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Wilson County is located in the heart of Middle Tennessee. Wilson County was
established by an act of the Third General Assembly of the State of Tennessee on
October 26, 1799, three years after the organization of the state itself
and consists of 583.27 square miles. The
county was named in honor of Major David Wilson, a native of Pennsylvania, who
came to Sumner County while it was yet a part of North Carolina. He was the
first Speaker of the Territorial Assembly. The 2000 Census by the U.S. Census
Bureau gives Wilson County a total population of 88,809 broken down by the
following: Lebanon - 20,235, Mt. Juliet - 12,366 (according to their 2006
special census Mt. Juliet had grown to 20,392) and Watertown - 1,358, with the
remaining living in the county, outside of city limits. |