| Davidson County and the city of Nashville have a rich
architectural, cultural, and historical heritage. Nashville, founded
as Fort Nashborough in 1779-80, is older than the state of Tennessee
and older than the U.S. Constitution. Established by the state of
North Carolina in 1783, Davidson County initially included all of the
land in the present-day state of Tennessee from the Cumberland Plateau
west to the Mississippi River, forming the basis for some 70 counties
today.
Long the domain and hunting ground of indigenous native peoples,
the first white men to come to the area were French fur traders,
establishing a trading post around 1717. The first permanent
settlement was established on the banks of the Cumberland River on
Christmas Day in 1779. That band of pioneers, led by Englishman James
Robertson, cleared the land and built a log stockade. John Donelson
and some 60 families followed in April 1780, to settle the new
community that was then a part of North Carolina. The first settlers
quickly spread over the land, living in small groups and building
stations, or walled forts for protection from the Indians.
With the cessation of Indian attacks and a developing sense of
stability, the inhabitants were encouraged to build more permanent
homes. The first brick houses, built at the end of the eighteenth
century, were modeled after the kinds of houses they had known in
Virginia and North and South Carolina. In 1784 the community's name
was changed from Nashborough to Nashville.
Tennessee became the sixteenth state in 1796. Increasing population
in the Middle Tennessee grand division resulted in Nashville's first
becoming the state capital in 1812. However, the capital moved back to
Knoxville in 1815. Knoxville's role as state capital ended in 1817
when a move was made to Murfreesboro. Nashville again became the
capital in 1826, but it was not until a spirited legislative session
in 1843 that its status became permanent. By that time Nashville was
the home of two former presidents of the United States, Andrew Jackson
and James K. Polk.
On July 4, 1845, the cornerstone for a new capitol building was
laid. The General Assembly first met in the new building on October 3,
1853. However, the capitol building, designed by the noted architect
William Strickland, was not actually completed until 1859. This
masterpiece of Greek Revival architecture dominated the city's skyline
until the mid-twentieth century, when downtown's first high-rise
structures began to be constructed.
By 1860 Nashville was a prosperous river city. Because of its
strategic location on the river and the railroad, the city was
occupied by Federal troops in 1862. The Battle of Nashville, fought in
1864, was the last aggressive action of the Confederate Army.
In the decades following the war, Nashville once again experienced
a growth in population, business and industry, and education. Another
area of growth, country music, has grown to the point that Nashville
today is known as Music City, USA.
The influence of Nashville's churches is evident throughout the
city. Clergymen and church leaders led in the establishment of
educational institutions such as Vanderbilt University, Peabody
College, Belmont University and David Lipscomb University among
others. Religious publishing houses were important in Nashville's
becoming a printing and publishing center. Also Fisk University, one
of the first private institutions in the United States for the higher
education of blacks, was established in 1866. Meharry Medical College,
which has educated more black doctors than any other medical college
in the world, was started in 1876.
Under its present Metropolitan Charter, which became effective
April 1, 1963, Nashville and Davidson County have a single government
(the first in the state) with its authority encompassing more than a
half-million people and 533 square miles.
Historical information courtesy of www.historicnashville.org.
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