The Story of a TN Mountain Town

Left Behind: The Story of a Tennessee Mountain Town

I recently spent a weekend with a friend in Mountain City, Tennessee, a small Appalachian town at 2,400 feet, surrounded by stunning mountain ridges and good people. It is a town that has been losing its economic footing for decades. Walking through it, you feel the absence of something. Factories that once anchored the community are gone. The employers that replaced them are fewer and smaller. What is left is a familiar story playing out across rural America: industry has packed up and left.

The change did not happen overnight. And it did not happen without reason. But the consequences are worth understanding, both for the communities left behind and for investors paying attention to long-term structural shifts in the U.S. economy.

The offshoring of American manufacturing accelerated sharply in the 1990s. The signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994 contributed to a steep decline in manufacturing across Appalachia. Between 1970 and 2001, the number of apparel workers alone fell from 250,000 to 83,000. Similar patterns played out in furniture, electronics, and steel as companies chased lower labor costs, looser regulations, and favorable trade terms in Mexico, China, and Southeast Asia. The logic was straightforward: reduce input costs, protect margins, stay competitive. For a long time, it worked, at least on corporate income statements.

Towns like Mountain City absorbed the blow. Communities that had relied on manufacturing jobs found few alternatives as those sectors declined, and geographic isolation made it harder to attract replacement industries. When a major employer leaves a small town, the damage radiates outward: lost jobs, lost tax revenue, and a municipal budget that must stretch further with less. The human toll is harder to quantify but impossible to ignore. The decline of industry in Appalachian towns has correlated with rising rates of depression, addiction, and a deep sense of abandonment, with communities watching opportunity pass them by, much as they did during earlier industrial cycles.

The conversation around reshoring American manufacturing has grown louder, driven by supply chain vulnerabilities exposed during COVID, rising geopolitical tensions with China, and a renewed political focus on domestic production. For investors, this shift carries real implications. Companies that over-indexed on offshore production are reassessing risk. Domestic manufacturers in semiconductors, defense, and energy infrastructure are attracting significant capital.

Legislation like the CHIPS Act and the Inflation Reduction Act have begun directing federal dollars toward rebuilding domestic industrial capacity. But rebuilding what was lost in places like Mountain City will not happen automatically. Infrastructure gaps in broadband, transportation, and healthcare continue to deter long-term investment in rural areas, even when the political will exists. The promise of reindustrialization is real. So is the gap between policy announcements and the kind of sustained, ground-level investment that actually changes a community. That gap is where the opportunity lives.

Paige Johannesen

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