222 N Central St, Apt 313
$2,600
2bd1ba1,300sf
Pets AllowedApartment

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Offered for Rent by
Jackson Central Group
Company TypeProperty ManagerOperates InTNTotal Units268
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Community Name
222 N Central St
Community TypeApartmentTotal Units46Available Units2
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Features

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High Rise
High Rise
Microwave
Microwave
Refrigerator
Refrigerator
Dishwasher
Dishwasher
Range/Cooktop/Oven
Range/Cooktop/Oven
Garbage Disposal
Garbage Disposal
Central Air Conditioning
Central Air Conditioning
Air Conditioning
Air Conditioning

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Description

Two bedroom, 1 bath home available on the 3rd floor of the White Lily Flats building. This unique home offers gorgeous views of the Old City with high ceilings and hardwood floors throughout. Just a quick walk brings you to restaurants, bars, shopping and more, including the new multi-use Stadium!

The Old City is a thriving community steeped in history and teeming with activities. Walk or bike downtown for a show, or to campus to catch a game! A short drive to the Interstate places traveling right at your fingertips.

Laundry is included in the home and we are pet friendly. Water is included in the rent.

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ABOUT WHITE LILY FLATS

Georgia-born James Allen Smith came to the war-shaken town as a young man, around 1873, and founded a grain business on Gay Street, followed by a small mill on Broad. The Knoxville City Mills, of which he was a cofounder, was reorganized as the J. Allen Smith Co. They built the big building alongside Central in 1885; English industrial manufacturer W.J. Savage fitted it out with machinery, including a big roller mill, new technology at the time. It was a full-service flour factory; they manufactured not only the flour but the elm-stave barrels to pack it in. For a long time, it was pretty easy to find; its 175-foot smokestack was one of the tallest structures in East Tennessee. The smokestack was torn down in 1943, after the plant went electric.

They made several brands, various grades of flours for different purposes, some of them with odd names. One, a “special baker's cake flour,” was called Evidence. Another, for pastries, was called Jasco. A cookie flour was Clover Leaf. By 1904, J. Allen Smith was making Roller King, New South, Majestic, Knoxville Leader, Mayflower, Orange Blossom, Alpine Snow, Standard Fancy, and Piedmont flours.

Somewhere along the way, J. Allen Smith created a new flour that he reputedly was inspired to name for his wife, Lillie. There's another story; an early partner of Smith's was one Jasper Lily. Regardless of the etymology, White Lily and its sister flours made Smith's factory one of the biggest flour mills in the South, and made J. Allen Smith himself a rich man. He used his money to benefit the community. He was a big backer of the major Appalachian Exposition of 1910, the Knoxville Welfare Association, the University of Tennessee's agricultural experiment station, and, during its greatest need during World War I, the Red Cross.

—Jack Neely, Metro Pulse, Knoxville 2008

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Walk Score ®

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222 N Central St Apt 313
Walk Score
Walk Score
®
87
Very Walkable
Transit Score
Transit Score
®
58
Good Transit
Bike Score
Bike Score
®
85
Very Bikeable

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