587 items
General Jackson is a riverboat—more specifically, a showboat—based on the Cumberland River in Nashville, Tennessee.
website: https://generaljackson.com/
The Hermitage Arboretum is an arboretum located on the grounds of The Hermitage, President Andrew Jackson's antebellum cotton plantation outside Nashville, Tennessee in the Hermitage neighborhood.
Music Row is a historic district located southwest of downtown Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Widely considered the heart of Nashville's entertainment industry, Music Row has also become a metonymous nickname for the music industry as a whole, particularly in country music, gospel music, and contemporary Christian music.
Elm Street Methodist Church is a historic Methodist church building at 616 5th Avenue, South in Nashville, Tennessee. The building no longer serves as a place of worship and has been converted to offices. In 2019 it will be Bob Dylan's Heaven's Door whiskey's distillery and brand experience center.
NRHP reference number: 84003496
website: https://www.visitmusiccity.com/
website: http://www.humanitiestennessee.org/
Street address: 505 Heritage Drive, Madison, TN 37115 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4400 Clarksville Pike, Nashville, TN 37218 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1409 12th Avenue, South, Nashville, TN 37203 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 3701 Benham Avenue, Nashville, TN 37215 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1039 28th Avenue, North, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4312 Gallatin Road, Nashville, TN 37216 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1010 Jones Street, Old Hickory, TN 37138 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 117 Charles E. Davis Blvd., Nashville, TN 37210 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 612 17th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37203 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 380 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 2301 Rosa Parks Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37228 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4711 Charlotte Avenue, Nashville, TN 37209 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 5501 Edmondson Pike, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.vumc.org/psychiatry/vanderbilt-psychiatric-hospital-vph
Street address: 152 2nd Ave N, Nashville, TN 37201, USA (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4426 Lebanon Road, Hermitage, TN 37076 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 109 N Gallatin Parkway, Madison, TN 37115 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1123 Charlotte Avenue, Nashville, TN 37203 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 216 Fifth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 423 4th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 813 Monroe Street, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 615 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 418 Charlotte Avenue, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 307 Wilburn Street, Nashville, TN 37207 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 208 7th Avenue N., Nashville, TN 37203 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 727 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37203 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 407 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 511 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 214 5th Avenue N., Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 236 5th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 314 Charlotte Avenue, Nashville, TN 37201 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 235 5th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 531 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4050 Nolensville Road, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 305 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4700 Charlotte Pike, Nashville, TN 37209 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4010 Nolensville Road, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 217 5th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 5th Avenue N, Nashville, TN 37201 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 2815 Lebanon Pike, Nashville, TN 37214 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1011 Woodland Street, Nashville, TN 37206 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 722 4th Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37210 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 424 Charlotte Avenue, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 837 2nd Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37210 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 218 Fifth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37206 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1714 Jefferson Street, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 319 Union Street, Nashville, TN 37201 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1120 4th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
Street address: Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4301 Harding Pike, Nashville, TN 37205 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 3815 Greenhills Village Drive, Nashville, TN 37215 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.regalcinemas.com
Street address: 4005 Hillsboro Pike, Nashville, TN 37215 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4030 Nolensville Pike, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 3407 Gallatin Road, Nashville, TN 37216 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 219 Capitol Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 417 5th Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 415 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 5400 Bell Forge Lane E, Antioch, TN 37013 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 5252 Hickory Hollow Parkway, Antioch, TN 37013 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 705 2 Mile Pike, Goodlettsville, TN 37072 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 403 Gallatin Avenue South, Madison, TN 37115 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 120 Belle Forest Circle, Nashville, TN 37221 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 7741 Highway 70 South, Nashville, TN 37221 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 2298 Metrocenter Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37228 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 803 Monroe Street, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 835 2nd Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37210 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 729 Gallatin Pike S, Nashville, TN 37115 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 827 Meridian Street, Nashville, TN 37207 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.savetheroxy.org
Street address: 15534 Old Hickory Bloulevard, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 719 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN 37204 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.regalcinemas.com
Street address: 570 Opry Mills Drive, Nashville, TN 37214 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.regalcinemas.com
Street address: 208 Sarratt Student Center, Nashville, TN 37240 (from Wikidata)
website: http://vanderbilt.edu/sarratt/cinema
Street address: 1003 1st Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37210 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4914 Charlotte Avenue, Nashville, TN 37209 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 6618 Charlottte Pike, Nashville, TN 37209 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 90 White Bridge Road, Nashville, TN 37205 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 2511 Nolensville Pike, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.loewshotels.com/en/Hotels/Vanderbilt-Hotel/
website: https://www.marriott.com/hotels/travel/bnaak-union-station-hotel-autograph-collection/
website: https://www.tn.gov/behavioral-health/
website: https://toa.com/
website: https://www.va.gov/directory/guide/facility.asp?id=95
website: https://www.goldskincare.com/
website: https://www.centerstone.org/
Street address: 1310 Jefferson St, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
website: https://bestvisionforlife.com/
Street address: 1624 5th Ave N, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
Street address: The Covenant Presbyterian School, 33 Burton Hills Blvd, Nashville, Tennessee (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.thecovenantschool.com
Street address: 5911 Old Hickory Blvd, Ashland City, TN 37015 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1604 Holly St, Nashville, TN 37206 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 4187 Old Hickory Blvd, Nashville, TN 37218 (from Wikidata)
website: https://christchurchnashville.org/memorial-gardens/
Gillespie Airport is a former airport in Nashville, Tennessee.It was opened in 1941. During World War II, it was leased to the United States Army Air Forces as a training airfield.
Hume-Fogg Academic Magnet High School is a public magnet high school serving grades 9–12 and located in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, United States.
NRHP reference number: 74001909
The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Nashville Branch Office is one of the five Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta branch offices. The Nashville branch is part of the 6th District.
Street address: 226 3rd Ave N, Nashville, TN 37201 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 84000089; website: https://www.atlantafed.org/about/atlantafed/branches/nashville
Glencliff High School is an American public high school in Nashville, Tennessee. It was built in 1957 and added onto in 1977.
website: https://schools.mnps.org/glencliff-high-school
Harding Mall was a shopping mall located in suburban Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was southeast of downtown at the corner of Nolensville Pike US 31A/US 41A and Harding Place (SR 255) in the Paragon Mills neighborhood. Built in 1966, it was demolished in 2005 for a Walmart. Harding Mall is notable for being the first enclosed shopping mall in the state of Tennessee.
The Harpeth Hills Flying Monkey Marathon is a 26.2-mile (42.2 km) road race in Percy Warner Park, the larger of the Warner Parks in Nashville, Tennessee. It was created to be among the top five most difficult road marathons in the United States, and was designed to be somewhat anti-establishment and grassroots in character. In particular, the Harpeth Hills Flying Monkey Marathon is consciously not part of any running series and is neither certified nor sanctioned by the USATF, but is the standard 42.195 kilometres (26.219 mi) . A runner cannot use this race to qualify for the Boston Marathon. This marathon was initially dreamt up by a broad array of Middle Tennessee runners and was first described on an internet message board dedicated to Middle Tennessee runners. The original organizers included Trent Rosenbloom, The Nashville Striders, Peter Pressman, Diana Bibeau, and others.
The Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce is a chamber of commerce in Nashville, Tennessee, United States.
The Courtyard Nashville Downtown is a hotel in Nashville, Tennessee, housed in the historic Neo-Classical-style First National Bank Building, built in 1904.
Davidson County Courthouse, also known as Metropolitan Courthouse, is an Art Deco building built during 1936–37 in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1987.
NRHP reference number: 87000670
Hopewell is a neighborhood in Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, United States. It lies at an elevation of 472 feet (144 m).
USGS GNIS ID: 1288287
The Battle of Nashville was a two-day battle in the Franklin-Nashville Campaign that represented the end of large-scale fighting west of the coastal states in the American Civil War. It was fought at Nashville, Tennessee, on December 15–16, 1864, between the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Lieutenant General John Bell Hood and the Union Army of the Cumberland (Dept. of the Cumberland) (AoC) under Major General George H. Thomas. In one of the largest victories achieved by the Union Army during the war, Thomas attacked and routed Hood's army, largely destroying it as an effective fighting force.
The Life & Casualty Tower (also known as the L & C Tower) is a skyscraper in Nashville, Tennessee located at 401 Church Street. It stands 152.5 meters (409 ft) and has 30 floors. It was designed by Edwin A. Keeble, with structural engineering done by Ross Bryan Associates, and was finished in 1957. It was Nashville's first true skyscraper and the tallest in Tennessee until 1965, when 100 North Main Street in Memphis surpassed it.
The Battle of Brentwood took place during the American Civil War on March 25, 1863, in Williamson County, Tennessee at Brentwood, Tennessee.
Signature Tower was a projected mixed-use skyscraper which had been approved for construction in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Groundbreaking was originally scheduled for 2007. When completed, it was to contain condominiums, office space, a Kimpton-brand Hotel Palomar Nashville, and retail space. The building was originally planned to have 70 stories and stand 1,030 feet (314 m) in height. That would have made it the tallest building in the Southern United States and the tallest building in the US outside of New York City and Chicago, surpassing Bank of America Plaza in Atlanta by 7 feet (2 m). However, in December 2008, developer Tony Giarratana announced that the project would be downsized, due to the economic recession. Giarratana stated that the number of condos would be reduced from around 600 to under 100, but the average condo size would more than double from an average of 1,500 square feet (140 m2) to 3,500 sq ft (330 m2). The height of the revised Signature Tower was to be 807 feet (246 m) and 50 stories.
The Cordell Hull State Office Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee.
Airdrie, a.k.a. Petway House or the Buell-King House, is a historic house and former plantation in Nashville, Tennessee. Built as a log house from 1797 to 1808, it was a Southern plantation with African slaves in the Antebellum era. After the American Civil War, it belonged to Union veterans.
Street address: 3210 Avenal Ave, Nashville, TN 37211 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 05001027
Belair is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee. Built as a wedding present for Elizabeth Clay, a Southern belle and heiress to the Belle Meade Plantation in the 1830s, it was once the home of William Nichol, a mayor of Nashville.
NRHP reference number: 71000815
The Berger Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Street address: 164 North 8th Avenue (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 84000376
The Frost Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. It was built in the 1910s for the Southern Baptist Convention.
Street address: 161 8th Avenue North (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 80003791
The James Robertson Hotel is a historic hotel and apartment building in Nashville, Tennessee. It is located on North 7th Avenue at Commerce Street in Downtown Nashville.
NRHP reference number: 84000092
Richland Hall is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. It was completed in 1894.
Street address: 4822 Charlotte Avenue (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 83003028
Devon Farm is a historic farm in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since August 28, 1974.
NRHP reference number: 74001908
The Robert Chadwell House is a historic mansion in Madison, Tennessee, USA. It was built circa 1874. It was designed in the Italianate architectural style. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since November 13, 1989.
NRHP reference number: 89001972
The Acme Farm Supply Building is a listed building in Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, US. Originally a grocery store, it has been a restaurant and music venue since 2014.
NRHP reference number: 98000320
The Bush–Herbert Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was home to the Bush Brick Company (founded in 1867 by Confederate veteran Major W.G. Bush in 1867) and T. L. Herbert and Sons, from 1911 to 1961. The family business made bricks used for the construction of many buildings on the campus of Vanderbilt University as well as the Maxwell House Hotel, the Downtown Presbyterian Church and the Tulip Street Methodist Church. The building has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 25, 1982.
Street address: 174 3rd Avenue North (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 82003959
The Utopia Hotel is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee.
NRHP reference number: 79002428
The Weakley–Truett–Clark House, a.k.a. Fairfax Hall, is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee.
Street address: 415 Rosebank Avenue (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 89000297
The Morris Memorial Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was built in the 1920s for the African-American National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. and was named for longtime president Elias Camp Morris.
Street address: 330 Dr MLK Jr Blvd Nashville, TN; 330 Charlotte Avenue (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 85000046
The Woodmont Terrace Apartments is a historic apartment complex in Nashville, Tennessee, United States.
NRHP reference number: 03000280
The Rich–Schwartz Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee. Also known as the Rich, Schwartz & Joseph building, it is named for Julius Rich, Leo Schwartz, and Arthur Joseph.
Street address: 202-204 North 6th Avenue (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 84000091
The Smith Farmhouse is a historic house in Pasquo, Tennessee, USA.
NRHP reference number: 83004239
Sunnyside is a historic mansion in Sevier Park, a public park in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Street address: 3000 Granny White Pike (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 74001910
The Tennessee Manufacturing Company is a complex of six historic buildings in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. They were built from 1869 to 1953. The company was founded by Samuel Morgan. The buildings have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since June 25, 1999.
Couchville, Tennessee was a community and U.S. Post Office founded on Stones River prior to 1880 in Davidson County, Tennessee. Couchville was inundated when J. Percy Priest Lake was formed by impounding Stones River in the mid-1960s. The community was roughly located 500 feet to the west of the current intersection of Hobson Pike and Couchville Pike in Mt. Juliet, Tennessee. The community's identity is preserved in the name of adjacent Couchville Cedar Glade State Natural Area.
The Anna Russell Cole Auditorium is a historic building on the campus of Nashville School of the Arts in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. It was built in 1894. It was named in honor of Anna Russell Cole, philanthropist and wife of Confederate colonel Edmund William Cole, who founded the Randall Cole Industrial School in 1885. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since April 17, 1980. The building is not used or maintained.
NRHP reference number: 80003788
Belle Vue II is a historic mansion in Bellevue, a suburb of Nashville, Tennessee, USA. It was a Southern plantation worked by enslaved African Americans prior to the American Civil War of 1861–1865. After the war, it remained in the same family until the 1970s.
NRHP reference number: 73001758
The Frederick Stump Tavern-Inn is a historic house in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was built by Colonel Frederick Stump, an early settler of Nashville who arrived in the region as part of the first group of white settlers at Fort Nashboro in 1779. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since April 2, 1973.
Street address: 4949 Buena Vista Pike, Nashville, TN 37218 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 73001762
The Home for Aged Masons, formerly known as the Masonic Widows' and Orphans' Home and the Middle Tennessee Tuberculosis Hospital, is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
NRHP reference number: 08001086
The James Buchanan House is a historic log house in Nashville, Tennessee. It was built circa 1800 by James Buchanan, an early Nashville pioneer and signer of the 1789 Cumberland Compact. It's one of the earliest log homes still in existence in the area and is open to the public. The logs were hewn from Tennessee red cedars and nearly-extinct American chestnut trees. The floors were formed from Tennessee poplars and rest on a Tennessee limestone foundation. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 29, 1984.
Street address: 2910 Elm Hill Pike (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 84003486
The Thomas W. Phillips Memorial is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, United States, owned by Vanderbilt University. It was home to the Disciples of Christ Historical Society until the building was purchased by Vanderbilt in 2015. It was built in 1956. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since November 9, 2006.
NRHP reference number: 06001036
Prince's Hot Chicken Shack is a restaurant in Nashville, Tennessee, known for its hot chicken, and is credited with popularizing the dish and inspiring restaurants with similar offerings. The business was started in 1945 by James Thornton Prince, and in 1980 ownership was passed to his great-niece André Prince Jeffries.
website: https://www.princeshotchicken.com/
The McGavock-Gatewood-Webb House, also known as Blue Fountain, is a historic house in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. It was built in the 1840s.
NRHP reference number: 07000688
The Young Women's Christian Association Building, also known as the Jacques-Miller Office Building, is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
NRHP reference number: 82001727
Wilkinson House is a historic house in Joelton, Tennessee, USA.
NRHP reference number: 06001095
The Savage House is a historic three-storey townhouse in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Street address: 167 8th Avenue North (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 83003029
The Cole House is a historic house in Nashville, Tennessee. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since December 27, 1974. The original portion of the Cole House at 2001 Lebanon Pike and shown on Wilbur Foster's 1871 Map of Davidson County, is reputed to have been constructed c.1859. According to local legend and family tradition, Edmund Cole constructed the front portions of this structure for his first wife who died in 1869. The house is significant as an example of early Tennessee vernacular architecture and is the only one of three Cole residence remaining.
Street address: 2001 Lebanon Road (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 74001907
Dozier Farm, also known as Cliffview Farm, is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S..
Street address: 8451 River Road Pike (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 90001580
Tom Wilson Park is a former Negro league baseball park in Nashville, Tennessee, that opened in 1929 and closed in 1946. The ballpark has since been demolished.
Beech Grove is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee. Built as a log house circa 1850, it was a Southern plantation with African slaves in the Antebellum era. In the 1910s, it became a livestock farm.
Street address: 8423 Old Harding Pike, Nashville, TN 37221 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 07001163
Memorial Hall (formerly known as Confederate Memorial Hall) is a historic building on the Peabody College campus of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. It was built in 1935 as a dormitory hall for female descendants of Confederate States Army veterans. Its former name resulted in multiple lawsuits and student unrest. In August 2016, Vanderbilt announced it would reimburse the United Daughters of the Confederacy for their financial contribution and remove the word Confederate from the building.
The J.B. Daniel House is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It is home to the Woman's Club of Nashville. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since July 19, 2010.
Street address: 3206 Hillsboro Pike (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 10000481
West End High School is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
NRHP reference number: 03000726
Woodlawn is a historic house in Nashville, Tennessee, United States.
NRHP reference number: 78002584
The Southern Methodist Publishing House is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Lindsley Hall is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee. Built in the antebellum South as the main building of the University of Nashville, it served as a Union hospital during the Civil War. It became the Nashville Children's Museum in 1945. In 1974 the museum moved to a new facility at 800 Fort Negley Boulevard, became the Cumberland Science Museum and is now known as the Adventure Science Center. The building is once again called Lindsley Hall and is used by the City of Nashville for Metro Government offices.
Street address: 724 2nd Avenue South (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 71000818
Stone Hall is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, US. It was designed by George D. Waller in the Colonial Revival architectural style. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since November 17, 2010.
Couchville Cedar Glade State Natural Area is a Class II Natural-Scientific state natural area located in Davidson and Wilson counties Tennessee. Its western boundary is contiguous with the eastern boundary of Long Hunter State Park. The park's name reflects its location near the now extinct inundated community of Couchville, Tennessee.
The Richland–West End Historic District is a historic district on the Western side of Nashville, Tennessee. It comprises approximately a 12-block area consisting mostly of Bungalow/craftsman architecture and about 70 Foursquare-style houses.
NRHP reference number: 79002425
The Dr. Cleo Miller House, also known as Ivy Hall, is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was designed and built during 1934–1936. It is approximately 20 by 100 feet (6.1 m × 30.5 m) in plan. It was designed by Edwin A. Keeble in Tudor Revival architectural style. It was the residence of Dr. Cleo Miller, a college friend of Keeble's at Vanderbilt University.
NRHP reference number: 95001045
The Nashville International Auto Show occurs each year at the Music City Center in Nashville, Tennessee. It is part of the regular circuit of auto shows in the United States, and most major manufacturers exhibit there. Firms with assembly facilities in the Middle Tennessee area, such as Nissan and Saturn are particularly well represented.
Street address: 600 Opry Mills Dr, Nashville, TN 37214 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 14001222
Walden University was a historically black college in Nashville, Tennessee. It was founded in 1865 by missionaries from the Northern United States on behalf of the Methodist Church to serve freedmen. Known as Central Tennessee College from 1865 to 1900, Walden University provided education and professional training to African Americans until 1925.
Vanderbilt University School of Nursing (VUSN) is a graduate school of Vanderbilt University, located in Nashville, Tennessee. VUSN is closely connected with its parent university and the separate nonprofit Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The School of Nursing is ranked in the top 10 in the U.S. News & World Report rankings. Additionally, its Masters of Science program is ranked 8th, and its Doctorate of Nursing practice program 6th in the report's 2022 graduate school rankings.
website: http://www.nursing.vanderbilt.edu/
Watkins College of Art at Belmont University is an art and design college of Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee. It is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD) and offers Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) degrees as well as post-graduate degrees in film and visual arts. As of 2019, approximately 200 students were enrolled, mostly full-time. The college resides in a 60,000-square-foot (5,600 m2) facility in the MetroCenter area of north Nashville and offers on-campus housing.
