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The Nashville Zoo at Grassmere is a zoological garden and historic plantation farmhouse located 6 miles (9.7 km) southeast of Downtown Nashville. As of 2014, [update] the zoo was middle Tennessee's top paid attraction and contained 3,736 individual animals, encompassing 352 species. [ 7 ]
Plantation house on the property that is now the site of the Nashville Zoo 81: Benajah Gray Log House: Benajah Gray Log House: July 11, 1985 : 446 Battle Rd. Antioch: 82: Gymnasium, Vanderbilt University
Free Hill Rd., east of State Route 52 36°33′46″N 85°29′13″W / 36.562639°N 85.486944°W / 36.562639; -85.486944 ( Free Hills Rosenwald Free Hill
University of Tennessee Farm Site: 40AN2 Archaic, Mississippian 1960 Brushy Valley Site: 40AN3 1960 Holt Site: 40AN4 1961 County Farm/Braden Branch Site: 40AN5 1960 Worthington Branch Site: 40AN6 Freels Bend Site: 40AN8 1960 Hawkins Cave Site: 40AN14 1934 Johnson Farm Site: 40AN15 Mississippian 1934 Taylor Farm Site: 40AN16 1934 Lea Farm Site ...
Travellers Rest, also known as Golgotha, [2] 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. [2] For many years this plantation was worked and maintained by enslaved Black people. [3] [4]
Belmont Mansion, also known as Acklen Hall, and originally known as Belle Monte, Belle Mont or Belmont, is a historic mansion located in Nashville, Tennessee.It was built by Joseph and Adelicia Acklen to serve as the center of their 180-acre summer estate in what was then country outside the city, and featured elaborate gardens and a zoo.
Donelson is a neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee, about 6 mi (10 km) east of downtown Nashville along U.S. Route 70. [1] It is named in honor of John Donelson, co-founder of Nashville and father-in-law of Andrew Jackson, Nashvillian and seventh President of the United States.
The Hermitage is a historical museum located in Davidson County, Tennessee, United States, 10 miles (16 km) east of downtown Nashville in the neighborhood of Hermitage.The 1,000-acre (400 ha)+ site was owned by President Andrew Jackson, the seventh president of the United States, from 1804 until his death at the Hermitage in 1845.