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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Davidson County

 
Clickable Map of Davidson County, Tennessee and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Davidson County, TN (1477) Cheatham County, TN (17) Robertson County, TN (39) Rutherford County, TN (227) Sumner County, TN (136) Williamson County, TN (416) Wilson County, TN (118)  DavidsonCounty(1477) Davidson County (1477)  CheathamCounty(17) Cheatham County (17)  RobertsonCounty(39) Robertson County (39)  RutherfordCounty(227) Rutherford County (227)  SumnerCounty(136) Sumner County (136)  WilliamsonCounty(416) Williamson County (416)  WilsonCounty(118) Wilson County (118)
Nashville is the county seat for Davidson County
Adjacent to Davidson County, Tennessee
      Cheatham County (17)  
      Robertson County (39)  
      Rutherford County (227)  
      Sumner County (136)  
      Williamson County (416)  
      Wilson County (118)  
 
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
101 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — 187 — Dodson School
On Chandler Road, 0.1 miles north of Summit Run Place, on the right when traveling north.
As early as 1815, school was held nearby at Stoner's Lick Methodist Church. In 1843, early settler Timothy Dodson granted land for a dedicated schoolhouse that was built c. 1855. After it burned, classes were held at the Hermitage railroad station . . . Map (db m147673) HM
102 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Explore The Hermitage Grounds
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
From this point, you have many tour options inviting you to think about another time here at this 1120–acre National Historic Landmark. Use the map to guide you to any of the many points of interest you’ll find throughout Andrew Jackson’s . . . Map (db m85369) HM
103 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Field Quarter Trail
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
This path leads to the Field Quarter, an area that was once home to at least eighty enslaved African-Americans. A series of illustrated signs near exposed building foundations at the site help you to “see” what life was like for this . . . Map (db m81410) HM
104 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Field Quarter Trail
This path leads to the Field Quarter, an area that was once home to at least eighty enslaved African-Americans. A series of illustrated signs near exposed building foundations at the site help you to "see" what life was like for this part of the . . . Map (db m85379) HM
105 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Ginning and Pressing "King Cotton"Wealth Created by Enslaved Hands
On Field Quarter Trail.
Andrew Jackson built a cotton gin and press at The Hermitage in 1807, both of which stood in the field in front of you. It was a shrewd decision on Jackson's part, not only making his plantation more self-sufficient, but also generating additional . . . Map (db m85479) HM
106 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Growing CottonA Risky Venture
Near Rachel's Lane.
Andrew Jackson called it his farm, but in reality, The Hermitage was a large cotton plantation dependent upon enslaved labor. All the agricultural activities on Jackson’s 1000 – acre plantation supported his cotton. On average, Jackson’s . . . Map (db m81422) HM
107 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — 3A 81 — Hunter's Hill
On Lebanon Pike (U.S. 70) at Shute Lane, on the right when traveling east on Lebanon Pike.
On Cumberland River, two miles north, was Andrew Jackson's plantation, Hunter's Hill, which he bought in 1796 and where he lived until 1804 when he sold it to Colonel Edward Ward and removed to the adjoining tract to which he gave the name of the . . . Map (db m147681) HM
108 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Icehouse
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
The Hermitage icehouse, a common feature on larger farms and plantations during the nineteenth century, stood on the north side of the smokehouse. Archaeological excavation at this site in 1993 uncovered a portion of a 20 by 20 foot . . . Map (db m85480) HM
109 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Land Conservation at The HermitagePrescribed Grazing Plan
Near Rachel's Lane.
Prescribed grazing at the Hermitage improves forage, animal, soil, and water resources. Animal resources are improved by striving to maintain quality forge 3” to 8” tall. This height allows graze animals to have optimum intake. . . . Map (db m81424) HM
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110 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Land Conservation at The HermitageNative Warm Season Grasses Plan
Near Rachels Lane.
Native warm season grasses grow well during the summer heat. These are bunch type grasses, and the bare ground between the grass clumps provides wildlife cover and nesting space. Habitat conditions are excellent for species such as bobwhite quail, . . . Map (db m85446) HM
111 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Our Peace: Follow the Drinking GourdMemorial to the Enslaved
Near Rachels Lane, 0.7 miles east of Hermitage Road, on the right when traveling east.
