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Nashville's Historical Markers

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Manage episode 430435772 series 3364629
Content provided by WPLN News - Nashville Public Radio. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WPLN News - Nashville Public Radio or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The first marker, "Heaton's Station," was placed in 1968 at a bend in the Cumberland River in North Nashville and commemorates one of the city’s first structures, a fortified house built for protection in 1780. Now there are almost 300 markers across the city, with at least one in every council district. Today, we’ll talk about the importance of the marker program and how to get one made and planted. We'll also find out all about the marker for Warehouse 28, a gay disco that also made possible the founding of Nashville CARES, and the double-sided marker that commemorates Riverside Sanitarium and honors Dr. Dorothy Brown, the first female African American surgeon in the South.

Guests:

  • Jessica Reeves | Preservationist, Metro Historical Commission; Administrator, Historical Marker Program
  • John Bridges | Author; Board member, Metro Historical Commission
  • Bennie Thompson | Founder and Chairman, Riverside Historical Society
  • Michael Hubbard | Member, Riverside Historical Society; Executive Director, Charles and Etta Dudley Foundation

Further Reading and Listening:

  continue reading

553 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 430435772 series 3364629
Content provided by WPLN News - Nashville Public Radio. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WPLN News - Nashville Public Radio or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The first marker, "Heaton's Station," was placed in 1968 at a bend in the Cumberland River in North Nashville and commemorates one of the city’s first structures, a fortified house built for protection in 1780. Now there are almost 300 markers across the city, with at least one in every council district. Today, we’ll talk about the importance of the marker program and how to get one made and planted. We'll also find out all about the marker for Warehouse 28, a gay disco that also made possible the founding of Nashville CARES, and the double-sided marker that commemorates Riverside Sanitarium and honors Dr. Dorothy Brown, the first female African American surgeon in the South.

Guests:

  • Jessica Reeves | Preservationist, Metro Historical Commission; Administrator, Historical Marker Program
  • John Bridges | Author; Board member, Metro Historical Commission
  • Bennie Thompson | Founder and Chairman, Riverside Historical Society
  • Michael Hubbard | Member, Riverside Historical Society; Executive Director, Charles and Etta Dudley Foundation

Further Reading and Listening:

  continue reading

553 episodes

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