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September 28, 2017 By Bob Henderson Leave a Comment

Fort Johnson

Fort Johnson 360° Virtual Tour:

 

Updated: 28 September 2017

Tennessee State Capitol Building: 698 Charlotte Avenue, Nashville Tennessee

The Greek Revival building was designed by William Strickland. It is one of many Nashville’s examples of Greek Revival architecture. The cornerstone of the capitol was laid on July 4, 1845 and the building was completed fourteen years later in 1859.

fort-johnson-image

“Fort Johnson (1863-1865) – A U.S. Civil War Fort established in 1863 in Nashville, Tennessee. The Tennessee State capital building was re-named Fort Johnson after Andrew Johnson, the military governor of Tennessee. The building was abandoned by US troops in 1867 after the end of the war and after Tennessee had returned to the Union. Also known as Capitol Redoubt and Camp Andy Johnson.”

More tours

Recommended Reading:

#fortjohnson #capital #tn #virtualtour

© Bob Henderson | Athens-South

Filed Under: Forts, Nashville, Tennessee, Virtual Tour

September 7, 2017 By Bob Henderson Leave a Comment

Minnesota Monument

Battle of Nashville:

The Nashville National Cemetery Minnesota Monument in 3D.

*the model takes a moment to render

Minnesota Monument by Aerial 3D360 on Sketchfab

More Minnesotans died in the Battle of Nashville, the last major battle of the Civil War, than any other. 150 years later, a delegation travelled to Nashville to explore the roles of Minnesota regiments in the decisive Battle of Nashville in December 1864.

USCT Monument

Shy’s Hill Virtual Tour

Minnesota State Capitol Virtual Tour

Filed Under: Nashville, Tennessee, Virtual Tour

September 2, 2017 By Bob Henderson Leave a Comment

Spring Hill Cemetery

Spring Hill Cemetery in Nashville:

The Nashville National Cemetery actually has it’s origins from the Spring Hill Cemetery in Madison Tennessee.

The history of Spring Hill dates back to the 1780s when the first settlers moved in from the Cumberland settlement into an area six miles east of Nashville called Haysboro. The land offered fertile soil for their crops and a plentiful steady water source from several springs. Needing a church and school, James Robertson persuaded the Princeton educated Reverend Thomas B. Craighead of Mecklenburg, North Carolina, to move to Haysboro as a preacher and teacher. With a promise of 640 acres of land he arrived in 1785. The settlers had built a log house on the property for him and his family.

Spring Hill Cemetery is a cemetery located at 5110 Gallatin Pike South in the Nashville, Tennessee neighborhood of Madison, Tennessee.

Prior to the establishment of the cemetery, the Davidson Academy (a precursor to the University of Nashville) was located in a stone house at this location.[1]

In addition to two British Royal Air Force veterans of World War II[2] and circus performer Ella Harper,[3] the cemetery is the final resting place for numerous notable music performers including the following:

  • Bobby Hebb: soul singer, songwriter, musician, recording artist, performer
  • Earl Scruggs: bluegrass musician
  • Floyd Cramer: piano legend
  • George Morgan: singer
  • Hank Snow: singer
  • Jimmy Martin: bluegrass singer
  • John Hartford: singer, fiddler
  • Keith Whitley: singer
  • Roy Acuff: singer, songwriter, music publisher
  • Kitty Wells: singer

360º of Spring Hill Cemetery:

5110 Gallatin Pike S, Nashville, TN 37216

#springhillcemetery

Filed Under: Cemetery, Nashville, Tennessee

August 29, 2017 By Bob Henderson Leave a Comment

U.S.C.T. Statue

Honoring the United States Colored Infantry (U.S.C.I.)

 

The Civil War Monuments issue should take 180º turn. It’s time to honor the contributions of the 13th USCT in the Battle of Nashville. Fort Negley Park would be ideal for it’s location. The fort was constructed by African Americans, including the USCT. The grounds around the fort were “contraband camps” of Black refugees from around the region. Some may still be buried there.

Fort Negley Park is currently under threat of commercial development.

 The time is now to act and honor this page of American history. Save the park and honor the USCT.

 

USCT Monument by Aerial 3D360 on Sketchfab

 

The 13th USCT

Five color bearers of the 13th U.S.C.I. — carrying a flag with its origin:  “Presented by the Colored Ladies of Murfreesboro” — were shot down before their banner was captured. The regiment lost 40 percent of its men, the highest casualty rate of the battle of Nashville.  