In 2006, archaeologists discovered a slave cemetery at the site of a new subdivision on the former Ingleside plantation that once adjoined The Hermitage. This cemetery likely held the remains of the enslaved from not only Ingleside, but also . . . Map (db m182548) HM
112 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Property, Family, Humanity
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
For the Jackson family, the enslaved were property and the foundation of their wealth. The monetary value of the enslaved far exceeded the combined worth of the Hermitage land, mansion and other improvements. Andrew Jackson himself had no . . . Map (db m52412) HM
113 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Stone Hall / Eversong
Near Lebanon Pike (U.S. 70) near Stones River Greenway, on the right when traveling west.
Stone Hall and the cabin Eversong on the Stones River are situated on land that before white settlers came was Native American Indian hunting grounds controlled primarily by the Cherokee, but also used by the Shawnee and Chickasaw. . . . Map (db m147665) HM
114 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Stories Told by Things the Enslaved Left Behind
Near Rachels Lane.
Artifacts found during excavations of the Field Quarter have much to say about daily life within the Hermitage enslaved community. Animal bones tell us a great deal about diet. Buttons and sewing equipment provide details about clothing. Marbles, . . . Map (db m85445) HM
115 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Tennessee Confederate Soldiers' Home Cemetery Monument
On Lebanon Pike (U.S. 70), on the right when traveling east.
This crude, unhewn piece of everlasting granite is here to mark the resting place of manly men men like it: firm, solid, true men who, in support of principle, uncomplainingly endured hunger, cold and deprivation which history cannot . . . Map (db m182551) WM
116 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Architectural Evolution Of The HermitageA Matter of Style and Substance
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
Like its landscape, so too have the homes of the Hermitage been touched by time and circumstance. Andrew and Rachel Jackson's first Hermitage home was a substantial and well-furnished two-story log farmhouse, where they lived from 1804 until well . . . Map (db m85367) HM
117 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Belted Galloway
Near Rachel's Lane.
The Belted Galloway is an heirloom breed of beef cattle originating in the mountainous region of Galloway in southwestern Scotland. A hardy breed, they are naturally polled (hornless) and are distinguished by their thick heavy coats and white belt . . . Map (db m81425) HM
118 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Donelson Family Cemetery
Near Rachels Lane, 0.7 miles east of Hermitage Road, on the right when traveling east.
This cemetery provides a resting place for many members of the Donelson family whose original burial sites have been lost to development. It is not original to the Hermitage Church grounds. In 1948, a local chapter of the Daughters of the . . . Map (db m182534) HM
119 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Field QuarterLives of Labor
On Field Quarter Trail, on the left when traveling east.
In 1806, Andrew Jackson purchased 640 acres north of the first Hermitage and in turn used this land mostly for field crops such as cotton and corn. Jackson chose this portion of that land to build dwellings for his field slaves because of its . . . Map (db m85432) HM
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120 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Field Quarter SpringNourishing Body and Spirit
On Field Quarter Trail, on the right when traveling north.
Known as “Muddy Spring” in Andrew Jackson's time, this fast flowing spring was the primary source of water for the fifty to eighty enslaved men, women, and children who lived in the nearby Field Quarter. Along with its life-sustaining . . . Map (db m85382) HM
121 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The First HermitageWorlds Apart, Side by Side
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
These log buildings tell a remarkable American story unlike any other. From 1804 to 1821, as a two-story farmhouse and kitchen outbuilding, the First Hermitage housed future United States President Andrew Jackson and his family. Here, Jackson lived . . . Map (db m52420) HM
122 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Garden Privy
This small brick privy or necessary is something of a mystery. No documents or illustrations record the presence of such a building when the Jackson family lived on the property. Archaelogical evidence suggests that an older building may have stood . . . Map (db m85374) HM
123 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — 3A 13 — The Hermitage
On Rachels Lane.
Home of Andrew Jackson (1767~1845), Major General in the Army, hero of the Battle of New Orleans, and seventh President of the United States. It was originally built in 1819; partially burned in 1834, during Jackson's second term, replaced by the . . . Map (db m36280) HM
124 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Hermitage ChurchA Gift and a Promise
Near Rachels Lane, 0.7 miles east of Hermitage Road, on the right when traveling east.
In 1823, Andrew Jackson donated the land, a portion of the funds, and the labor of his slaves to build this simple church. There's little doubt that it was the encouragement of Rachel Jackson, a devout Presbyterian, that prompted her husband's . . . Map (db m182525) HM
125 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Hermitage GardenAn Ever Changing Delight
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
As with all living things, the Hermitage Garden cannot be wholly defined by any particular moment in time. Gardens grow and change. Few records tell us about the appearance of the garden Andrew Jackson enjoyed. Jackson hired gardener William Frost . . . Map (db m85370) HM
126 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Hermitage Landscape1804-1821
Near Rachel's Lane.
