
Roofing for Rogersville.
45 minutes west on 11E to 11W. Hawkins County seat, Tennessee's second-oldest town, the Hale Springs Inn corridor, and a rural roofing market dominated by metal.
What we know about Rogersville roofs
Rogersville's housing stock splits cleanly between the downtown historic district (preservation-sensitive small homes and commercial structures) and the surrounding rural Hawkins County corridor (farmhouses, manufactured housing, metal-roof outbuildings).
Downtown historic district — anchored by the Hale Springs Inn (1824) and the Main Street courthouse square. Preservation review applies to exterior alterations; like-kind shingle replacement is typically administratively approved. Material changes (asphalt to metal, bright color shifts) require Town review.
11W rural corridor — farmhouse and manufactured-home stock on multi-acre parcels. Standing-seam metal is the regional baseline — both for the main house and for outbuildings.
The Hawkins County HIL distinction — Tennessee's Home Improvement License applies in only nine counties; Hawkins is one of them (the others are Bradley, Davidson, Hamilton, Haywood, Knox, Marion, Robertson, Rutherford, and Shelby). That means residential roofing projects under the $25,000 state contractor threshold still legally require a TN Home Improvement License. We hold the appropriate licensing. Verify any contractor at verify.tn.gov before signing.

Hawkins County roofs.
Same Palisade truck.
Inspect
On-site within 48 hours. License + insurance verification offered up front.
Document
Findings written same day. Insurance claim package if applicable.
Estimate
Itemized written estimate. Three options at three price points.
Restore
1–2 days on site for most homes.
Stand behind
10-year workmanship warranty in writing.
Questions, answered locally
Are there roofing restrictions in Rogersville's historic district?
Rogersville has a downtown historic district anchored by the Hale Springs Inn (1824 — Tennessee's oldest continuously operated inn) and the surrounding Main Street courthouse-square area. Properties within the historic district may be subject to exterior-alteration review; like-kind shingle replacement (asphalt-to-asphalt in a compatible color) is typically administratively approved. Material changes — asphalt to metal, bright color shifts, visible vent or skylight additions — require Town review. We verify scope with the Town before any visible-from-street material change.