The 13th U.S.C.T. was comprised of 20 officers and 556 men, most of whom had been enslaved in Tennessee. Ordered to assault Peach Orchard Hill during the battle, after many white Union regiments had failed, the 13th U.S.C.T. was slaughtered by the Confederate troops defending the hill. Yet in undertaking this task these freed slaves, untried in fierce combat, won in their deaths the admiration of friend and foe alike…read more

Blood Proof: USCT and the Battle of Nashville

#usct #usci #nashville

 

Filed Under: Nashville, Preservation, Slavery, Tennessee, USCT

August 22, 2017 By Bob Henderson 2 Comments

Mount Olivet

Confederate Circle at Mt. Olivet Cemetery: 

 

1201 Lebanon Pike, Nashville, TN 37210

rebel
9′ Granite Soldier

After the Civil War, women  formed an association to raise funds to purchase a distinct plot of land at the cemetery for the interment of Confederate dead. It was used for the interment of soldiers who had died on nearby battlegrounds and as a memorial to their sacrifice. Women organized such memorial associations and raised money for interment of Southern soldiers in cities across the South and areas where there were concentrations of bodies. The Nashville memorial association arranged for burials of about 1,500 soldiers here. Confederate veterans were also eligible for burial. – Wikipedia 

Confederate Memorial Hall: The chamber was constructed in 1856, when Mount Olivet opened, as a holding vault. Underground, it allowed the deceased to be kept at cooler temperatures. Embalming procedures improved in the 1860’s, but the structure is believed to have been used well into the 20th Century. It is open to the public and includes a timeline of significant individuals related to the Civil War in Nashville. The Hall located on the left main drive, on the right side near the crest of the hill.

Notable Civil War Related Burials:

  • Adelicia Acklen, wealthy Nashville businesswoman and socialite.
  • William B. Bate, Governor of Tennessee (1883 to 1887), Confederate general
  • Battle, Fannie (Mary Francis) (1842-1924), Confederate spy and social reformer.
  • William N.R, Bealle, Confederate brigadier general
  • John Bell, United States Senator and presidential candidate
  • George P. Buell, Union Army general
  • Benjamin F. (“Frank”) Cheatham, Confederate general
  • Mark R. Cockrill (1788-1872), cattleman, planter, and “Wool King of the World”.
  • Thruston Sr., Gates Phillips (1835-1912) Union Brevet Brigadier General. Lawyer, businessman and author.
  • Alvan Cullem Gillem, Union general and post-bellum Indian fighter
  • Adolphus Heiman (1809 – 1862),  Prussian-born American architect and soldier; later becoming a Confederate Colonel
  • William Hicks Jackson, Confederate general
  • Mary Kate Patterson Kyle (1844-1931) Coleman’s Scouts Confederate spy, first woman to be buried in Confederate Circle
  • George Maney, Confederate general and U.S. Ambassador to Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Uruguay
  • Randal William McGavock (1826–1863), Mayor of Nashville from 1858 to 1859 and Confederate Lt. Colonel who was killed in the Battle of Raymond.
  • Colonel Buckner H. Payne (1799-1889), clergyman, publisher, merchant and racist pamphleteer.[8]
  • James E. Rains, Confederate general killed in the 1862 Battle of Murfreesboro
  • John Hugh Smith (1819–1870), Mayor of Nashville, Tennessee three times, from 1845 to 1846, from 1850 to 1853, and from 1862 to 1865.[2]
  • Thomas Benton Smith (1838 – 1923), Confederate brigadier general

Confederate Circle

Seven Confederate generals are buried in or around the circle. They are William B. Bate, William N.R, Bealle, Benjamin Franklin Cheatham, William H. Jackson, George E. Maney, James E. Rains, and Thomas Benton Smith. Other prominent Nashville Confederates, Colonels Adolphus Heiman and Randall McGavock, lie nearby.

This 45-foot granite monument marks the center of the Confederate Circle.

 

3D like Virtual Tour of Confederate Circle and Confederate Memorial Hall

 

Find a Grave locator link

#confederatecircle

Filed Under: Cemetery, Nashville, Tennessee

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Battlefield Trust

CWPT Link

Tennessee State Museum

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Fort Negley

Negely

USCT Charge on Peach Orchard Hill

USCT Painting

Travelers Rest

Travelers Rest

Belle Meade Plantation

Belle Meade Plantation

Battle of Franklin

Franklin

Nashville Naval Battle

Kelley’s Point Video

Nashville MIA’s

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