At a time when limited resources led to smaller dwellings, the distinctions between indoor and outdoor life blurred. When Jackson lived in the log farmhouse, this area buzzed with dawn-to dusk activity, sounds and smells. Cramped housing for white . . . Map (db m81426) HM
127 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Hermitage LandscapeFrontier Farm to Cotton Plantation to Shrine
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
At first glance, The Hermitage Landscape may seem largely untouched by time. Look more closely, however, and discover the changes brought by over 200 years of labor...living...and a changing America. White Americans and their slaves first . . . Map (db m85360) HM
128 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Hermitage MansionSymbol of Democracy?
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
Elegant as it is, The Hermitage Mansion is also a prime example that, indeed, beauty sometimes does lie “in the eye of the beholder.” Andrew Jackson's visitors got their first good look at his home as they rounded the graceful curves of . . . Map (db m85366) HM
129 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Hermitage OverseerBetween Two Worlds
On Field Quarter Trail.
As was common at large plantations, Jackson hired a white overseer on an annual contract to supervise farm operations, particularly the lives and work of the enslaved. The overseer's contract began on January 1, after the previous year's crop had . . . Map (db m85477) HM
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130 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Hunter’s Hill Farm Building
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
This log building was not part of Andrew Jackson’s Hermitage. In 1929, a fire destroyed one of Jackson’s original barns. To help replace it, The Ladies’ Hermitage Association purchased and moved this log building from the nearby Hunter's Hill . . . Map (db m52416) HM
131 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Jackson Family Cemetery
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
Andrew Jackson's strong sense of family extended beyond those he embraced during his lifetime. Reaching into the future to touch generations yet to come, he deeded a small portion of the garden in trust to serve as a family cemetery. Stones . . . Map (db m85372) HM
132 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Jacksons and ReligionReflection of the Times
Near Rachels Lane, 0.7 miles Hermitage Road, on the right when traveling east.
At a time when America was growing in more than material ways, the Jacksons, too, were touched by matters spiritual. In the early 1800s, the stresses of a young nation on the move to new political, geographic, and economic areas produced rapid . . . Map (db m182530) HM
133 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The North Cabin
On Field Quarter Trail.
The remains of the North Cabin stood near this spot until 1988 when it was dismantled because of structural instability. The foundation of the chimney is the only part of the building visible. The North Cabin was a one-story log dwelling with a . . . Map (db m85478) HM
134 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The SpringhouseWater for The Hermitage
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
Of all the enticements Tennessee offered settlers, one promised both survival and a future: Water. Falling from above, bubbling up from below, flowing in broad river “highways”: Water. Two natural free-flowing springs made The . . . Map (db m81428) HM
135 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The TriplexReclaiming the Past
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
Rarely do facts alone uncover the past. Scholarship, judgment, and analysis all have roles in interpreting evidence, and hints, of long-ago lives. So it is with these stones marking the location of a building that Hermitage archaeologists have named . . . Map (db m52410) HM
136 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The War Road
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road. Reported permanently removed.
In 1915, The Ladies' Hermitage Association planted this double line of trees to serve as the border for a new entryway intended for visitors arriving by automobile. Each tree came from a battlefield where Andrew Jackson fought, such as the Plain of . . . Map (db m214554) HM
137 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — The Work YardThe World Behind the Mansion
Near Rachels Lane, 0.3 miles east of Hermitage Road.
The stately trees and park-like grounds of today’s Hermitage bear scant resemblance to the working plantation of Andrew Jackson’s time. As the farm developed, trees were cleared to make room for fields and pastures. By the time the first . . . Map (db m52408) HM
138 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — Tulip GroveA Greek Revival Home
On Rachels Lane, 0.9 miles east of Hermitage Road when traveling east.
In 1834, Andrew Jackson Donelson began plans for his eventual return to Tennessee when Jackson's presidency ended in 1837. Donelson chose to build a new home on his land adjoining The Hermitage. There he could be near Andrew Jackson, as he had been . . . Map (db m182561) HM
139 Tennessee, Davidson County, Hermitage — 3A 11 — Tulip Grove
On Lebanon Pike (U.S. 70) at Rachels Lane, on the right when traveling east on Lebanon Pike.
Designed by Jos. Reiff, who was also builder of the Hermitage, this house was built in 1836 for Andrew J. Donelson, Jackson's namesake and secretary. A West Point graduate, Donelson was at one time minister to Prussia, and held other offices. In . . . Map (db m147680) HM
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140 Tennessee, Davidson County, Joelton — 166 — Paradise Ridge
On Morgan Road, 0.6 miles east of Whites Creek Pike (U.S. 431), on the left when traveling east.
