Site Admission & Tours
Begin at the Rugby Visitor Centre & Theatre with its 32-foot wall mural of Rugby in its heyday. Relax in comfortable Johnson Theatre seats for a 22-minute showing of the award-winning Rugby history film - The Power of a Dream
Then take the guided
walking tour to the 1882 Thomas Hughes Free Public Library, 1884
Kingstone Lisle (the founder's home), 1887 Christ Church Episcopal and 1906 Schoolhouse Exhibits. |
Events
Historic Rugby hosts several special events each year which
attract thousands of people, including the May Festival of British & Appalachian Culture, Halloween Ghostly Gathering,
and Christmas at Rugby. The Pilgrimage
of Rugby Homes is held the first Saturday in September.
Special presentations take place throughout the year at the Johnson Theatre.
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Lodging
Unique
overnight lodging is available year-round at restored Newbury House B & B and Pioneer
Cottage, both built in 1880. Walk-Ins are welcome, but reservations are always a
good idea. Pioneer has Dish TV w/DVD; Percy has free Wifi.
Larger lodging groups can be accommodated by including nearby private lodging facilities.
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Workshops
Historic Rugby sponsors a wide variety of traditional
craft and outdoor workshops as part of its efforts to
preserve the arts and craft traditions and the diverse natural resources of the Cumberland Plateau. Workshop
instructors are highly experienced and classes are geared to both beginners and more
advanced students.
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Dining
Today you can enjoy a variety of moderately priced British Isles and Appalachian food selections at the Harrow Road
Cafe, named after Rugbys first eating establishment.
The cafe is open daily for breakfast and lunch and on Fridays and Saturdays for dinner.
Prices are moderate. You may bring your own wine for dinner with $1.00 corkage fee per bottle. |
Shopping
The
historically reconstructed Rugby Commissary features Rugby history wares, regional traditional handcrafts,
British Isles products, old-time Watkins extracts and spices and much more.
Next door, the historically reconstructed Board of Aid to Land Ownership building houses the Spirit of Red Hill Nature Art shop; across the street is Carriage House Gallery. |
The Outdoors
When you visit, be sure to bring your camera to capture some of the most beautiful scenery you can imagine.
Clean, sparkling rivers - deep, mysterious gorges -
crystal clear waterfalls and some of the most spectacular views from towering bluffs
surround Rugby. Many trails, some dating from the 1880s, (The Gentlemens
Swimming Hole) wind through heavily wooded areas where deer, wild turkey and wild
flowers are waiting to be revealed.
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Area
Attractions
In the Tennessee Cumberlands near Rugby, youll discover Tennessees
last frontiera region of intriguing history, scenic beauty, cultural diversity
and boundless recreationand no crowds.
Some area attractions include Highland Manor Winery,
Colditz Cove State Natural Area, Pickett State Rustic Park, The Big South Fork Recreation Area,
Historic Stearns and the Big South Fork Scenic Railway, Blue Heron Historical Museum,
Muddy Pond Mennonite Community, the Obed Wild and Scenic River, and much more...
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