Street address: 2298 Rosa L Parks Blvd, Nashville, TN, 37228 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.watkins.edu
WFCN is an AM radio station broadcasting at 1200 kHz. Licensed to Nashville, Tennessee, it airs a Christian radio format. WFCN is owned by the Chicago-based Moody Bible Institute and it simulcasts its sister station in nearby Murfreesboro, Tennessee, 91.7, WFCM-FM. Programming on WFCN is rebroadcast on FM translator 98.7, W254CK.
website: http://www.moodyradiomidsouth.fm
The Whitten Soccer Complex was the on-campus soccer complex for the Belmont Bruins of Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, the largest Christian university in Tennessee.
WJXA (92.9 FM) is an adult contemporary radio station. Licensed to Nashville, Tennessee, United States, the station serves the Nashville, Bowling Green, Clarksville-Hopkinsville areas. The station is currently owned by Duey Wright, through licensee Midwest Communications, Inc. Its studios are located in south central Nashville near the Tennessee State Fairgrounds and the transmitter site is located in the far western portion of Nashville.
website: http://www.mix929.com
WRFN-LP is a community LPFM non-commercial radio station in Nashville, Tennessee. It operates at a frequency of 107.1 MHz and is branded as Radio Free Nashville. The station features a mix of music, talk and public affairs programming, almost all with a decidedly liberal or leftist political perspective largely not found on other area media outlets (local or national).
website: http://www.radiofreenashville.org/
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine (VUSM) is the graduate medical school of Vanderbilt University, a private research university located in Nashville, Tennessee. The School of Medicine is primarily housed within the Eskind Biomedical Library which sits at the intersection of the Vanderbilt University and Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) campuses and claims several Nobel laureates in the field of medicine. Through the Vanderbilt Health Affiliated Network, VUSM is affiliated with over 60 hospitals and 5,000 clinicians across Tennessee and five neighboring states which manage more than 2 million patient visits each year. As the home hospital of the medical school, VUMC is considered one of the largest academic medical centers in the United States and is the primary resource for specialty and primary care in hundreds of adult and pediatric specialties for patients throughout the Mid-South.
website: http://medschool.vanderbilt.edu/
WPGD-TV (channel 50) is a religious television station licensed to Hendersonville, Tennessee, United States, serving the Nashville area as an owned-and-operated station of the Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN). The station's transmitter is located in Whites Creek, Tennessee, just off I-24 and Old Hickory Boulevard. Its studios are located at Trinity Music City on Music Village Boulevard in Hendersonville, which also acts as a host studio for several TBN programs and serves as a religious tourist attraction, in addition to its former role as the estate of the late country artist Conway Twitty.
website: http://www.tbn.org
Yazoo Brewing Company is a regional brewery in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was founded in 2003 by brewmaster Linus Hall, and has since expanded operations and won several awards.
website: http://yazoobrew.com/
WECV is a radio station operated by Bott Radio Network, with a Christian talk/teaching format.
website: http://www.bottradionetwork.com/stations/tennessee/nashville/
WHPY-FM (94.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Bellevue, Tennessee, and serving the Nashville metropolitan area. It simulcasts a classic hits radio format with sister station WYGI 1430 AM Madison. They are owned by Kensington Digital Media and are known as "Hippie Radio." The stations focus on the "hippie era," playing the hits of the 1960s, 70s and 80s.
website: http://www.hippieradio945.com/
WLVU (97.1 MHz) is an FM radio station licensed to the city of Belle Meade, Tennessee, but serving the Nashville market as a whole. It is currently branded as K-LOVE, repeating a satellite-delivered contemporary Christian format. The station is owned by Educational Media Foundation and is one of the two flagship of the K-Love brands based in nearby Franklin, Tennessee. (The other Station being WLVN in Woodbury, Tennessee) It is Nashville's most recent full-power FM station to take the air.
website: http://www.klove.com/
WNXP (91.1 FM) is a public radio station in Nashville, Tennessee, airing an adult album alternative (AAA) radio format. The station is owned by Nashville Public Radio, the licensee of Nashville's main NPR member station, WPLN-FM, with studios for both outlets located on Mainstream Drive north of downtown Nashville. WNXP holds periodic on-air fundraisers to support the station, which is non-commercial.
website: http://wpln.org/music
Holy Trinity Church (also known as Church of the Holy Trinity) is a historic Episcopal church at 615 6th Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee, currently a parish of the Episcopal Diocese of Tennessee. The congregation was formed in 1849 as a mission of the nearby Christ Church Episcopal, attained parish status in 1851, and grew to around fifty members per service by the beginning of the American Civil War. During the war, the church was occupied by Federal troops and was badly damaged. After repairs, services continued and a new mission was opened on Wharf Avenue, which catered to the African American population of Nashville and soon overtook Holy Trinity in membership. After Holy Trinity lost parish status in 1895, the two missions merged and continued to serve the African American community of Nashville. Its congregation was largely made up of faculty and students from nearby Fisk University and other educational institutions. The mission reattained parish status in 1962, and the current rector is Bill Dennler.
Street address: 615 6th Ave., S., Nashville, TN 37203 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 72001234
WMDB (880 AM) is a Regional Mexican-formatted radio station in Nashville, Tennessee. The station's power is 2,500 watts during the daytime hours. The station is currently owned by Mahan Janbakhsh, through licensee TBLC Media #2, LLC. Nighttime power is reduced to 2 watts to protect the signal of WHSQ in New York, New York. WHSQ is the dominant Class A signal on 880 AM.
website: http://laranchera880.com
WNAH (1360 AM, "Power Gospel") is a radio station broadcasting an urban gospel radio format, with some Christian talk and teaching programming. Licensed to Nashville, Tennessee, United States, the station is currently owned by Hoyt M. Carter, Jr.
website: http://www.wnah.com/
Wabash Cannonball was a steel roller coaster at the now-defunct Opryland USA theme park in Nashville, Tennessee. Built by Arrow Development in 1975, it was the second roller coaster added to the park following the Timber Topper. Located in the State Fair section of the park, the ride was built in an area previously occupied by the park's buffalo exhibit.
WRVW (107.5 FM) is a radio station licensed to the city of Lebanon, Tennessee, but serving the nearby Nashville market. It is currently branded as 107.5 The River, broadcasting a Top 40 (CHR) format, and has become something of a heritage station for Top-40 music in middle Tennessee. It is owned by iHeartMedia and operates out of studios in the "Music Row" area. Its transmitter is located just north of downtown Nashville.
website: http://www.1075theriver.com
WENO (760 AM) is a radio station operating in the Nashville, Tennessee market. It is currently programmed with a conservative talk radio format and has a power of 1,000 watts; operation is limited to daytime hours to prevent interference to WJR, Detroit.
website: http://760thegospel.com/
WNFN (106.7 FM, "Y'all 106.7") is a classic country formatted radio station in the Nashville, Tennessee market. Its transmitter site is in Whites Creek, Tennessee and its studios are in Berry Hill, Tennessee.
website: http://i1067.com
WQQK (92.1 FM) is an urban adult contemporary radio station broadcasting in the Nashville, Tennessee. Its transmitter site is in Goodlettsville, Tennessee (its city of license), and its studios are located in Nashville's Music Row district.
website: http://www.92qnashville.com/
WGFX (104.5 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Gallatin, Tennessee, and serving the Nashville metropolitan area. It is branded as 104.5 The Zone, broadcasting a sports radio format. It is owned by Cumulus Media, with studios in Nashville's Music Row district. Most of its daytime schedule has local hosts, with programming from Fox Sports Radio heard nights and weekends.
website: http://www.1045thezone.com/, http://1045thezone.com
WCJK (96.3 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Murfreesboro, Tennessee and serving the Nashville metropolitan area. It airs an adult hits radio format and is owned by Midwest Communications, Inc. It subscribes to the nationally syndicated Jack FM service.
website: http://www.963jackfm.com/
WKDA (900 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Big Band format. Licensed to Lebanon, Tennessee, United States, the station serves the Nashville area. The station is owned by Wilson County Broadcasting, Inc.
website: http://radioluz900am.net/main/
WLAC (1510 AM) is a commercial radio station in Nashville, Tennessee. Owned by iHeartMedia, it broadcasts a talk radio format. The studios are in Nashville's Music Row district. It identifies itself as "TalkRadio 98.3 and 1510 WLAC" using the dial position of its FM translator at 98.3 MHz, as well as its AM frequency.
website: http://www.wlac.com/
WNAB (channel 58) is a television station in Nashville, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with the digital multicast network Dabl. It is owned by Tennessee Broadcasting, which maintains an outsourcing agreement with Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner of WZTV (channel 17) and WUXP-TV (channel 30), for the provision of certain services. The stations share studios on Mainstream Drive along the Cumberland River; WNAB's transmitter is located along I-24 in Whites Creek.
website: http://www.cw58.tv/
WWCR is a shortwave radio station located in Nashville, Tennessee, in the United States. WWCR uses four 100 kW transmitters to broadcast on about a dozen frequencies.
website: http://www.wwcr.com/
WYGI (1430 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Madison, Tennessee, and serving the Nashville metropolitan area. WYGI and sister station WHPY-FM simulcast a classic hits radio format. They are owned by Kensington Digital Media and are known as "Hippie Radio." The stations focus on the "hippie era," playing the hits of the 1960s, 70s and 80s.
Lake Palmer was a man-made lake in Nashville between 16th Ave and 17th Ave, south of Hayes St and north of West End Ave. This was the proposed location of a long-mooted mixed-use construction project near downtown Nashville that failed to materialize for over ten years. Conceived by Nashville-based Alex S. Palmer & Company, the project was originally planned to open in 2007 as the West End Summit, a $300 million project for office space and apartments.
The Tennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC) is located in the James K. Polk Cultural Center at 505 Deaderick Street in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. It occupies a city block between 5th and 6th Avenues North and Deaderick and Union Streets. The cultural center adjoins the 18-story James K. Polk State Office Building.
St. Patrick's Catholic Church and Rectory is a historic building at 1219 2nd Avenue, S. in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was built in 1890 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
NRHP reference number: 84003516
Sulphur Dell, formerly known as Sulphur Spring Park and Athletic Park, was a baseball park in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was located just north of the Tennessee State Capitol building in the block bounded by modern-day Jackson Street, Fourth Avenue North, Harrison Street, and Fifth Avenue North. The ballpark was home to the city's minor league baseball teams from 1885 to 1963. The facility was demolished in 1969.
The Tennessee Department of Children's Services (TDCS) is a state agency of Tennessee that operates services for children and youth. It is currently headquartered on the tenth floor of the UBS Tower in Nashville. The current commissioner is Margie Quin, who assumed office on September 1, 2022.
website: https://www.tn.gov/dcs
Rocketown is a 40,000-square-foot (3,700 m2) facility with entertainment space, a coffee bar, and indoor skate park, located in Nashville, Tennessee. First opening in Franklin, TN in 1994-95 by contemporary Christian music artist Michael W. Smith, Rocketown was created as a safe, drug and alcohol free place for teenagers to hang out. After closing its building for a brief period, it re-opened in 2003 in downtown Nashville.
website: http://www.rocketown.com/
The Sheraton Nashville Downtown Hotel is a high-rise hotel and restaurant in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. Sheraton Nashville Downtown’s multimillion-dollar transformation was conceptualized by New York–based designer Anna Busta. The Sheraton is the 12th tallest building in Nashville, with 27 stories and a height of 300 ft (91 m).
Cannery Hall is the largest independent music venue in Nashville. Anchoring Cannery Row, just outside of downtown Nashville’s lower Broadway and “The Gulch,” Cannery Hall is located in the Station District. The historic building dates to 1883 and has been a music venue for over 40 years. Highlighting music across all genres, Cannery Hall’s three stages include the Mainstage (1,275), The Mil (550), and Row One Stage (300). On the top floor of Cannery Hall sits Amaranth, an event center with beautiful views of downtown Nashville.
The Station Inn is a concert venue in Nashville, Tennessee that hosts bluegrass music acts. Frommers wrote that it is "widely regarded as one of the best bluegrass venues around". The small nightclub has a reputation for being a simple building, located near Music Row in proximity to Nashville's major country music recording studios and related businesses, where local and national bluegrass artists and fans convene.
website: http://www.stationinn.com/
The Tennessee Theatre was a 2,028 seat, single screen movie and stage theater at 535 Church Street, in Nashville, Tennessee was opened on February 28, 1952. It was built with the designs of architect Joseph W. Holman in the shell of the 11-story, Art Deco Sudekum Building, also known as Warner building, that was completed in 1932, The theater was demolished in the 1980s. The high rise office building was imploded on November 29, 1992 The Cumberland Apartment high-rise now sits on the site. The theater hosted the first Grammy Awards ceremony not held in either Los Angeles or New York City in 1973 — it would be 49 years until the Grammys were held outside those two cities (Las Vegas).
Street address: 535 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
The Third Baptist Church in Nashville, Tennessee, which has also been known as Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church and Parsonage, is a historic church at 906 and 908 Monroe Street.
NRHP reference number: 79002427
Street address: 100 Centerview Drive, Suite 250, Nashville, TN, 37214-3439 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.artinstitutes.edu/nashville/
Travellers Rest, also known as Golgotha, is a former plantation and historic plantation house, located in Nashville, Tennessee. The first owner of the site was John Overton in 1796, who built the first family home in 1799. For many years this plantation was worked and maintained by enslaved Black people.
NRHP reference number: 69000179
The SunTrust Plaza is a 13-story building located next to the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. The building was completed in 2007 and features a Panera Bread restaurant and a fitness center.
Tulip Grove is an antebellum house built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson, who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970.
NRHP reference number: 70000607
Nashville's Union Station is a former railroad terminal designed by Richard Montfort, chief engineer of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad (L&N), and built between 1898 and 1900 to serve the passengers of the eight railroads that provided passenger service to Nashville, Tennessee, at the time, but principally the L&N. Built just west of the downtown area, it was spanned by a viaduct adjacent to the station and positioned to the east and above a natural railroad cut, through which most of the tracks in the area were routed. The station was also used by streetcars prior to their discontinuance in Nashville in 1941.
NRHP reference number: 69000178; website: https://www.marriott.com/hotels/travel/bnaak-union-station-hotel-autograph-collection/
The Maxwell House Hotel was a major hotel in downtown Nashville. Because of its stature, seven US Presidents and other prominent guests stayed there over the years. It was built by Colonel John Overton Jr. and named for his wife, Harriet (Maxwell) Overton. The architect was Isaiah Rogers.
The Lockeland Springs historic neighborhood is a turn-of-the-20th-century streetcar suburb two miles northeast of downtown Nashville, Tennessee, in East Nashville.
Joelton Air Force Station (ADC ID: SM-145) is a closed United States Air Force General Surveillance Radar station. It is located 8.3 miles (13.4 km) west of Goodlettsville, Tennessee. It was closed in 1960.
USGS GNIS ID: 2087769
Street address: 1800 Ninth Ave. North, Nashville, TN 37208 (from Wikidata)
website: https://schools.mnps.org/jones-paideia-elementary-magnet-school
The James K. Polk State Office Building is a 24-story, 392-foot (119 m) building in Nashville, Tennessee. Completed in 1981, the building was constructed on the site of the Andrew Jackson Hotel and is home to offices for state employees, the Tennessee State Museum's collection, and the Tennessee Performing Arts Center.
Broadway is a major thoroughfare in the downtown area in Nashville, Tennessee. It includes Lower Broadway, a tourist and entertainment district renowned for honky tonks and live country music. The Broadway Historic District or Honky Tonk Highway was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on July 18, 1980.
Martin Luther King Jr. Academic Magnet for Health Sciences and Engineering at Pearl High School (or simply MLK Magnet) is a public magnet high school located in Nashville, Tennessee. MLK includes grades 7–12, and students enter through a lottery process similar to the other magnet schools in Nashville.
Street address: 613 17th Avenue North (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 02000828; website: https://schools.mnps.org/martin-luther-king-jr-academic-magnet-high-school
The Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute, originally known as the Tennessee Hospital for the Insane and later as the Central State Hospital for the Insane, was a psychiatric hospital located in Nashville, Tennessee.
USGS GNIS ID: 1305832
The School of Dentistry is a dental school within Meharry Medical College located in the United States city of Nashville, Tennessee.
website: http://www.mmc.edu/education/dentistry/
Herschel Greer Stadium was a Minor League Baseball park in Nashville, Tennessee, on the grounds of Fort Negley, an American Civil War fortification, approximately two mi (3.2 km) south of the city's downtown district. The facility closed at the end of the 2014 baseball season and remained deserted for over four years until its demolition in 2019. Following an archaeological survey, the land is expected to be reincorporated into Fort Negley Park.
Opryland USA (later called Opryland Themepark and colloquially "Opryland") was a theme park in Nashville, Tennessee. It operated seasonally (generally March to October) from 1972 to 1997, and for a special Christmas-themed engagement every December from 1993 to 1997. During the late 1980s, nearly 2.5 million people visited the park annually. Billed as the "Home of American Music", Opryland USA featured a large number of musical shows along with typical amusement park rides, such as roller coasters. The park was closed and demolished following the 1997 season. On its site was built Opry Mills, an outlet-heavy shopping mall, which opened in 2000.
Meharry Medical College is a private historically black medical school affiliated with the United Methodist Church and located in Nashville, Tennessee. Founded in 1876 as the Medical Department of Central Tennessee College, it was the first medical school for African Americans in the South. While the majority of African Americans lived in the South, they were excluded from many public and private racially segregated institutions of higher education, particularly after the end of Reconstruction.
Street address: 1005 DB Todd Blvd., Nashville, TN, 37208 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.mmc.edu
Old Gym is one of the surviving Victorian buildings that characterized the early style of the Vanderbilt University campus in Nashville, Tennessee. The Old Gym was originally a gymnasium, later served as the Fine Arts Building, and currently houses the university's admissions office.
NRHP reference number: 72001233
Cleveland Hall is an Antebellum mansion in Nashville, Tennessee.
NRHP reference number: 71000821
Riverwood is a privately owned historic house located in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. At 9,200 square-feet it sits on 8 acres of its original 2,500 acres. It has been a wedding and event facility since 1997.
NRHP reference number: 77001264
Scarritt College for Christian Workers was a college associated with the United Methodist Church in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. The campus is now home to Scarritt Bennett Center.
Street address: 19th Avenue South (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 82003965
WFSK-FM (88.1 MHz) is a non-profit radio station in Nashville, Tennessee. Owned and operated by Fisk University, it broadcasts a smooth & contemporary jazz format under the branding "JAZZY 88 Nashville's Jazz Station," WFSK is the first radio station in Nashville to play jazz music on the radio. The station's studios are located inside Dubois Hall and its transmitter are located nearby -- both on campus.
website: http://www.wfskfm.org/
The Consulate-General of Japan, Nashville (在ナッシュビル日本国総領事館, Zai Nasshubiru Nippon-koku Sōryōjikan) is a diplomatic facility of Japan. It is located in Suite 900 of Palmer Plaza in Nashville, Tennessee. Its jurisdiction includes the U.S. states of Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, and Mississippi.
website: http://www.nashville.us.emb-japan.go.jp/itprtop_ja/
WNQM (1300 AM), is a radio station located in Nashville, Tennessee, owned by F. W. Robbert Broadcasting. It airs a Christian radio format calling itself "Nashville Quality Ministries".
website: http://www.1300wnqm.com/
John A. Gupton College is a private 2-year college in Nashville, Tennessee that specializes in mortuary science. Founded in 1946, it awards the Associate of Arts degree in Funeral Service. Gupton College is accredited by both the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools and the American Board of Funeral Service Education. Gupton is located just west of downtown Nashville, in the same building as the Tennessee Funeral Directors Associational Office.
Street address: 1616 Church St, Nashville, TN, 37203-2954 (from Wikidata)
website: http://guptoncollege.edu/, http://www.guptoncollege.edu
Neely's Bend is a major bend in the Cumberland River just northeast of Nashville, Tennessee and south of the Nashville suburb of Madison. This area contains several hundred acres and is some of the most rural land remaining in Davidson County, Tennessee, especially toward its southern end, with several large farms including a major equestrian operation. At the southernmost point is a boat ramp onto the Cumberland, which is the major current feature of Peeler Park, a property of the Metropolitan Nashville Department of Parks and Recreation that is as of 2006 still largely undeveloped. Peeler Park contains a model airplane landing strip and a new greenway. The northern end includes a middle school and an elementary school. The land within the bend is mostly visible from neighborhoods across the river (and atop river bluffs) in Donelson and East Nashville. The area's lack of development is largely due to its lack of accessibility; there is no ferry or bridge across the Cumberland from Neely's Bend into Nashville proper and access to the southern end is only by a narrow two-lane road.
WNVL (1240 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Regional Mexican music format. Licensed to Nashville, Tennessee, United States, the station is currently owned by Mark Janbakhsh, through licensee TBLC Media, LLC.
website: http://www.activa1240.com
The Miles House is a historic building located at 631 Woodland Street in Nashville, Tennessee It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 8, 1978. Since 1978 the Miles House has been cared for by Phillip Miller and is currently home to the Miller Law Offices.
NRHP reference number: 79002424
The Cheatham Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee.
NRHP reference number: 80003787
Hillsboro Village is a neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee, located 3 miles southwest of downtown. Hillsboro Village is governed by the Metropolitan Council of Nashville and Davidson County, due to the fact that the government of Davidson County is consolidated with that of Nashville.
The Belmont Tower and Carillon is an iconic structure on the campus of Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee. The Tower is listed in the National Register of Historic Places as part of the Belmont Mansion registration and is prominently featured in the university logo. The current Belmont University Tower and Carillon chimes each hour from 9:00am–8:00pm.
West Meade is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, United States.
NRHP reference number: 75001750
The Great Train Wreck of 1918 occurred on July 9, 1918, in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Two passenger trains, operated by the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway ("NC&StL"), collided head-on, costing at least 101 lives and injuring an additional 171. It is considered the worst rail accident in U.S. history, though estimates of the death toll of this accident overlap with that of the Malbone Street Wreck in Brooklyn, New York, the same year.
Vanderbilt University (informally Vandy or VU) is a private research university in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Founded in 1873, it was named in honor of shipping and railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt, who provided the school its initial $1 million endowment in the hopes that his gift and the greater work of the university would help to heal the sectional wounds inflicted by the American Civil War. Vanderbilt is a founding member of the Southeastern Conference and has been the conference's only private school since 1966.
Street address: 2101 West End Avenue, Nashville, TN, 37240 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.vanderbilt.edu/
The Philips Plaza is a high-rise office building in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, which was renamed from the Bank of America Plaza in 2018. Philips Plaza is the 20th tallest building in Nashville, with 20 stories and a height of 291 ft (89 m).
Cain-Sloan Co. Inc. was a department store chain based in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was founded in 1903, merged with Allied Stores in 1955, and with Dillard's in 1987. It was a target of the 1960 Nashville sit-ins.
Street address: 501-17 Church Street (from Wikidata)
Cane Ridge Cumberland Presbyterian Church is a historic church in Antioch, Tennessee.
NRHP reference number: 76001770
The American Institute of Parliamentarians (AIP) is a not-for-profit educational organization founded in 1958. The objectives of AIP are to promote the use and teaching of parliamentary procedure, as well as the training and certification of parliamentarians.
The Beacon Center of Tennessee, formerly the Tennessee Center for Policy Research (TCPR), is a non-profit free-market think tank based in Nashville, Tennessee. The Center's research areas include tax and economic policy, education policy, and healthcare policy. The organization is a member of the State Policy Network.
website: http://www.beacontn.org/
One Bellevue Place is a regional shopping, dining, and entertainment complex in southwestern Nashville, Tennessee, specifically in the Bellevue neighborhood. Opened in 1990 as an enclosed regional shopping mall named Bellevue Center, it had capacity for over 90 stores on two floors totaling 848,545 square feet (78,832.4 m2). The mall itself opened in 1990, began showing signs of decline during the early 2000s recession, and closed in 2008. Two of its three anchor tenants continued to operate beyond the mall's closure, but both would eventually vacate the property as well. The entire structure, including the three adjacent anchor buildings and an outparcel, was demolished in 2015. A new mixed-use complex opened on the site in 2017.
The Brick Church Mound and Village Site (40DV39) (also known as the Love Mounds and the Brick Church Pike Mound Site) is a Mississippian culture archaeological site located in Nashville in Davidson County, Tennessee. It was excavated in the late nineteenth century by Frederic Ward Putnam. During excavations in the early 1970s, the site produced a unique cache of ceramic figurines very similar in style to Mississippian stone statuary which are now on display at the Frank H. McClung Museum. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) on May 7, 1973 as NRIS number 73001759 although this did not save the site from being almost totally destroyed by residential development.
NRHP reference number: 73001759
505, previously known as 505 CST and Paramount, is a residential skyscraper in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, located at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Church Street. 505 stands on the location originally intended for the cancelled Signature Tower. The 45-story building is 522 feet (159 m) tall and feature 403,000 sq ft (37,400 m2) of floor space. 505 is the tallest building in Nashville based on occupied floors, and the third tallest overall behind the AT&T Building and the Four Seasons Hotel and Residences. It includes 500 apartment units ranging from under 400 sq ft (37 m2) to more than 4,000 sq ft (370 m2), with an option to later convert the top 175 units to condominiums. Other planned areas include three retail spaces including an 8,000 sq ft (740 m2) ground-level restaurant, a 45,000 sq ft (4,200 m2) amenity level, and 690 parking spaces. It is expected to cost US$169 million. The architect is Solomon Cordwell Buenz.
website: http://505nashville.com/
Antioch is a neighborhood of Nashville located approximately 12 miles (19 km) southeast of Downtown Nashville. It is served by the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County.
Baptist Sports Medicine is a specialized extension of the Baptist Hospital orthopedic program. Baptist Hospital is a part of Ascension Saint Thomas, which also includes Saint Thomas Hospital in Nashville, Middle Tennessee Medical Center in Murfreesboro and Hickman Community Hospital in Centerville.
Meigs School (or currently Meigs Academic Magnet Middle Prep) is a public magnet school located in Nashville, Tennessee.
Street address: 713 Ramsey St. Nashville, TN 37206 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.meigsacademicmagnet.org/
The Tennessee Department of Health (TDH) is the primary agency of state government in Tennessee responsible for public health. Its workforce provides a variety of direct and indirect services to residents and visitors in all 95 counties of the state.
website: https://www.tn.gov/health
The Hattie Cotton Elementary School bombing on September 10, 1957 was a destructive bombing by pro-segregationists of an elementary school in Nashville, Tennessee shortly after it admitted its first African American student in the midst of the Civil Rights Movement. The school is now known as Hattie Cotton STEM Magnet Elementary School, and focuses on science, technology, engineering and math for students in grades kindergarten through five.
Street address: 1033 W Greenwood Ave, Nashville, TN 37206 (from Wikidata)
website: https://schools.mnps.org/hattie-cotton-stem-magnet-elementary-school
Eighth Avenue South Reservoir is a man-made masonry reservoir in Nashville, Tennessee. The reservoir was built on Kirkpatrick's Hill which was the former site of Fort Casino: a Union Army fort in the American Civil War. Completed in 1889, it ruptured in 1912 causing much property damage, and was repaired in 1914. In 1978, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP). The reservoir is the largest and oldest working reservoir supplying water to the city of Nashville, and remains in use as of 2022.
NRHP reference number: 78002578
The Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1916 for the Little Sisters of the Poor, a Roman Catholic order which takes care of the elderly poor. It closed down in 1968, and it was turned into a series of nursing homes until 1998. It was subsequently used by the music industry, including Sony. In 2014, Sony Music sold it to Vanderbilt University for US$12.1 million.
NRHP reference number: 85001608
The James A. Cayce Homes is a housing project in East Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1939-1941 as a white-only community. By the 2000s, it was the lowest-income locality in Nashville. It is the largest housing project in Nashville.
The Confederate Private Monument is a bronze sculpture of a private of the Confederate States Army in Centennial Park, Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Designed by George Julian Zolnay, it was commissioned by the Frank Cheatham Bivouac of the United Confederate Veterans in 1903, laid with Masonic honors in 1907, and dedicated in 1909. It was vandalized in June 2019.
The Nathan Bedford Forrest Statue was a controversial 25 feet (7.6 m) equestrian statue of Confederate Lt. General Nathan Bedford Forrest publicly displayed for 23 years (1998–2021) along an interstate highway near Nashville, Tennessee. The controversial work was located on a narrow strip of private land in Nashville's Crieve Hall area and was visible from the city's Interstate 65 at 701D Hogan Road. It was displayed alongside 13 flags representing the Confederacy and various Southern states. The work, by amateur sculptor Jack Kershaw, was widely mocked by national media for its crude craftsmanship and attracted decades of controversy and repeated vandalism before its removal on December 7, 2021. Critics said the work's distorted facial features bore little resemblance to Forrest himself. The depiction showed Forrest mounted on a rearing horse holding a sword aloft in his right hand and a pistol in his left.
A mass shooting occurred on September 24, 2017, when a gunman opened fire at the Burnette Chapel Church of Christ in Antioch, Tennessee, part of the Greater Nashville area, killing one person and injuring six others.
The Nashville Fairgrounds, also known as The Fairgrounds Nashville and the Tennessee State Fairgrounds, is an entertainment complex in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. The 117-acre (47 ha) site is located southeast of Downtown Nashville on the Nolensville Pike. The historic home of the Tennessee State Fair, today the complex is home to Geodis Park, home of Nashville SC of Major League Soccer, Fairgrounds Speedway, the Tennessee State Fairground Sports Arena, the Nashville Flea Market, and The Nashville Fair. The site is undergoing redevelopment into a mixed-use development spurred by the construction of the soccer stadium with commercial and residential use and a community park. Additionally, there is a plan to renovate and upgrade Fairgrounds Speedway to host NASCAR Cup, Xfinity and Truck Series events in conjunction with Speedway Motorsports.
The Tennessee Confederate Women's Monument, also known as the Tennessee Monument to the Women of the Confederacy or the Monument to Southern Women in War Times, is a bronze statue on the grounds of the Tennessee State Capitol in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
The Lebanon Road Stone Arch Bridge is a historic bridge over Brown's Creek in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was designed by J. A. Jowett, and its construction was completed by the Foster and Creighton Company in 1888. From its construction to 1925, it was used by drivers on Lebanon Road. There is also a water main on the bridge to carry water from a water plant to the Eighth Avenue South Reservoir. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since May 13, 1987.
NRHP reference number: 87000379
The Nathan Bedford Forrest Bust is a bust of Confederate States of America Lt. General and first-era Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard Nathan Bedford Forrest that was prominently displayed in the Tennessee State Capitol in Nashville. On July 23, 2021, the bust was removed, and was relocated to the Tennessee State Museum in a new exhibit that opened four days later.
The Belmont Theatre, also known during its existence as the Norworth Theatre and the Theatre Parisien, was a Broadway theatre located at 125 W. 48th St., New York, New York. It was designed by architect Eugene De Rosa. It was active as a Broadway theatre from 1918 through 1933. It went dark in August 1933 after a revival of St. John Greer Ervine's John Ferguson closed. It did not reopen again until 1936 when it was active for one more year before being sold in 1937. It then operated as a movie theatre, mainly showing foreign language film, until 1951 when the building was demolished.
Street address: 2100 Blakemore Avenue, Nashville, TN 37212 (from Wikidata)
The Grand Lodge Building is a historic building at the intersection of Broadway and 7th Avenue in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. It houses the Grand Lodge of Tennessee of Free and Accepted Masons. In addition to offices, meeting spaces, and a dining hall, the building also contains a Masonic library, museum, a large theatrical auditorium and stage, and a collection of portraits of all the Past Grand Masters of Tennessee.
The National Museum of African American Music (NMAAM) is a museum in Nashville, Tennessee. The museum showcases the musical genres inspired, created, or influenced by African-Americans. Its location at Fifth + Broadway in Downtown Nashville, as opposed to historically-Black Jefferson Street, has been controversial.
Street address: 618 Church St, Suite 130, Nashville, Tennessee 37219 (from Wikidata)
website: https://nmaam.org/
The Ellis Service Station Garage, or Ellis Garage, at 2000 Old Murfreesboro Rd. in Nashville, Tennessee, was built in 1929. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
Street address: 2000 Old Murfreesboro Road (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 91000436
Jefferson Street is a street in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S., which developed as the historic center of the city's African-American community. Three historically black universities are located near here: Fisk University, Meharry Medical College and Tennessee State University. In the 1940s-1960s, it attracted many rock and roll as well as rhythm and blues artists. It was a center for the Nashville sit-ins in the 1960s, but the construction of Interstate 40 across the street in 1968 led to its economic decline. Since 2011, Lorenzo Washington and his staff at the Jefferson Street Sound Museum, the neighborhood community music museum is conserving the musical legacies of the 1940s through 1970s.
The Draper Tower (also known as Centennial Tower and LifeWay Tower) was a high-rise building in Nashville, Tennessee. It was built from 1989 to 1990, and inaugurated in 1991. The building was demolished in 2018.
Samuel Smith was a 15-year-old African-American youth who was lynched by a white mob, hanged and shot in Nolensville, Tennessee, on December 15, 1924. No one was ever convicted of the lynching.
The Sullivan Tower was a high-rise building in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was built between 1940—1953, and demolished in 2018.
On April 22, 2018, a mass shooting occurred at a Waffle House restaurant in the Antioch neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee, United States, when 29-year-old Travis Jeffrey Reinking fatally shot four people and injured two others with an AR-15 style rifle. Another two people were injured by broken glass. Reinking was rushed by an unarmed customer, James Shaw Jr., who wrestled the rifle away and stopped the shooting spree. Reinking was captured on April 23, ending a 34-hour manhunt.
Andrew Jackson State Office Building is a skyscraper in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was designed in the International Style by Taylor & Crabtree, and completed in 1969. Its construction cost $10 million (equivalent to $63.7 million in 2023).
RCA Studio A is a music recording studio in Nashville, Tennessee built and founded in 1965 by Chet Atkins, Owen Bradley and Harold Bradley as an addition to the RCA Victor Studio the company established seven years prior. Together these two studios were oknown simply by the name "RCA Victor Nashville Sound Studios" (or "RCA Studios" for short) and became known in the 1960s for becoming an essential factor and location to the development of the musical production style and sound engineering technique known as the Nashville Sound.
Thrillopolis was a planned amusement park that was to have been built by Themeparks LLC in the early 2000s. The park was announced in 2002, and was projected to open in 2005. Thrillopolis was originally planned to be located at an 82-acre site near Adelphia Coliseum, but after conflicts with the local government, Themeparks LLC planned to build the park in Wilson County. The project was scrapped around 2004–05.
Omohundro Water Treatment Plant is a municipal water treatment plant located in Davidson County, Nashville, Tennessee on Omohundro Drive.
NRHP reference number: 87000380
The James Geddes Engine Company No. 6, at 629 2nd Ave., S., in Nashville, Tennessee, was built in 1884–85. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.
Street address: 629 2nd Avenue South (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 78002580
The Nashville Financial Historic District or Wall Street of the South is a historic district in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on March 20, 2002.
NRHP reference number: 02000232
The Silliman Evans Sr. Memorial Bridges, most commonly referred to as the Silliman Evans Bridge, are a set of steel plate girder bridges which carry Interstate 24 across the Cumberland River in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. Until 2000, the bridges also carried Interstate 65. The bridges consist of two separate spans, which diverge into four separate spans at their southern end.
The Millie E. Hale Hospital was a hospital in Nashville, Tennessee that served African-American patients. It was the first hospital to serve black patients year-round. The hospital was opened by a husband and wife team, Dr. John Henry Hale and Millie E. Hale in July 1916. The couple first turned their home into a hospital that would grow to house 75 patients by 1923. In addition to the hospital, there was a community center and ladies' auxiliary that provided health services and also recreational and charity work to the black community. The hospital also provided parks for children who had no park to use in the Jim Crow era. In 1938, the hospital closed, but some social services continued afterwards.
On December 25, 2020, Anthony Quinn Warner detonated a recreational vehicle (RV) bomb in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, United States, killing himself, injuring eight people and damaging dozens of buildings in the surrounding area. It took place at 166 Second Avenue North between Church Street and Commerce Street at 6:30 am, adjacent to an AT&T network facility, resulting in days-long communication service outages.
The Patsy Cline Museum is a museum that opened on April 7, 2017 on the second floor of the Johnny Cash Museum building on Third Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee. It is home to an extensive collection of Patsy Cline memorabilia as well as real-life artifacts once owned by the country singer, who died in a plane crash in 1963 at the age of 30.
The Lyle H. Fulton Memorial Bridge is a steel plate girder bridge in Nashville, Tennessee that carries Interstate 65 across the Cumberland River. Between the bridge's completion in 1971 and 2000, the route that the bridge carries was designated as Interstate 265, until I-65 was rerouted onto the bridge, replacing that route.
The Second Avenue Commercial District is a historic district in Nashville, Tennessee, consisting of Second Avenue North between Brandon Street and Broadway. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 2, 1972.
NRHP reference number: 72001237
The Fire Hall No. 1 in Nashville, Tennessee, at 1312 3rd Ave. N., was built in 1936. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.
Street address: 1312 3rd Avenue North (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 08000691
The Holly Street Fire Hall, at 1600 Holly St. in Nashville, Tennessee, was built in 1914. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
Street address: 1600 Holly Street (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 82003963
A bronze statue of the Confederate soldier Sam Davis was installed in 1999 at Nashville, Tennessee's Montgomery Bell Academy, in the United States. The sculpture was designed by the local artist Alan LeQuire. Davis had been an student at the Western Military Institute, a predecessor of the Montgomery Bell Academy.
Hatch Show Print is a print shop in Nashville, United States that specializes in printing concert posters using letter press printing and hand-carved wood pieces.
website: https://hatchshowprint.com/
The Music City Grand Prix, known as the Big Machine Music City Grand Prix for sponsorship reasons, is an IndyCar Series race held at the Nashville Street Circuit in Nashville, Tennessee. The race's most notable feature is its 3,578 ft (1,091 m) straightaway across the Korean War Veterans Memorial Bridge, which spans the Cumberland River. The bridge layout makes the track the only one on the IndyCar circuit and one of the few in the world to cross a significant body of water. Marcus Ericsson won the inaugural event in 2021. The Grand Prix is set to host the season finale from 2024 onwards.
On 29 May 2021, a Cessna 501 Citation I/SP crashed into the Percy Priest Lake in Tennessee, United States. All seven occupants died, including Remnant Fellowship Church founder Gwen Shamblin Lara and her husband, actor Joe Lara, who was piloting the aircraft.
The Broadway Historic District or Honky Tonk Highway is a historic district located in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) in 1980.
NRHP reference number: 80003785
University of Nashville was a private university in Nashville, Tennessee. It was established in 1806 as Cumberland College. It existed as a distinct entity until 1909; operating at various times a medical school, a four-year military college, a literary arts (liberal arts) college, and a boys preparatory school. Educational institutions in operation today that can trace their roots to the University of Nashville include Montgomery Bell Academy, an all-male preparatory school; the Vanderbilt University Medical School; Peabody College at Vanderbilt University; and the University School of Nashville, a co-educational preparatory school.
Street address: 724 2nd Avenue, South (from Wikidata)
The John Sevier State Office Building, also known as the Tennessee State Office Building, is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. Located on Tennessee State Capitol grounds, it was designed in the Art Deco architectural style by Emmons H. Woolwine, and completed in 1940. It was named for Governor John Sevier. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since July 13, 2011.
Street address: 6th Ave., N. & Charlotte Avenue (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 11000455
Buena Vista Historic District is a historic neighborhood in Nashville, Tennessee. The district is at Interstate 265 in Tennessee and U.S. Route 41. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on April 24, 1980.
NRHP reference number: 80003786
The James A. Cayce Administration Service Building is a building located in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee in 2019.
The Abner T. Shaw House is a historic mansion in Goodlettsville, Tennessee, U.S. that was built in 1855. It was designed in the Greek Revival architectural style. During the American Civil War of 1861–1865, the house was not burnt down by the Union Army because both Shaw and the Union general were Masons. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 28, 1985.
NRHP reference number: 85000671
The Dr. Richard and Mrs. Margaret Martin House is a historic house in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1956 for Dr. Richard Martin and his wife, Margaret. It was designed by architect Robert Bruce Draper. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 22, 2007.
NRHP reference number: 07000188
Belmont–Hillsboro Historic District is a historic neighborhood in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) ion May 1, 1980. The area homes are now protected by a Belmont-Hillsboro Neighborhood Conservation Zone which creates rules for homeowners within the district.
NRHP reference number: 80003784
Overbrook is a building located in Nashville, Tennessee. The building is now used by Overbrook School and two other schools operated by The Dominican Sisters of St. Cecelia. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) in 1984.
Street address: 4218 Harding Rd. Nashville, Tennessee 37208 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 84003511
The Vanderbilt Divinity School and Graduate Department of Religion (usually Vanderbilt Divinity School) is an interdenominational divinity school at Vanderbilt University, a major research university located in Nashville, Tennessee. It is one of only six university-based schools of religion in the United States without a denominational affiliation that service primarily mainline Protestantism (University of Chicago Divinity School, Harvard Divinity School, Wake Forest University School of Divinity, Yale Divinity School, and Howard University School of Divinity are the others).
Glen Oak is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S..
NRHP reference number: 83004235
The Hall-Harding-McCampbell House is a former plantation and historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 23, 2010.
NRHP reference number: 10000141
St. Cecilia Academy is a historic religious building in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S..
NRHP reference number: 76001772
Bluefields Historic District is a historic neighborhood in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP)on March 22, 2016.
Street address: 2600-2733 Bluefield Avenue, 201-279 Cumberland Circle, 2700-2724 Overhill Circle, 104-165 Spring Valley Drive (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 16000116
Lake Palmer was a man-made lake in Nashville between 16th Ave and 17th Ave, south of Hayes St and north of West End Ave. This was the proposed location of a long-mooted mixed-use construction project near downtown Nashville that failed to materialize for over ten years. Conceived by Nashville-based Alex S. Palmer & Company, the project was originally planned to open in 2007 as the West End Summit, a $300 million project for office space and apartments.
The Hays-Kiser House is a historic house in Antioch, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1795 for Charles Hays, a settler from North Carolina. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since September 10, 1974.
NRHP reference number: 74001906
The Hows-Madden House is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1830 for Rasa Hows, a settler and slaveholder. After he died in 1858, it was inherited by his widow and his sons, including Stephen Hows, who served under Nathan Bedford Forrest in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War of 1861–1865. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since November 23, 1984.
NRHP reference number: 84000324
Robincroft is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1908 for Thomas M. Robinson, the owner of the Robinson McGill Carriage Company, a baby carriage company. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since July 10, 1978.
NRHP reference number: 78002583
Demonbreun's Cave is a cave in Nashville which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) in 1979. The cave was named after a fur trapper named Timothy Demonbreun.
Fifth Avenue Historic District is a historic neighborhood in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) in 1983.
NRHP reference number: 83004234
Fire Hall for Engine Company No. 18 (1930) is a fire station in Nashville, Tennessee. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on May 13, 2016.
Edgefield Historic District is a historic neighborhood in East Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on July 13, 1977.
NRHP reference number: 77001263
Fisk University is a private historically black liberal arts college in Nashville, Tennessee. It was founded in 1866 and its 40-acre (16 ha) campus is a historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Street address: 1000 17th Ave North, Nashville, TN, 37208-4501 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.fisk.edu/
The Vanderbilt Television News Archive, founded in August 1968, maintains a library of televised network news programs. It is a unit of the Jean and Alexander Heard Library of Vanderbilt University, a private research university located in Nashville, Tennessee. It is the world's most extensive and complete archive of television news.
website: http://tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/
Gladstone Apartments is a historic apartment building in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1923 for Morris Fisher, a developer, and it was designed by architect Charles Ferguson. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since June 16, 1983.
NRHP reference number: 83003025
The McCrory-Mayfield House is a historic log house in Brentwood, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1798 by Thomas McCrory, a settler and veteran of the American Revolution. Thomas came to Tennessee to claim some of the land granted by the United States government to his late father, Captain Thomas McCrory who died from wounds inflicted at the Battle of Germantown in 1777.
NRHP reference number: 82001726
The John Geist and Sons Blacksmith Shop and House is a building located in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) in 1980. The business finally closed in 2006. In 2018 the building and site were developed and a restaurant opened in the blacksmith building.
Street address: 311 Jefferson St Nashville, Tennessee 37208 (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 80003792
Whitland Area Neighborhood is a historic neighborhood in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on July 24, 2007.
NRHP reference number: 07000763
The Graduate School manages many of the advanced degree programs of Vanderbilt University, a major research university located in Nashville, Tennessee. While the Graduate School exists as a standalone institution within Vanderbilt, it awards degrees in conjunction with Vanderbilt's other constituent colleges (e.g., the College of Arts and Science or the School of Engineering).
The School of Engineering provides undergraduate and graduate education in engineering and the engineering sciences at Vanderbilt University, a major research university located in Nashville, Tennessee. Founded in 1879, the Vanderbilt School of Engineering is the oldest private school of engineering in the American South. The school has an exceptionally high percentage of female engineers, 41.6%, compared to a national average of 22.5%.
website: http://www.engineering.vanderbilt.edu
The Alexander Ewing House is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. The two-story plantation home was built in 1821 in the Federal architecture style for Alexander Ewing. It is constructed of brick with a stone foundation and a gable roof. Both the north and south side elevations feature a pair of chimneys connected by a parapet wall. The house has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since November 25, 1980.
NRHP reference number: 80003790
Metropolitan Development and Housing Agency (MDHA) (1972) is a government agency in Nashville, Tennessee. The original agency was formed in 1938 and it was called the Nashville Housing Authority (NHA). The goal of the MDHA is to provide affordable housing for low income families. The agency also provides business and personal training to residents of low income housing.
Buchanan's Station was a fortified stockade established around 1784 in Tennessee. Founded by Major John Buchanan, the settlement was located in what is today the Donelson neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee. On September 30, 1792, it was the site of the critical Battle of Buchanan's Station during the Cherokee–American wars of the late eighteenth century. The assault by a combined force of around 300 Chickamauga Cherokee, Muscogee Creek, and Shawnee, nominally led by Chief John Watts, was repelled by 15 gunmen under Major Buchanan defending the station. Although smaller raids continued in the region, it was the last major Native American attack on the American settlements in the Cumberland.
The Benajah Gray Log House is a historic loghouse in Antioch, Tennessee, United States.
NRHP reference number: 85001512
The Hubbard House is a historic house in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1921 by architecture firm McKissack and McKissack for Dr. George W. Hubbard, the then-president of Meharry Medical College, an African-American medical school. It was built on its original campus, and its construction was funded by trustees and alumni.
NRHP reference number: 73001760
Rainbow Ranch is a ranch home located in Madison, Tennessee. The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on November 27, 2018.
Buena Vista Historic District is a historic neighborhood in East Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County, Tennessee (NRHP) on August 1, 1979.
website: http://www.historicgermantown.org/; NRHP reference number: 79002422
On March 27, 2023, a mass shooting occurred at The Covenant School, a Presbyterian Church in America parochial elementary school in the Green Hills neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee when 28-year-old Aiden Hale (born Audrey Elizabeth Hale), a transgender man and former student of the school, killed three nine‑year‑old children and three adults before being shot and killed by two Metropolitan Nashville Police Department (MNPD) officers. It is the deadliest mass shooting in Tennessee history.
Street address: The Covenant Presbyterian School, 33 Burton Hills Blvd, Nashville, Tennessee (from Wikidata)
Kisser is a Japanese restaurant in Nashville, Tennessee. Established in March 2023, the business was included in The New York Times's 2023 list of the 50 best restaurants in the United States. Kisser was a semifinalist in the Best New Restaurant category of the James Beard Foundation Awards in 2024. It was also named of the twenty best new restaurants of 2024 by Bon Appétit.
New Nissan Stadium is a domed American football stadium under construction in Nashville, Tennessee, for use by the Tennessee Titans, succeeding the current Nissan Stadium beginning in 2027.
Paramount Tower is a 750 feet (230 m), 60 story skyscraper under construction in Downtown Nashville, Tennessee. Upon completion, it will be the tallest building in Nashville and the state of Tennessee. It was first announced on October 4, 2021 by long-time Nashville developer Giarratana Development. Construction is expected to start by late 2024 and will be completed by 2027. The building will contain 360 apartments and 140 condos for sale.
Four Seasons Hotel and Residences is a 542-foot (165 m), 40-story skyscraper located in Nashville, Tennessee. The building contains 235 hotel rooms between floors 5 and 14 and another 144 private condominium units on the upper levels.
Alcove is a 419 ft (128 m), 34 story skyscraper in Nashville, Tennessee. Construction started in 2021 and finished in 2023 after originally being proposed in 2020. It is located at the intersection of Ninth and Church Street, adjacent to the Nashville Yards district. The building contains 356 residential units and 375,800 sq ft (34,910 m2) of space. Alcove's design is intended to resemble Amazon boxes stacked on top of each other, referencing the Amazon offices two blocks away.
WNPX-TV (channel 28) is a television station licensed to Franklin, Tennessee, United States, broadcasting the Ion Television network to the Nashville area. It is owned and operated by the Ion Media subsidiary of the E. W. Scripps Company alongside CBS affiliate WTVF (channel 5). WNPX-TV's transmitter is located near Cross Plains, Tennessee.
website: http://www.iontelevision.com/
WSMV-TV (channel 4) is a television station in Nashville, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Gray Television alongside low-power Telemundo affiliate WTNX-LD (channel 29). The two stations share studios on Knob Road in west Nashville, where WSMV-TV's transmitter is also located.
website: https://www.wsmv.com/
WKRN-TV (channel 2) is a television station in Nashville, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with ABC and owned by Nexstar Media Group. The station's studios are located on Murfreesboro Road (U.S. Routes 41 and 70S) on Nashville's southeast side, and its transmitter is located in Forest Hills, Tennessee.
website: http://www.wkrn.com
CoreCivic, Inc. formerly the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), is a company that owns and manages private prisons and detention centers and operates others on a concession basis. Co-founded in 1983 in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas W. Beasley, Robert Crants, and T. Don Hutto, it received investments from the Tennessee Valley Authority, Vanderbilt University, and Jack C. Massey, the founder of Hospital Corporation of America.
website: https://www.corecivic.com/
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) is the state bureau of investigation of the state of Tennessee. It has statutory authority to conduct criminal investigations and make arrests of crimes occurring throughout the state. The bureau is analogous to the FBI on the federal level.
Street address: 901 R.S. Gass Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37216 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.tn.gov/tbi.html
Genesco Inc. is an American publicly owned specialty retailer of branded footwear and accessories and is a wholesaler of branded and licensed footwear based in Nashville, Tennessee. Founded in 1924 as Jarman Shoe Company, a footwear manufacturer, the company changed its name to General Shoe Company in 1931, and became a public company in 1939. By 1957, its stock would be included in the first S&P 500 Index. The company took its current name, Genesco—an acronym derived from its earlier name—in 1959. Genesco exited the business of U.S.-based footwear manufacturing in 2002 and now contracts with independent, third parties located offshore to manufacture its branded and licensed footwear. In June 2011, Genesco acquired U.K. retail chain and web business Schuh, which gave them an already well-established grounding in a market outside of the U.S.
website: http://genesco.com, http://www.genesco.com/
The Schizophrenia International Research Society is an academic organization with a global scope, devoted to the study of schizophrenia and related disorders.
website: http://www.schizophreniaresearchsociety.org
WLLC-LD (channel 42) is a low-power television station in Nashville, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with the Spanish-language networks Univision and UniMás. Owned by JKB Associates, Inc., its transmitter is located atop the Life & Casualty Tower in Nashville's Capitol District.
website: http://bouncetvnashville.com
The Tennessee Historical Society is a historical society for the U.S. state of Tennessee. It was established in 1849. Its founding president from 1849 to 1856 was Nathaniel Cross, a Princeton-educated professor of Ancient Languages at the University of Nashville.
website: http://www.tennesseehistory.org/
The Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security (TDOS), also known as the Tennessee Department of Safety or DOS, is a law enforcement agency serving the U.S. state of Tennessee. The TDOS is made up of three main divisions: the Tennessee Highway Patrol (THP), the Tennessee Driver License Services division, and the Tennessee Office of Homeland Security.
website: https://www.tn.gov/safety.html
Gibson, Inc. (formerly Gibson Guitar Corporation and Gibson Brands Inc.) is an American manufacturer of guitars, other musical instruments, and professional audio equipment from Kalamazoo, Michigan, and now based in Nashville, Tennessee.
website: https://www.gibson.com/
NRHP reference number: 82003964
NRHP reference number: 78002579
Street address: 3500 John A. Merritt Boulevard (from Wikidata)
NRHP reference number: 96000677
website: https://www.vanderbilt.edu/art-museum/
Street address: 2806 Buchanan Street, Nashville, TN (from Wikidata)
Street address: 506 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.tennessee.gov/humanservices/topic/ttap
website: https://tnartscommission.org/
website: https://www.vanderbilt.edu/rpw_center/
The Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame was established in 1970 by the Nashville Songwriters Foundation, Inc. in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. A non-profit organization, its objective is to honor and preserve the songwriting legacy that is uniquely associated with the music community in the city of Nashville. The Foundation's stated purpose is to educate, archive, and celebrate the contributions of the members of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame to the world of music.
The Barbershop Harmony Society, legally and historically named the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America, Inc. (SPEBSQSA), is the first of several organizations to promote and preserve barbershop music as an art form. Founded by Owen C. Cash and Rupert I. Hall in Tulsa, Oklahoma in 1938, the organization quickly grew, promoting barbershop harmony among men of all ages. As of 2014, just under 23,000 men in the United States and Canada were members of this organization whose focus is on a cappella music. The international headquarters was in Kenosha, Wisconsin for fifty years before moving to Nashville, Tennessee in 2007. In June 2018, the society announced it would allow women to join as full members.
website: http://www.barbershop.org
The Rock 'n' Roll Nashville Marathon, previously known as the Country Music Marathon (2000–2015), is an annual marathon, half marathon, and 5K run that has been held in Nashville, Tennessee, since 2000. The marathon is followed by an evening country music concert. Nashville is a major center for the music industry, especially country music, and is commonly known as "Music City"
website: http://www.runrocknroll.com/nashville
The Nashville metropolitan area (officially the Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin, TN Metropolitan Statistical Area) is a metropolitan statistical area in north-central Tennessee. Its principal city is Nashville, the capital of and largest city in Tennessee. With a population of over 2 million, it is the most populous metropolitan area in Tennessee. It is also the largest metropolitan area in Tennessee in terms of land area.
FIPS 6-4 (US counties): 34980
Primitive Baptist Church (The College Street Primitive Baptist Church) is a historic Primitive Baptist church at 627-629 3rd Ave., S. in Nashville, Tennessee.
NRHP reference number: 84003513
Quad Studios Nashville was a four-studio recording facility established as Quadrafonic Sound Studio in 1971 on Music Row in Nashville, Tennessee, US. The studio was the location of numerous notable recording sessions, including Neil Young's Harvest, Jimmy Buffett's "Margaritaville", Joan Baez' "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down", and Dobie Gray's "Drift Away". The studio's location has been the home of Sienna Recording Studios since 2014.
Disciples Divinity House at Vanderbilt is a graduate institution associated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and the Vanderbilt University Divinity School.
website: http://www.discipleshousevandy.org/
Green Hills is an affluent neighborhood in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Green Hills is located south of downtown Nashville on Hillsboro Pike (U.S. Highway 431/Tennessee State Route 106).
Donelson Christian Academy is a private, K-12 Christian school located in the Donelson neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee.
website: http://www.dcawildcats.org
The Curb Event Center is a multipurpose arena on the campus of Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.
E. S. Rose Park is a baseball, softball, soccer, and track & field venue in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It is home to Nashville Union FC and Belmont Bruins baseball, softball, men's and women's soccer, and men's and women's track & field teams of the NCAA Division I Ohio Valley Conference. It is located approximately five minutes from Belmont University's main campus. The city-owned park was renovated extensively in 2010–2011.
Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens is a cemetery noted for the number of musicians' graves located within it. It was established in 1960, and is located at 1150 Dickerson Pike in Goodlettsville, Tennessee, just north of Nashville. One area of the cemetery is designated as "Music Row" for the number of country music entertainers that are interred there, including three musicians who died in the 1963 plane crash with Patsy Cline as well as singer Jack Anglin who died in a car accident on his way to her funeral.
website: https://www.dignitymemorial.com/funeral-homes/goodlettsville-tn/forest-lawn-funeral-home-memorial-gardens/4880
Gentry Complex is a multi-purpose facility on the main campus of Tennessee State University (TSU) in Nashville, Tennessee. Opened in 1980 and named for Howard C. Gentry Sr., a long-time professor, coach and athletic director at TSU, the building houses the university's Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and also contains an arena, dance studio, indoor track, Olympic swimming pool, racquetball courts, and the training and weight room. The 9,100-seat arena is home to the TSU Tigers men's basketball team. The Gentry Complex replaced Kean Hall Gymnasium, nicknamed "Kean's Little Garden," which had been their home for 27 years.
Harpeth Hall School is a private, college-preparatory school for girls in the Green Hills neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Its beginning dates back to 1865 as a seminary for young ladies. After various mergers and name changes, the antecedent school closed in 1951, leading to the founding of the present school. The campus consists of a middle school and high school on a 40-acre (16 ha) site.
website: http://www.harpethhall.org
Cornelia Fort Airpark (FAA LID: M88) was a privately owned, public-use airport located five nautical miles (9 km) northeast of the central business district of Nashville, in Davidson County, Tennessee, United States. It was located on Cumberland River bottomland. It is named in honor of Nashvillian, Cornelia Fort, the first female pilot to be killed on war duty in American history. The airpark was built in 1945 near the Fort family farm. The 141-acre airport was located on part of a plot of land granted to early Nashvillian Ephraim McLean for service in the Revolutionary War, near what is still known as McLean's Bend in the Cumberland River in East Nashville. The airport operated from 1944 until 2011, when the city of Nashville acquired it to include it as non-aviation part of Shelby Park.
USGS GNIS ID: 1301407; FAA airport code: M88
The First American Cave is an archaeological and paleontological site in downtown Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee. The site was initially recognized in 1971 during construction of the foundations for the First American National Bank building at 315 Deaderick Street, when workers noticed a collection of bones being unearthed within a pocket of dirt approximately 30 feet below ground surface. Excavations were halted and both the Vanderbilt University Department of Anthropology and the Southeastern Indian Antiquities Survey were notified of the find. It was subsequently determined that the bones included those of humans, as well as a number of animal species, including a saber-tooth cat. The dirt pocket from which the bones had been disinterred was in fact a filled in cave, most of which had been destroyed by construction. The Southeastern Indian Antiquities Survey was given permission to excavate within the remaining portion of the cave with the assistance of Vanderbilt University students.
Street address: 221 5th Ave N, Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 239 5th Ave N. Nashville, TN 37219 (from Wikidata)
FAA airport code: TN55; USGS GNIS ID: 1301397
website: https://woodlandnash.org/
Street address: 918 Eighth Avenue South (from Wikidata)
Street address: 2007 Old Lebanon Road, Donelson, TN 37214 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 3430 Lebanon Pike, Hermitage, TN 37076 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 111 N. Gallatin Parkway, Madison, TN 37115 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1020 S. Gallatin Pike, Madison, TN 37115 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 3930 Clarksville Pike, Nashville, TN 37220 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 1081 Murfreesboro Pike, Nashville, TN 37217 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 3201 Dickerson Pike, Nashville, TN 37207 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 11 Vaughns Gap Road, Nashville, TN 37205 (from Wikidata)