Named for the Paradise brothers, early settlers from North Carolina, this ridge was home to the Joelton Air Force Station from 1956-61, when the 799th Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron operated here as a part of the integrated continental . . . Map (db m147786) HM
141 Tennessee, Davidson County, Madison — 3A 55 — Indian Captivity
On Neelys Bend Road at Hospital Drive, on the right when traveling west on Neelys Bend Road.
Two miles east on Cumberland River was Neely's Lick, later called Larkin's Sulphur Spring. Here, in the fall of 1780 William Neely was killed and his daughter Mary captured by Indians. Carried by her captors to Michigan, she escaped after two years, . . . Map (db m147699) HM
142 Tennessee, Davidson County, Madison — 3A 246 — Madison Adventist Origins
On Cheyenne Boulevard, 0.1 miles north of Pallas Drive, on the right when traveling north.
In June 1904 near this spot, "The Morning Star" moored for repairs. Seventh-day Adventist visionary Ellen White, mother of boat owner Edson White, saw the nearby Ferguson Farm for sale and told educators Edward A. Sutherland and Percy T. Magan to . . . Map (db m162447) HM
143 Tennessee, Davidson County, Madison — 29 — Madison College
On Hospital Drive, 0.1 miles north of Neelys Bend Road, on the left when traveling north.
Madison College was founded in 1904 as Nashville Agricultural Normal Institute by Seventh-day Adventists on a farm of 412 acres. A sanitarium and campus industries were integral to the plan of work and study for students training for careers in . . . Map (db m147701) HM
144 Tennessee, Davidson County, Madison — 13 — Mrs. John Donelson
On Gallatin Pike North (U.S. 31E) at Rivergate Parkway, on the right when traveling south on Gallatin Pike North.
After Col. John Donelson was killed in 1785, his widow and family continued to live here in a log house. In 1789 lawyers Andrew Jackson and John Overton boarded with the Donelsons. Here Jackson met Rachel, the Donelson's youngest daughter. They . . . Map (db m147702) HM
145 Tennessee, Davidson County, Madison — 172 — Odom's Tennessee Pride Sausage, Inc.
On Neelys Bend Road just north of Nix Pass, on the right when traveling north.
In 1943, with a $1000 loan from a friend, Douglas G. Odom, Sr., his wife Louise, and their children - Doug Jr., Richard, Judy, and June - started a four-hog a day sausage business. Before selling the company in 2012, the three generation . . . Map (db m147698) HM
146 Tennessee, Davidson County, Madison — 171 — Smith-Carter House
On Gibson Drive, 0.2 miles north of Due West Avenue, on the left when traveling north.
This stone, Monterey-style house was built in 1925 and purchased in 1952 by “Mr. Country,” Carl Smith, just weeks before his marriage to June Carter, of the famed Carter Family. The farm remained home to June and daughter Carlene . . . Map (db m147478) HM
147 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 3A 268 — Aaittafama' Archaeological Park
On Hillsboro Road south of Tennessee Road 254, on the right when traveling north.
Created in 2014, this park protects one of the few remaining undisturbed Mississippian period villages in Davidson County. The Native Americans who lived here were part of a landscape of farms, villages, and mound centers that flourished along the . . . Map (db m247864) HM
148 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Arabian HorsesTravellers Rest Trace
Near Farrell Parkway west of Regent Drive.
As was the case with many upper-class Southern families in the 19th and early 20th century, the Overton's engaged in the breeding of fine horses. However, Travellers Rest was not devoted solely to breeding one type of horse until 1929. Jacob . . . Map (db m247941) HM
149 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 134 — Battle of Nashville(December 16, 1864) — Confederate Final Stand —
On Tyne Boulevard, on the right when traveling east.
After the withdrawal from the main Confederate line at Peach Orchard Hill, Lt. Gen. Stephen D. Lee formed a battle line across Franklin Pike 400 yards east of here with 200 men from the remnants of Brig. Gen. Henry Clayton's division and two cannons . . . Map (db m53394) HM
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150 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — N2 2 — Battle of NashvilleSmith's Assault — Dec. 16, 1864 —
On Granny White Pike, on the right when traveling south.
