Explore Greene County, Tennessee with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 9 cities and towns in Greene County below.
| County | Greene |
| State | Tennessee (TN) |
| County Seat | Greeneville |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 36.202465 |
| Longitude | -82.828047 |
| Cities & Towns | 9 |
| Area Codes | 615, 731, 865 |
Greene County lies in the easternmost reach of Tennessee, a land where the Appalachian Mountains begin to soften their formidable presence, giving way to a landscape of both rugged beauty and gentle cultivation. The terrain here is a complex tapestry, with the foothills of the Smokies forming a dramatic northern and eastern boundary, their slopes often shrouded in a morning mist that lends a spectral quality to the dawn. South and west, the land unfolds into a mosaic of broad valleys and rounded ridges, traversed by numerous creeks and streams that eventually feed into the Nolichucky River, a powerful artery that cuts its way through the county, its waters a cool, dark ribbon reflecting the sky. This river, and the fertile bottoms it creates, has long been a central feature, shaping both the physical and human geography of the region. Neighboring counties are similarly defined by this interlocking system of ridges and hollows, creating a sense of an ancient, weathered land, its contours etched by millennia of wind and water.
The formal organization of Greene County dates to 1783, a product of the burgeoning settlements that followed the American Revolution and the westward push into territories still considered frontier. Its early inhabitants were a hardy mix of Scotch-Irish, English, and German settlers, drawn by the promise of fertile land and a measure of independence. These formative years were marked by the challenges of taming a wild landscape, establishing communities, and navigating the complex relationships with both the wilderness and the established colonial governments. The county seat, officially designated as Greeneville, grew organically around a central crossroads, a natural gathering point that gradually solidified into a town. Its development was intrinsically tied to the agricultural bounty of the surrounding countryside, a place where farmers brought their produce and where the nascent legal and administrative functions of the county found their home. The very air in Greeneville seems to hold the quiet hum of generations who have walked its streets, a subtle resonance of lives lived and work done.
Life in Greene County today is a pragmatic blend of tradition and adaptation, its economy still deeply rooted in agriculture, with cattle, corn, and soybeans forming a significant part of its output. Yet, the county also harbors a growing manufacturing sector and a reliance on the service industries that sustain its growing population. The character of Greene County is one of quiet resilience, a place where a strong sense of community prevails, and where the pace of life, while not stagnant, allows for a certain deliberation. Landmarks are not always ostentatious; they are often the enduring structures that speak of sustained endeavor – the old stone bridges, the weathered barns that stand sentinel in the fields, and the historic courthouse in Greeneville, a solid anchor in the town's center. It is in the quality of the late afternoon light, a soft, golden wash that spills across the fields and settles on the distant ridges, that one can best sense the enduring spirit of this East Tennessee county.
This page provides an interactive map of Greene County, Tennessee alongside links to detailed street maps for 9 cities and towns. The county seat is Greeneville. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |