Westmoreland Water Wheel
Designer: Diane Wick
Embroiderer: Marjorie Campbell
Year Created: 1984
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In 1923, near a spring at the entrance to the 180-acre Westmoreland
Heights subdivision, a large steel water wheel was installed to
generate electricity and water for the first homes built there. Architects
Barber and McMurry designed the elegant water house and its gatepost
in the Tudor Revival style featuring East Tennessee marble, iron window
grates, and slate roofs.
The land on which the structures are located was first settled in 1809
by Captain William Lyons. The neighborhood was landscaped by local
landscape architect Charles F. Lester and featured large lots and views
of the Smoky Mountains.
The Westmoreland Water Wheel, surrounded by dogwood trees and
azeleas, now marks the entrance to one of Knoxville’s Dogwood Trails
and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
