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This is a list of hospitals in Nashville, Tennessee , sorted alphabetically. This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (June 2017) Hospitals ...
The Rachel Jackson State Office Building, also known as the Rachel Jackson Building, is an eight-story building in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. [1] It was built on the site of the 1925 Cotton States Building, [2] and completed in 1985. [3] It was designed in the modernist style by Taylor & Crabtree. [4]
Nashville Business Journal. August 26, 2008. "A conversation with Bernie Sherry, president, CEO of Baptist Hospital". Nashville Business Journal. July 1, 2007. "Baptist Hospital kicks off chapel construction". Nashville Business Journal. May 22, 2007. "Titans give Baptist $500,000 grant". Nashville City Paper.
The Tuscumbian of Tuscumbia, Alabama, printed a description of "General Jackson's Military Road" on November 12, 1824. It states its length at 436 miles (Nashville to Madisonville) or 516 miles (Nashville to New Orleans), 200 miles (320 km) shorter than the historic Natchez Trace. The article describes the construction gang as averaging 300 ...
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. [ 1 ] Its construction cost $10 million (equivalent to $63.7 million in 2023 [ 2 ] ).
June 14, 2013 (1800 Baptist World Center Dr. Nashville: 5: Archeological Site 40DV307: March 12, 2015 (Address Restricted: Nashville: 6: Archeological Site No. 40DV35
The William R. Snodgrass Tennessee Tower (also known as the Tennessee Tower) is a skyscraper in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, that houses Tennessee government offices. The tower was built for the National Life and Accident Insurance Company and served as its National Life Center until the State of Tennessee acquired it on January 3, 1994. More ...
In 1845, the patient Green Grimes wrote the book A Secret Worth Knowing, extolling the hospital. [1]After visiting Tennessee's first mental health facility, the Tennessee Lunatic Asylum, in November 1847, Dorothea Dix urged the state legislature to replace the unfit facility. [2]