NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Known as the Athens of the South,
Nashville is the capital of Tennessee,
the seat of Davidson County, the location
of the Grand Ole Opry, and home to no
less than 16 institutions of higher
education. It is located in central
Tennessee on the Cumberland River. Since
governmental functions of both Nashville
and Davidson County were consolidated in
1963, Nashville is more properly known as
Nashville-Davidson.Downtown Nashville
is on the west side of the Cumberland
River and is dominated by the State
Capitol. The Capitol is of classical
Greek design with a tower in the center.
James K. Polk, the 11th president of the
United States, is buried on the Capitol
grounds. Not far from the Capitol is Fort
Nashborough, the origin of the modern
city. In Centennial Park, southwest of
downtown, is a full-scale replica of the
Parthenon, built in 1897. The Hermitage,
home and burial place of Andrew Jackson,
is 12 miles (19 kilometers) east of the
city center. Other historic buildings
include Travelers' Rest, built in 1792 by
a law partner of Andrew Jackson, and
Belle Meade Mansion, a plantation home
built in 1853 on one of the first
Thoroughbred horse farms in the United
States.
Nashville's
industries produce such products as
aircraft wings, automobile glass,
clothing, shoes, heating and cooking
equipment, tires, and chemicals.
Publishing is represented by such firms
as the United Methodist Publishing House
and the National Baptist Publishing
Board. The Grand Ole Opry has helped make
Nashville the center of the country music
industry. A theme park, Opryland USA, was
opened outside Nashville in 1974 as the
new headquarters of the Grand Ole Opry.
Government is also a major employer.
Contributing
to Nashville's reputation as the Athens
of the South are its many educational
institutions, many of which are
affiliated with religious denominations.
These include Aquinas Junior College,
Belmont College, David Lipscomb College,
and Fisk University. Other major
institutions include Vanderbilt
University, Tennessee State University,
and Nashville State Technical Institute.
Nashville is also home to NFL's Tennessee
Titans and NHL's Nashville Predators.
Nashville
dates from 1779, when a group of settlers
under James Robertson built Fort
Nashborough (named for Revolutionary War
general Francis Nash) on the Cumberland
River. These settlers were joined a year
later by other families under the
leadership of John Donelson. The
settlement around the fort was
incorporated as a town in 1784 and as a
city in 1806. Nashville became the
permanent state capital in 1843 and was
occupied by Federal troops in 1862. The
last major battle of the American Civil
War was fought outside the city in
December 1864.
In 1963
the city and county voted to consolidate,
and since then the metropolitan
government of Nashville and Davidson
County has governed the area. The county
elects a mayor and vice-mayor and a
40-member Metropolitan County Council.
Population, city (1990 census), 510,784;
metropolitan area 985,026.
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