017 Water Quality Pt 1 2017 Water Quality Report 2018 Water Quality Pt 1 2016 Water Quality Pt 2 2016 The Water Standard Practices & Procedures are currently being reviewed and revised. An old copy is available upon request but not all terms and conditions are still applicable.
- Policies | Town of Wartrace
Town of Wartrace Policies will help direct you should you need assistance in this area. Legalities Privacy Policy Cookies, Privacy, Compliance This Privacy Policy describes how your personal information is collected, used, and shared when you visit www.townofwartrace.com , herein referred to as "The Site”. PERSONAL INFORMATION WE COLLECT When The Site is visited, information is automatically collected. This includes, but is not limited to, web browser information, IP address, time zone, and possible other cookies installed on the device being used to access The Site. Browsing of The Site, a collection of data is automatically being saved from individual web pages and/or viewed products, affiliated with the Site, and interactions on The Site, as well as, clicks that took you to The Site. This is referred to as “Device Information”. Device Information is collected using the following technologies common to all internet usage: “Cookies” are data files that are placed on devices or computers and may include an anonymous unique identifier. For more information about cookies, and how to disable cookies, visit http://www.allaboutcookies.org . --The Site is not affiliated with this link and holds no responsibility for the information provided by this link. “Log files” track actions occurring on the Site and collect data including IP addresses, browser types, Internet service providers, referring/exit pages, and date/time stamps. “Web beacons”, “tags”, and “pixels” are electronic files used to record information on how The Site is being browsed. Additionally, user choice to correspond through The Site will result in a collection of information freely provided by the user could include name, billing address, shipping address, payment information, credit card information, email address, and phone number. We refer to this information as “User Supplied Information”. “Personal Information” in this Privacy Policy can be both/either Device Information and/or User Supplied Information. HOW YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION MAY BE USED User Supplied Information that is collected is to directly correspond with said user through The Site. This includes, but is not limited to, any processing of payment information, form submittal, and invoices. Third Party links are described in more context below. User Information may be used for the following: Communicate with you; Screen forms for potential risk or fraud; and When in line with the preferences shared, to provide information relating to our departments, committees, commissions or boards. Device Information collected may be used to help screen for potential risk and fraud. In particular, associated with IP addresses, and more generally to improve and optimize The Site (i.e. generation of analytics concerning browsing and interaction on The Site; assessing this information for the success of marketing and advertising campaigns). HOSTING BY OUTSIDE PARTIES Some content on portions of the Town’s website reside on servers that are operated by third party vendors. These third party vendors have direct control of what information is automatically collected, whether cookies are used, and how information that is voluntarily provided is used. Thus, the Town cannot represent that the third party vendors will abide by this privacy policy. The Town uses the following applications that are currently hosted by third party vendors with complete disclosure below: Google Wix NEX Bill pay Facebook and other social media HMDB Notwithstanding the foregoing language regarding third party vendors, the Town does not share text messaging originator opt-in data and consent that it receives from the public with any third parties. SHARING PERSONAL INFORMATION Personal Information may be shared with third party affiliates. Personal Information may also be shared to comply with applicable laws, rules, and regulations, not limited to, but including, third party cookies, responding to a subpoenas, search warrants or other lawful requests for information deemed in legal cases, or to otherwise protect our rights. The Site holds no jurisdiction over these links, holds no responsibility for the information that was provided to be used by these links, and will be held harmless if brought to a court of law. Third parties include but may not be limited to: NEXBill Pay; Bill Pay platforms used to pay bills. You can read more about these platform policies here: https://new.nexbillpay.net/wartracewaterworks/Home/Privacy Google Analytics 4, Google Console, Google Search Optimization, and Google Calendar secures data to provide information on how our customers use the Site. To read more about how Google uses your Personal Information: https://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/privacy/ To opt-out of Google Analytics here: https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout Wix is the website hosting platform and holds the DNS and name servers for the domain townofwartrace.com. To read more about how Wix may use your Personal Information: https://www.wix.com/about/privacy The Historical Marker Database is an external link found on the Historical Marker page of townofwartrace.com and to read more about how they use your Personal Information: https://www.hmdb.org/privacypolicy.asp BEHAVIOURAL ADVERTISING As described above, Personal Information may be used to provide targeted advertisements or marketing communications. For more information on targeted advertising, visit the Network Advertising Initiative’s (“NAI”) educational page at http://www.networkadvertising.org/understanding-online-advertising/how-does-it-work --The Site holds no jurisdiction over this link and holds no responsibility for the information provided by this link. To opt out of some of these services, please visit the Digital Advertising Alliance’s opt-out portal at: http://optout.aboutads.info/ --The Site holds no jurisdiction over this link and holds no responsibility for the information provided by this link. DO NOT TRACK Note: No alterations to The Site’s data collection and use practices are made. We respect the Do Not Track signal from your browser and will not alter this signal. YOUR RIGHTS If you are a U.S. citizen or European resident, you have the right to access Personal Information that may be held about you and to ask that this Personal Information be corrected, updated, or deleted. If you would like to exercise this right, please contact us through the contact information below. Additionally, U.S. citizens and European residents, please note that we are processing your information in order to fulfill contracts we might have with you (i.e. orders placed through the Site), or otherwise, to pursue our legitimate business interests listed above. Additionally, please note the possibility that information may be transferred to the third parties listed above. SECURITY Unless a particular page on this website indicates that encryption technology is being used, the user should not assume that information uploaded through that Web page to the Town of Wartrace's Web server will be treated as confidential. If a user submits information to the server through a page containing visible indicators of active encryption technology, the Town will take all reasonable precautions to safeguard the confidentiality of such information to the extent permitted by law. Nevertheless, the Town shall not be liable for any injury caused by the disclosure of that information, whether caused by a security breach, accident, inadvertence, or any other act resulting in disclosure. CHANGES We may update this privacy policy without prior consent of the signed in order to reflect changes to our practices or for other operational, legal or regulatory reasons. FURTHERMORE As with the privacy policy herein, and in accordance with laws depicted by the government, compliance of www.townofwartrace.com and the Town of Wartrace will adhere to the following as found https://digital.gov/resources/checklist-of-requirements-for-federal-digital-services/ --The Site holds no jurisdiction over this link and holds no responsibility for the information provided by this link. CONTACT US For more information about The Site's privacy policies, for questions, for complaints, or for comments please contact us: admin@townofwartrace.com
- Town Agenda and Calendar | Wartrace Website
Town Agenda and Calendar < Back Town Agenda and Calendar Monthly Town Meeting Document Downloads 20250915 Fall Mailer Cover letter 2025 .docx Download DOCX • 951KB 20250915 Fall Calendar 2025 .docx Download DOCX • 204KB 20250915 Fire and Volunteer Fall 2025 - Copy .docx Download DOCX • 462KB 20250915 ACH Form_Fields (1) .pdf Download PDF • 66KB Previous Next
- Board of Zoning and Appeals | Wartrace Website
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