The Cumberland River and the Factory Whistle: A Landlord’s Guide to Humphreys County
Humphreys County runs along the south bank of the Cumberland River in Middle Tennessee, a stretch of rolling terrain that has been shaped for a century by the river, by the Tennessee Valley Authority’s influence on the surrounding region, and by a small but consequential industrial base that distinguishes the county from its more purely agricultural neighbors. Waverly, the county seat, sits inland from the river and serves as the commercial, governmental, and healthcare hub for the county’s 18,582 residents. It is not a large city, but it has the institutional depth — a hospital, a courthouse, several manufacturing employers, schools, and a functioning commercial district — to anchor a genuine rental market for landlords willing to operate in a rural Middle Tennessee context.
The county is perhaps best known outside Tennessee for the catastrophic flooding it experienced in 2021, when record rainfall caused the Trace Creek to overflow with devastating speed through Waverly’s downtown. The disaster caused significant loss of life and property damage, and its aftermath continues to shape the community’s recovery trajectory. For landlords evaluating the market, the flooding is relevant in two ways: it eliminated a portion of the county’s housing stock, which has implications for both rental demand and property values, and it has made flood zone awareness a non-negotiable part of due diligence for any property acquisition in the county. Waverly sits in a watershed that concentrates runoff from the surrounding uplands, and any property near Trace Creek or in the lower-lying portions of the city deserves careful flood risk assessment before purchase.
Waverly’s Institutional Employment Core
Despite the disruption of the 2021 flood, Waverly’s institutional employment base remains the most reliable source of rental demand in the county. Humphreys County Medical Center provides healthcare employment — nurses, technicians, administrative staff, and support workers — whose income is stable and verifiable. As a critical access designation hospital, it provides services that the community cannot do without, and its staff represents a tenant pool whose job security is above the rural average.
County government employment — courthouse staff, road department, sheriff’s office, and emergency services — adds another stable tier of rental demand. The Humphreys County school system employs teachers and support staff across the county’s schools, and these workers, whose salaries are funded through the state education system, have reliable annual income cycles that make them predictable rental applicants. Together, these institutional employers form the backbone of Waverly’s working population and, consequently, its most dependable tenant base.
Industrial Employment Along the Cumberland
Humphreys County has a more substantial industrial employment base than most rural Middle Tennessee counties of comparable size. Several manufacturing and chemical processing operations have operated in the county for extended periods, taking advantage of the Cumberland River for industrial water access and the county’s position on US-70 for transportation connectivity. New Johnsonville, on the Tennessee River at the county’s western edge, has a long history tied to TVA’s power generation infrastructure, and industrial workers associated with energy and chemical operations in that corridor represent a meaningful share of the county’s working-class population.
Industrial employment in Humphreys County is generally more stable than the county’s agricultural sector because it tends to be year-round and tied to large employers with capital investments in local facilities. A chemical plant or manufacturing operation that has been running in the county for twenty years is not going to close overnight because of a bad quarter. That said, industrial employment is subject to cyclical demand patterns, and individual workers can face layoffs during slow periods even at established facilities. The screening approach for industrial applicants should focus on tenure at the specific facility — a worker who has been directly employed at the same plant for three or more years has demonstrated a degree of integration into that employer’s permanent workforce that a newer hire has not.
The agency-placed worker issue applies in Humphreys County just as it does across the rural Tennessee manufacturing landscape. Many industrial facilities use contract labor for production positions, and the distinction between a direct employee and a contract worker can be invisible on a single pay stub. A straightforward application question — “Are you a direct employee of the facility or placed through a staffing agency?” — and a request for verification documentation resolves the ambiguity before a lease is signed rather than after rent stops arriving.
McEwen and the US-70 Corridor
McEwen sits on US-70 east of Waverly and serves as a secondary residential community within the county. Its rental market is smaller than Waverly’s and more purely residential — there is no significant employer concentration in McEwen itself, and rental demand there comes primarily from households seeking lower costs than Waverly while remaining accessible to employment in the county seat or along the US-70 corridor. Landlords with properties in McEwen are drawing from a tenant pool that is largely dependent on Waverly employment and should verify that applicants have reliable transportation and stable employment in Waverly or beyond before assuming the commute is sustainable long-term.
Flood Risk and Property Due Diligence
The 2021 Waverly flood underscored what should already be obvious in any river-adjacent Middle Tennessee county: flood risk is a material consideration in property acquisition decisions. Before purchasing any rental property in Humphreys County — particularly in Waverly or in any low-lying area near a creek or river drainage — landlords should obtain a current FEMA flood map analysis for the specific parcel, review the property’s flood insurance history, and determine whether the property has experienced flood damage in prior events. A property that flooded in 2021 is not necessarily a bad investment, but it is one that requires a clear-eyed assessment of flood mitigation, insurance availability and cost, and the likelihood of recurrence given the watershed’s characteristics.
Flood insurance disclosure to tenants is a practical and ethical obligation even where not legally mandated. Tenants who are unaware of flood risk cannot make informed decisions about renter’s insurance or emergency preparedness. A landlord who discloses flood history and recommends appropriate renter’s insurance is protecting both the tenant and themselves from the downstream consequences of an inadequately prepared household facing a flood event.
Legal Operations in Humphreys County
Humphreys County operates entirely under Tennessee common law for residential tenancies. Eviction filings go to General Sessions Court in Waverly, where the process follows standard Tennessee procedure: serve appropriate notice — 14 days for nonpayment of rent, 30 days for other lease violations — then file a detainer warrant once the notice period expires without resolution. The Humphreys County Sheriff handles writ enforcement. Written leases, documented security deposits, and careful record-keeping form the foundation of defensible landlord operations in any Tennessee common law county, and Humphreys County is no exception.
|