The Federal XVI Corps attacked southward along this road. After violent artillery bombardment, McArthur's Division took the hill to the west about 4:00 p.m., precipitating the rout of Hood's Army. This hill is named for Col. W. M. Shy, 20th Tenn. . . . Map (db m53351) HM
151 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Belle Meade BourbonBelle Meade Plantation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.1 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
The Belle Meade Distillery once stood 3 miles east of Belle Meade Farm on the Harding Pike (where St. Thomas Hospital stands today). The location was known as Bosley Springs, the waters from which feed the Richland Creek that runs in front of . . . Map (db m158321) HM
152 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Belle Meade PlantationThe Battle of Nashville — Hood's Campaign —
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.2 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
(overview) In September 1864, after Union Gen. William T. Sherman defeated Confederate Gen. John Bell Hood at Atlanta, Hood led the Army of Tennessee northwest against Sherman’s supply lines. Rather than contest Sherman’s “March to . . . Map (db m68971) HM
153 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Belle Meade PlantationChange of Ownership
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.2 miles north of Leake Avenue when traveling north.
Confederate Gen. William Hicks “Billy” Jackson (1835–1903), who acquired Belle Meade Plantation after the war, served with distinction throughout the Western Theater of the Civil War. He was an excellent horseman, a skill that . . . Map (db m68973) HM
154 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Block House3801 West End Avenue
On West End Avenue at Carden Avenue, on the right when traveling east on West End Avenue.
The property was originally part of Peach Blossom Farm (later called Whitland Farm). Subdivided by Bransford Realty, the property was purchased in 1911 by George Killibrew, Vice President of Marathon Motor Works, Nashville's first and only auto . . . Map (db m220549) HM
155 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 216 — Brewery at Mill Creek
On Elm Hill Pike west of Massman Drive, on the right when traveling east.
Arthur Redmond, a European brewer who immigrated to Nashville in 1815, established a brewery and bakery on Chicken Pike, now Elm Hill Pike. Situated along the east side of Mill Creek near Foster's and Buchanan's mills, he brewed porter and ale and . . . Map (db m151769) HM
156 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Buchanan Station Cemetery
On Massman Drive, 0.2 miles north of Elm Hill Pike, on the left when traveling north.
No original records Survive för this burial ground of the Buchanan family and friends. Early interments likely include Samuel Buchanan, evidently killed by Indians outside the station walls in 1786, and John Buchanan, Sr., killed inside the . . . Map (db m175151) HM
157 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Buchanan’s Station
On Massman Drive, 0.2 miles north of Elm Hill Pike, on the left when traveling north.
The Cumberland Settlements In the winter of 1779 - 1780, the family of John and Jane Trindle Buchanan was among the earliest permanent American settlers of the bend in the Cumberland River where the city of Nashville, Tennessee is now . . . Map (db m175150) HM
158 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Buchanan’s Station Cemetery
On Massman Drive, 0.2 miles north of Elm Hill Pike, on the left when traveling north.
A lasting monument to the early pioneers and defenders of Nashville who sacrificed their lives and who now lie in peace including Revolutionary War patriot, John "Major" Buchanan and his wife, Sarah “Sally” Ridley Buchanan.Map (db m175152) HM
159 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 3A 10 — Buchanan's Station
On Elm Hill Pike west of Massman Drive, on the right when traveling west.
One of Cumberland settlements, established here in 1780. The fort was attacked, Sept. 30, 1792, by about 300 Creeks and Lower Cherokees under Chiachattalla. Aided by the heroism and efficiency of Mrs. Buchanan and other women in . . . Map (db m147557) HM
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160 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Caring for Historic CabinsTennessee Agricultural Museum
Near Hogan Road.
These three log cabins, likely homes for tenant farmers, were already here when the Tennessee Department of Agriculture relocated to this site in 1957. We do not know the exact date of the cabins' construction or their original location(s). . . . Map (db m205349) HM
161 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 3A 158 — Charles Spurgeon Johnson/Robert E. Park
On Phillips Street, on the right when traveling east.
Charles Spurgeon Johnson 1893-1956 Charles S. Johnson joined Fisk's faculty in 1928 as professor of sociology and director of the Department of Social Sciences. In 1942. he began a series of seminars on race relations at Fisk. thereby . . . Map (db m249023) HM
162 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Coach Ed TempleTigerbelles Head Coach 1950-1994 — U.S. Olympic Coach 1960, 1964, 1980 —
Near Doctor Walter S Davis Boulevard west of Schrader Lane, on the right when traveling east.
"In looking over my 44 years as coach, I know that we accomplished monumental things at TSU and the Olympics. This Plaza stands as a witness to those deserving student athletes who helped to make the tradition." Coach Ed Temple Tigerbelles . . . Map (db m209505) HM
163 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 192 — Cockrill Bend
On Centennial Boulevard at Bomar Boulevard, on the right when traveling north on Centennial Boulevard.
