Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER LX— - NATIONAL MILITARY PARKS › § 428d–1
Three pieces of land in the seventh civil district of Stewart County, Tennessee are moved from the Secretary of War to the Secretary of the Interior to become additions to Fort Donelson National Battlefield. After August 30, 1937, they must follow the laws and rules that apply to that battlefield. Tract 1 is a 50-foot right-of-way (25 feet each side of a center line) starting on the south line of the Lock D reservation 734.8 feet from the southwest corner, then running south 31°5′ west 77.1 feet; south 86°21′ west 479.9 feet; south 63°53′ west 262.3 feet; south 39°36′ west 186.7 feet; south 40°00′ east 194 feet; south 30°58′ east 314.5 feet; south 28°15′ east 85 feet; south 28°37′ east 250.5 feet; south 4°6′ east 261.7 feet; south 36°27′ east 282.3 feet; and south 23°45′ east 178.3 feet to the center line of a county road. The Department of the Army keeps the right to continue using that road to reach Lock D. Tract 2 begins on the south line of Lock D 753.5 feet from the southwest corner and runs north 74°28′ east 191.98 feet; south 85°12′ east 52.9 feet; south 51°36′ east 32.9 feet; south 9°33′ east 117.02 feet; south 31°3′ west 69.82 feet; and north 58°57′ west 288.08 feet to the start. Tract 3 begins on the south line of Lock D 590 feet from the southwest corner (marked by an iron fence post), runs north 58°57′ west 590 feet along that line; north 31°3′ east 488 feet along the west line to low-water mark on the Cumberland River; follows the low-water line southeasterly 335 feet; then south 34°5′ west 123 feet to an iron pin; south 55°55′ east 307.5 feet to an iron pin; and south 40°5′ west 310.5 feet back to the start.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 428d–1
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73