Editors Note: I’ve spent a lifetime in Tennessee. I was born and raised here, I’ve served twenty four years in public office, and I’ve represented the people of Rutherford County in the state legislature. I thought I knew much about Tennessee and while serving in the legislature I quickly realized there’s so more about Tennessee I never knew. Like many of you — I’ve driven I-24 and I-40 so many times I could probably do it blindfolded.
I was intrigued when I ran across this recent video titled “35 Insane Geography Facts About Tennessee (You Won’t Believe)” reminded me that this state still has plenty of secrets left to tell.
Geography isn’t just about lines on a map or names in a textbook; it’s the foundation of our history, our economy, and our identity. From “lost” communities sitting on the wrong side of the Mississippi River to a hidden world of over 10,000 caves beneath our feet, the land we call home is far more complex and surprising than it appears through a windshield.
Whether it’s the fact that we share a border with eight different states or that parts of our mountains are technically classified as a rainforest, these facts challenge our mental picture of the Southeast. They remind us that Tennessee has always been a crossroads—a place where the unexpected is often just around the bend.
I want to share some of the most striking highlights from this deep dive into our state’s geography. As someone who has always believed that “God wasn’t casual about Tennessee,” I think these revelations prove it.
Here is a look at the hidden geography of the Volunteer State—and why you might want to take a second look at the map.
35 Things About Tennessee’s Geography That Will Blow Your Mind
I thought I knew Tennessee pretty well.
Sixteen years in public service. Born and raised here. Represented Rutherford County in the state legislature. Driven every stretch of I-24 and I-40 more times than I can count. And then I watched a YouTube video that stopped me cold — thirty-five geography facts about this state, many of them things I either never knew or had completely wrong in my head.
The video is called *“35 Insane Geography Facts About Tennessee (You Won’t Believe)”* and it’s making the rounds right now for good reason. It’s a fast-moving look at the myths, misconceptions, and flat-out surprises hiding inside a state most people think they already understand. I want to share some of the highlights — because if you love Tennessee, this stuff matters.
We Share Our Borders With Eight States — More Than Almost Anyone
Tennessee is tied with Missouri for the most neighboring states in the entire country. Eight states touch our border: Kentucky, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Missouri. That’s not an accident of geography — it’s a reflection of where we sit at the crossroads of American history, culture, and commerce. We’ve always been a meeting place. A throughway. A gathering point.
And here’s something that surprises nearly everyone: parts of South Carolina are actually *west* of parts of Tennessee. Northeast Tennessee pushes so far east that it sits further east than the western portions of South Carolina. Pull up a map and look. It’ll rearrange your mental picture of the Southeast.
The Mississippi River Isn’t Quite Where You Think It Is
Most people assume the Mississippi River is Tennessee’s western border — clean, straight, done. The truth is messier and more fascinating. The river was established as our border in 1836 when Arkansas became a state. But rivers move. They meander. They flood and shift course over decades.
Today, in many places, the actual river channel sits miles away from where the official state line is drawn. That’s why two communities in Tipton County — Reverie and Corona — are located *west* of the Mississippi River while still being legally part of Tennessee. The U.S. Supreme Court has heard at least nine cases over the years about exactly where that boundary falls. Lawbreakers once hid in the disputed zone because nobody could agree on whose jurisdiction they were in.
That’s not just geography trivia. That’s Tennessee being Tennessee — complicated, layered, never quite what you expect.
We’re the Cave Capital of the Country
Tennessee has more than 10,000 documented caves — more than any other state in the union. That’s a direct result of our karst geography, where slightly acidic groundwater slowly dissolves the limestone bedrock beneath the surface over thousands of years, carving out chambers, passages, and underground rivers that most of us never see.
Some you can visit — Cumberland Caverns in Warren County, Raccoon Mountain Caverns in Hamilton County, Tuckaleechee Caverns in Blount County, and the Lost Sea in Monroe County. But most are on private land or too small for people to enter. They’re just quietly there, beneath our feet, part of a hidden Tennessee that stretches for miles underground.
We Have a Rainforest
Technically speaking. The highest elevations of the Great Smoky Mountains receive up to 85 inches of rain per year — enough to classify them as a temperate rainforest. That moisture feeds one of the most biologically diverse ecosystems in North America. The Smokies are home to the highest density of black bears in the eastern United States. And the Great Smoky Mountains National Park has held the title of most-visited national park in America for decades running.
All of that is in our backyard. Tennessee’s backyard.
Rutherford County Is the Center of It All
I saved this one because I admit I may be a little partial. But it’s true — Murfreesboro in Rutherford County is the geographic center of Tennessee. Not Nashville. Not Cookeville. Right here. The center of this remarkable, complicated, endlessly surprising state runs straight through the county I’ve had the honor to represent.
There’s something fitting about that. Rutherford County has always been a place where things come together — where East meets West, where history meets growth, where community holds its ground against the rushing pace of change.
The Land Itself Teaches Us Something
I’ve said before that God wasn’t casual about Tennessee. The geography proves it every time you look closely. A river that rewrote its own border. Underground caves by the thousands. Ancient mountains older than most of the rocks in the Rockies. A rainforest tucked inside our most-visited park. An earthquake so powerful in 1811 that it made the Mississippi River flow backward and created an entirely new lake — Reelfoot — that still exists today.
This isn’t ordinary land. And the people who live on it have never been ordinary either.
Next time someone asks you where you’re from, don’t just say Tennessee. Tell them what that actually means — because most people have barely scratched the surface.
Mike Sparks represents Rutherford County in the Tennessee House of Representatives and hosts Conversations with Mike Sparks on WGNS Radio (100.5 FM, 101.9 FM, and 1450 AM) on Sundays.