The Grégory farm has been operating continuously since 1787 without interruption
TVA proposed creating a 100-foot-wide corridor through the property, but faced objections.
The route would have completely destroyed the outdoor classroom of the agricultural school
A multi-generational family farm that has operated continuously since the Revolutionary War successfully blocked the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) from running a power line across its land.
The Gregory family’s 650-acre farm, founded in 1787 by a veteran of the American Revolution, faced imminent disruption when TVA proposed digging a 100-foot-wide corridor through the property.
The proposed route would have destroyed the exact trail, creek crossing, and outdoor classroom that Kaytlin Gregory uses to teach more than 300 children each year.
How the family fought against a utility giant
“We don’t sell and we don’t give in,” said John Gregory, whose family has worked the same land for nine generations.
TVA first notified the Gregory family via postal mail in spring 2024, followed by a public forum where residents could voice their concerns.
The family didn’t hear again until August 2025, when a surveyor showed up and revealed exactly where the power lines would cross the farm.
Frosty Gregory, the family patriarch, repeatedly asked to speak to TVA officials, but each time was told that the decision-makers were higher up the chain.
When a TVA engineer finally called, he allegedly insinuated that the agricultural school was just a made-up cover story and demanded proof of its existence.
Kaytlin responded with online links, registration forms, and social media videos demonstrating the broad reach and success of the program.
The Gregory family began making noise through a petition and social media videos, eventually attracting the attention of country music star John Rich, a prominent property rights advocate.
Rich amplified his story and called on federal authorities to investigate, which changed the entire trajectory of the fight. “TVA assumed we would all do exactly what we were told,” Kaytlin said. “It works everywhere else, but not this time.”
In March 2026, faced with full-on public discontent, TVA abandoned the proposed route crossing the Gregory farm and chose a different path.
What this means for Tennessee’s data center boom
The Gregory family’s victory against TVA sends a warning signal to utility companies planning transmission lines for AI-intensive data centers across the state.
Tennessee currently has 60 data centers operating or under construction, and each new facility requires electrical infrastructure that must cross someone’s territory.
If more landowners follow the Gregory family’s plan using public petitions, social media campaigns, and political pressure, future transmission projects could face costly delays and forced rerouting.
The state Legislature has failed to assuage concerns, passing only one of seven bills aimed at regulating the industry, leaving communities with limited protection from utility giants.
This legislative gap means that the Gregory family’s strategy of public shaming and viral attention may become the only effective tool for resisting unwanted power lines.
Despite the Gregory family’s victory, the larger battle over Tennessee’s energy future is far from settled.
As Google and xAI continue to expand their data center footprint, electricity demand increases in tandem.
The same demand that pushed the Tennessee Valley Authority to propose a power line through the Gregory family’s land is only gaining momentum.
His farm is safe for now, but the next power line could be just one legislative session away.
Via AGWeb
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