Articles: Nashville in the Tennessee Historical Quarterly


Nashville Articles in the Tennessee Historical Quarterly

Nashville-related articles published in the Tennessee Historical Quarterly (1942-present) include the following:

  • Parks’ “The Career of John Bell as Congressman from Tennessee, 1827-1841,” THQ I (1942), 229-249.

  • Williams’ “Generals Francis Nash and William Lee Davidson,” THQ I (1942), 250-268.

  • Denis’ “The Nashville City Cemetery,” THQ II (1943), 30-42.

  • Rose’s “A Nashville Musical Decade, 1830-1840,” THQ II (1943), 216-231.

  • Beatty’s “Fugitive and Agrarian Writers at Vanderbilt,” THQ III (1944), 3-23.

  • Williams’ “Ann Robertson: An Unsung Tennessee Heroine,” THQ III (1944), 150-155.

  • Horn’s “Nashville During the Civil War,” THQ IV (1945), 3-22.

  • Mahoney’s “William Strickland and the Building of Tennessee’s Capitol, 1845-1854,” THQ IV (1945), 99-153.

  • Frank’s “Adolphus Heiman: Architect and Soldier,” THQ V (1946), 35-57.

  • Des Champs’ “Early Days in the Cumberland Country,” THQ VI (1947), 195-229.

  • Grise’s “Samuel Watkins,” THQ VI (1947), 251-264.

  • Dreyfus’ “Life and Works of George Michael Wharton, M.D. (Pseudonym ‘Stahl’), 1825-1853,” THQ VI (1947), 315-336.

  • Somit’s “Andrew Jackson: Legend and Reality,” THQ VII (1948), 291-313.

  • Crabb’s “Wilkins Tannehill, Business and Cultural Leader,” THQ VII (1948), 314-321.

  • Chambers’ “Thomas Hart Benton in Tennessee, 1801-1812,” THQ VIII (1949), 291-331.

  • Mahoney’s “William Strickland’s Introduction to Nashville, 1845,” THQ IX (1950), 46-63.

  • Burt’s “Four Decades of the Nashville, Chattanooga, & St. Louis Railway, 1873-1916,” THQ IX (1950), 99-130.

  • Clifton’s “John Overton as Andrew Jackson’s Friend,” THQ XI (1952), 23-40.

  • Wills’ “An Echo from Egypt: A History of the Building Occupied by the First Presbyterian Church, Nashville, Tennessee,” THQ XI (1952), 63-77.

  • Baughn’s “An Early Experiment in Adult Education: The Nashville Lyceum, 1830-1832,” THQ XI (1952), 235-245.

  • Avery’s, ed. “The Second Presbyterian Church of Nashville during the Civil War,” THQ XI (1952), 356-375.

  • Moore’s “The Tennessee State Library in the Capitol,” THQ XII (1953), 3- 22.

  • Crabb’s “James Priestley, Pioneer Schoolmaster,” THQ XII (1953), 129-134.

  • Parrent’s “Adolphus Heiman and the Building Methods of Two Centuries,” THQ XII (1953), 204-212.

  • Burt’s “Anna Russell Cole, a Study of a Grand Dame,” THQ XIII (1954), 127-155.

  • Spain’s “R.B.C. Howell: Virginia Baptist Tradition Comes to the Old Southwest,” THQ XIV (1955), 99-119.

  • Spain’s “R.B.C. Howell: Progressive Baptist Minister in the Old Southwest,” THQ XIV (1955), 195-226.

  • