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  1. Website. nashville .gov. Nashville is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Tennessee and the county seat of Davidson County. Located in Middle Tennessee, it had a population of 689,447 at the 2020 U.S. census.

  2. Welcome to the Nashville Wiki, a collaborative encyclopedia for everything and anything related to Nashville. There are 845 articles and we are still growing since this wiki was founded. The wiki format allows anyone to create or edit any article, so we can all work together to create a comprehensive database for the Nashville franchise.

  3. Oct 8, 2017 · Nashville (Metropolitan Nashville/ Davidson County) Written by Ophelia Paine and John Lawrence Connelly. 5 minutes to read. With a population of 545,524 in 2000, Nashville is the capital of Tennessee and a national business, transportation, and tourism center for the United States.

    • Prehistory
    • Early History
    • Fort Nashborough
    • Early Statehood
    • Capital of Tennessee
    • Civil War
    • After The Civil War
    • Recent History
    • Recent Economic Development
    • Further Reading

    The first known settlers in the area of modern Nashville were Native Americans who arrived in the region by at least 13,000 BC during the Paleoindian period of regional prehistory. For millennia the descendants of these first Tennesseans continued to live along the river terraces and uplands overlooking the Cumberland River, leaving behind a dense ...

    There is no reliable historical or archaeological evidence for Native American presence in the Nashville area from 1500 through the late 1600s. The region between the Ohio and Tennessee Rivers was a hunting ground for many tribes, and while the Shawnee occupied the area in the later part of the 17th century, by 1700 they were being challenged by th...

    John Buchanan Sr., born in either Scotland or Ireland, migrated with his family from their home in Cumberland Co., Pennsylvania, to the Watauga Valley, Washington District of North Carolina. Afterward, they took a long horseback trek to Kentucky, left their women and traveled down to the Cumberland Settlements in late 1778, building a station on th...

    After the failed experiment of the State of Franklin, North Carolina ceded its land from the Allegheny Mountains to the Mississippi River to the federal government. In 1796, that territory was admitted to the union as the state of Tennessee. Nashville at that time was still a small settlement in a vast wilderness, but its central location and statu...

    More than 30 years after receiving its charter, Nashville was selected as the permanent capital of Tennessee on October 7, 1843. Several towns across Tennessee were nominated; all received votes, but Nashville and Charlotte were the top contenders. Nashville won by only one vote. Previously, the cities of Kingston (for one day) and Knoxville in Eas...

    Tennessee was the last state to join the Confederacy on June 24, 1861, when Governor Isham G. Harris proclaimed "all connections by the State of Tennessee with the Federal Union dissolved, and that Tennessee is a free, independent government, free from all obligations to or connection with the Federal Government of the United States of America." Na...

    After the Civil War, Nashville quickly grew into an important trade center. Its population rose from 16,988 in 1860 to 80,865 by 1900. African-Americans increased from being 23 to 38 percent of the population between 1860 and 1870. Meanwhile, the Nashville chapter of the Ku Klux Klan was established by Confederate veteran John W. Morton, who initia...

    In 1949, the city administration claimed 96 acres in Hell's Half Acre, a black neighborhood northwest of the state capital that housed the poorest African-Americans in the city. The city administration justified it by saying they would rid the city of vice, as the place was then known for saloons, prostitution, and other vices but also housed some ...

    On January 8, 2013, The New York Times declared Nashville "It" city in a publication titled "Nashville's Latest Hit Could Be the City Itself".This article is widely thought to have spurred new growth and construction in Nashville, ultimately leading to Nashville being declared the 5th fastest growing city in America by the end of 2013. On May 28, 2...

    Carey, Bill (2000). Fortunes, Fiddles, & Fried Chicken: A Nashville Business History. Franklin, Tennessee: Hillsboro Press. ISBN 1-57736-178-4.
    Chaney, James. "The formation of a Hispanic enclave in Nashville, Tennessee." Southeastern Geographer 50.1 (2010): 17-38 online[dead link].
    Doyle, Don H. (1985). New Men, New Cities, New South: Atlanta, Nashville, Charleston, Mobile, 1860–1910 excerpt and text search
    Doyle, Don H. (1985). Nashville Since the 1920s
  4. But when you're on top, you have to fight to stay there." Nashville is an American musical drama television series created by Academy Award winner Callie Khouri and produced by R. J. Cutler, Callie Khouri and Steve Buchanan. The series stars Connie Britton and Hayden Panettiere.

  5. Feb 23, 2024 · Nashville [1] is a city in Davidson County and the capital of the American state of Tennessee, as well as being the state's largest city.

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