In 1786, the State of N.C. granted Gen. James Robertson several large tracts of land in this area. Robertson's Bend was renamed after the Cockrill family who established several farms and a mill here before the Civil War. The Romanesque-style third . . . Map (db m147820) HM
164 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — DairyBelle Meade Plantation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.1 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
In 1884 the dairy house was completed with walls measuring two feet thick made of ashlar limestone, perfect for the cool keeping of dairy products. Nashville stonemason, Con Callaghan, constructed the building in the Romanesque Revival style and . . . Map (db m158285) HM
165 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Early HistoryTennessee Agricultural Museum
Near Hogan Road.
Indigenous populations lived in the Cumberland Valley of Middle Tennessee in large villages such as Mound Bottom in present-day Cheatham County. They were the first farmers of Tennessee and grew corn, beans, and squash for their own sustenance . . . Map (db m205342) HM
166 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Ellington Agricultural CenterTennessee Agricultural Museum
Near Hogan Road.
During the 1930 collapse of Caldwell's financial empire and subsequent Great Depression, the State of Tennessee lost its sizable financial assets invested in The Bank of Tennessee. The State took legal action to recover these funds and learned . . . Map (db m205347) HM
167 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 115 — Ezell House
On Donelson Pike (State Highway 255) at Ezell Road, on the right when traveling north on Donelson Pike.
In 1805 Jeremiah Ezell (1775-1838) moved here from Virginia and purchased 17 acres of land on Mill Creek. In 1816 he served on the Court of Pleas for Davidson County. In 1888, his grandson, Henry Clay Ezell, built this brick vernacular Queen Anne . . . Map (db m147166) HM
168 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 53 — Frederick Stump(1723-1820)
On Buena Vista Pike south of Briley Parkway (Tennessee Highway 155), on the right when traveling south.
Frederick Stump was born in Lancaster Co., Pa. He married Ana c. 1757, Ann Snavely c. 1766, and Catherine Gingery in 1816. He had at least 8 children. In 1761 he founded Stumpstown, Pa. In 1768 he was jailed in Carlisle, Pa. for killing several . . . Map (db m162444) HM
169 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 198 — Hillwood Estates
On Post Road at Davidson Road, on the right when traveling south on Post Road.
In 1910, Horace Greeley Hill, Sr. and wife Mamie began buying land around their West Nashville home Cliff Lawn. After Hill Sr., an entrepreneur and philanthropist, died in 1942, H.G. Hill, Jr. took over the family business and began developing that . . . Map (db m147414) HM
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170 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Ice HouseBelle Meade Plantation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.1 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
In 1820 John Harding immensely improved his quality of life by constructing a six-room, brick federal style house on his property. Not long after finishing his new home he set to work on another improvement, building an ice house. An ice . . . Map (db m158324) HM
171 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Iconography of the TSU Olympian
On Doctor Walter S Davis Boulevard, on the right when traveling south.
The total height of the TSU Olympian is 46 feet. It is constructed using the slip roller technique, a process that allows an artist to bend sheets of metal at incremental degrees between rollers. Jane-Allen McKinney, Assistant Professor of Art at . . . Map (db m209506) HM
172 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — In 1865[Belle Meade Farm Freedom] — Belle Meade Plantation
Reported permanently removed.
In 1865 one hundred thirty six (136) enslaved men, women, and children at Belle Meade Farm gained their freedom. With this freedom they gained the right to choose where they would live and work. Seventy-two (72) farm workers continued under the . . . Map (db m68986) HM
173 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 3A 12 — John Haywood
On Nolensville Pike (Alternate U.S. 41) 0.1 miles north of Strasser Drive, on the right when traveling north.
On the site of this house was home of John Haywood, a Supreme Court Justice in North Carolina. Founder (1820) of the Antiquarian Society, forerunner of the Tennessee Historical Society and author of the basic histories of the state, he is known as . . . Map (db m182312) HM
174 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 3A 156 — Juno Frankie Pierce
On West Heiman Street at Ed Temple Boulevard, on the right when traveling west on West Heiman Street.
J. Frankie Pierce was born during or shortly after the Civil War. In 1921, she founded the Tennessee Vocational School for Colored Girls and served as its first superintendent until 1939. The founding of this school was aided by the Negro . . . Map (db m166306) HM
175 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Justin "Jet" Potter
Near Hillsboro Pike at Woodmont Boulevard, on the right when traveling north.
Justin Potter had a passion for Scouting that began when his son Jasan, Jr Wee-Buddy joined Scouting Jet (or "Pop" to his family) played a key role in the establishment of Camp Boxwell at the Narrows of the Harpeth and worked to involve underserved . . . Map (db m249034) HM
176 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Kitchen Garden History
Near Hogan Road.
Early Tennessee settlers did not have access to year-round fresh produce like we do today. General stores were often miles away and sold dried goods and seeds for growing your own food in kitchen gardens like this. Common plants were onions, . . . Map (db m205314) HM
177 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 246 — Kurdish Americans in Nashville
On U.S. 41A, on the right when traveling north.
In 1976 Kurdish Immigrants began arriving in Nashville and continued to emigrate here, fleeing persecutions in Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey were they were ethnic minorities following the Treaty of Lausanne. In 2022, around 20,000 Kurds lived in . . . Map (db m214619) HM
178 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 99 — Lake Providence Community
On Nolensville Pike (Alternate U.S. 31) at Winston Avenue West, on the right when traveling south on Nolensville Pike.
Soon after the Civil War, freed slave families established farms and dairies in this community named for Lake Providence Missionary Baptist Church. The church was founded in 1868 by Rev. Larry A. Thompson, a traveling missionary. The first church . . . Map (db m147128) HM
179 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 86 — Luke Lea Heights5 miles ahead on Scenic Drive
On Belle Meade Boulevard at Warner Park Entrance.
Luke Lea (1879-1945) envisioned this park, gave to the city in 1927 the original 868 acres, and asked that the land be named for his father-in-law, Percy Warner. Founder of the Nashville Tennessean, Lea was a key developer of Belle Meade, a U.S. . . . Map (db m68993) HM WM
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180 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — MausoleumBelle Meade Plantation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.1 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
In 1839 William Giles Harding commissioned the construction of a limestone burial vault for his recently deceased wife, Mary Selena McNairy Harding. This vault eventually became the final resting place for five generations of Harding-Jackson . . . Map (db m158319) HM
181 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 168 — May-Granbery House and Alford Cemetery
On Hill Road at Granbery Park Drive, on the left when traveling west on Hill Road.
Revolutionary War Pvt. John Alford built a two-room house on this land c. 1810, expanding it in 1812 and 1820. The Alford cemetery retains three markers that were placed as early as 1822. The c. 1830 brick two-story Federal dwelling was home to . . . Map (db m147408) HM
182 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 78 — Percy Warner Park2058.1 acres
On Belle Meade Boulevard at Warner Park Entrance.
Percy Warner (1861-1927) was a pioneer in electric utilities and hydroelectric development in the South. As chairman of the Park Board, he expanded Nashville’s park system. Preservation of this natural area was one of his greatest civic projects. . . . Map (db m68992) HM
183 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 3A 91 — Robertson Academy
On Robertson Academy Road, 0.2 miles west of Franklin Pike (U.S. 31), on the left when traveling west.
Was established by an Act of the Tennessee General Assembly Sept. 13, 1806, which provided for an academy in each of the then 27 counties. The school has operated continuously since that time.Map (db m151594) HM
184 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Rock City Gardens
On 7th Avenue North, on the left when traveling south.
Popular Lookout Mountain tourist attraction Rock City Gardens - "See Rock City" - opened in 1932.Map (db m218442) HM
185 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Slave BurialsBelle Meade Plantation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.2 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Due to the lack of records kept by slave owners, including those at Belle Meade, it is often difficult to piece together the full story of the daily lives and experiences of enslaved individuals. In particular, and particularly disheartening, is . . . Map (db m158289) HM
186 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Slave CabinBelle Meade Plantation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.1 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
In 1865 one hundred thirty six (136) enslaved men, women, and children at Belle Meade Farm gained their freedom. With this freedom they gained the right to choose where they would live and work. Seventy-two (72) farm workers continued under . . . Map (db m158315) HM
187 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 175 — Tennessee Hospital for the Insane
On Murfreesboro Pike (U.S. 41) at Dell Parkway, on the right when traveling south on Murfreesboro Pike.
In 1832, the Tenn. legislature approved the state's first asylum, established in 1840 southwest of Nashville. The State bought this land in 1848, after activist-reformer Dorothea Dix and asylum staff called for improved facilities. Prominent . . . Map (db m147132) HM
188 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 3A 124 — Tennessee State University
On Centennial Boulevard/John A Merritt Boulevard, on the left when traveling east.
