June 6-12, 2022
One of our favorite discoveries in Nashville was a monument erected by the Ladies Battlefield Memorial Association in 1926. It’s almost hidden by vegetation between a major highway (Franklin Pike) and an apartment building. We walked a couple of hundred feet from a dead end street to get to the monument.
“Oh, valorous gray, in the grave of your fate,/ Oh, glorious blue, in the long dead years./ You were sown in sorrow and harrowed in hate/ for the message you left through the land/ Has from the lips of God to the heart of man: /Let the past be past. Let the dead be dead/ Now and forever American!”
We completed geocaching tasks in two historic cemeteries.
Woodlawn Memorial Park was a hospital during the Civil War because of a spring with good quality water.
We drove about 30 miles southeast to Murfreesboro and visited Stones River National Battlefield where almost 24,000 Union and Confederate soldiers were killed, wounded or captured December 31, 1862.
Jane enjoys visiting places commemorated in song (Luckenbach, Texas, for example) or song-writing history so our excursions in the Nashville area took us to two places. The first was west Nashville in general. Jane expected, based on a Jimmy Buffet song called “West Nashville Grand Ballroom Gown” [lyrics https://genius.com/Jimmy-buffett-west-nashville-grand-ballroom-gown-lyrics ], to see large Southern homes with grand lawns. Instead we saw a mural, a diner, a marina, a state prison, and a non-profit cultural institution.
The sculptures on display at OZ Arts weren’t labeled, but we liked these.
We completed an Adventure Lab about Nashville Row. Jane thought it would be neat to find out where some of her favorite songwriters and performers worked. She didn’t learn where Boudleau Bryant had written “Rocky Top”, but she and Dave did tromp around past lots of music recording studios.
Our campground in Nashville was around the corner from Gaylord Opryland Resort (Opryland the theme park closed in 1997). Room rates start at about $400 a night and parking, after the first 20 minutes, is $33. We dashed in, saw as much of the nine acres of atriums as we could, snapped a handful of pictures, and dashed back to the car and out of the lot before being charged to park. Whew!
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