Established in 1912 for the education of Negro citizens, Tennessee State University merged with UT-Nashville in 1979 and has become a major comprehensive urban university. Development from normal school to university progressed as follows: Tenn. A & . . . Map (db m5512) HM
189 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 69 — Tennessee State University
Tennessee Agricultural & Industrial State Normal School for Negroes first opened its doors to 247 students in 1912. This site gave birth to a new era of public higher education for African Americans in the state of Tennessee, with emphasis on . . . Map (db m182179) HM
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190 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — 230 — Tennessee/Spring Water Brewery
On Air Freight Boulevard at Vultee Boulevard, on the right when traveling north on Air Freight Boulevard.
In 1858 P. & N. Harsh built a small brewery near Franklin College on Stones River Pike. E.D. Crossman & M.J. Drucker took over in 1860, renaming it the Tennessee Brewery. After fire destroyed it in 1860 and again in 1864, Drucker rebuilt it as . . . Map (db m249146) HM
191 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — The Caldwell YearsTennessee Agricultural Museum
Near Hogan Road.
Rogers Caldwell, "the J.P. Morgan of the South,” purchased the acreage that would later become the Ellington Agricultural Center from descendants of the Ewing family. Caldwell was a Nashville native who established Caldwell and Company in 1917, . . . Map (db m205343) HM
192 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — The Natchez TraceBelle Meade Plantation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.2 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
In 1742 a European settler recorded his travel and the conditions of the path which was known as the Natchez Trace. This is the earliest known recording of the trace, a portion of which was located on the site of Belle Meade Plantation. The trace, . . . Map (db m81472) HM
193 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — War on the Home FrontBelle Meade and Union Occupation
Near Harding Pike (U.S. 70S) 0.2 miles north of Leake Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
William Giles Harding, the owner of Belle Meade Plantation, was an ardent Confederate supporter who provided thousands of dollars to help arm Tennessee’s Confederate forces. He served on the state’s Military Armaments Committee. In March 1862, he . . . Map (db m81481) HM
194 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — Warner ParksEstablished in 1927
On Belle Meade Boulevard at Page Road, in the median on Belle Meade Boulevard.
This property is listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 by the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m163934) HM
195 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville — William James "Billy Jim" Vaughn
Near Hillsboro Pike just north of Woodmont Boulevard, on the right when traveling north.
This statue is dedicated to William James "Billy Jim" Vaughn He has been Scoutmaster of Troop #1 at Brentwood United Methodist Church since 1935. During these years of his continuous leadership Billy Jim has influenced thousands of boys and . . . Map (db m249037) HM
196 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville, Antioch — 244 — Alice Thompson Collinsworth1777-1828
On Crossings Boulevard west of Mt. View Road, on the right when traveling west.
Alice Thompson (1777-1828) married Revolutionary War veteran Edward Collinsworth (1759-1816) in Dec. 1795, after spending two years as a captive at the Muscogee (Creek) tribal town Kialegee, in present-day Alabama. Alice and Edward reared seven . . . Map (db m207153) HM
197 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville, Antioch — 208 — Antioch High School
On Blue Hole Road, 0.3 miles south of Antioch Pike, on the left when traveling south.
Antioch High School opened here in the fall of 1933, after community members from Antioch, Cane Ridge and Mims (Bakertown) signed petitions to the Board of Education urging them to choose Antioch, not Una, as the school location. Previously the . . . Map (db m224208) HM
198 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville, Antioch — 206 — Percy Priest Lake
On Smith Springs Road, 0.2 miles east of Old Anderson Road, on the left when traveling east.
Construction of the J. Percy Priest Dam and Reservoir began on June 2, 1963. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project was named for Priest, a teacher and Tennessean editor who served in Congress from 1940 until his death in 1956. Several small . . . Map (db m205206) HM
199 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville, Arts District — 3A 223 — Nashville Sit-Ins
On 5th Avenue North north of Church Street, on the left when traveling north.
On 13 February 1960, 124 students from Nashville's Historically Black Colleges and Universities walked into Woolworth's, Kress, and McClellan's, sat down at the lunch counters and asked to be served to no avail. The students also targeted . . . Map (db m219765) HM
200 Tennessee, Davidson County, Nashville, Arts District — 3A 139 — Sarah Estell
On 5th Avenue North north of Church Street, on the left when traveling north.
Sarah Estell, a free black woman in the slavery era, ran an ice cream parlor and sweet shop near here. She overcame the many hurdles faced by free persons of color, and her venture thrived. Her catering firm met the banquet needs of the city's . . . Map (db m81470) HM

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Jul. 3, 2024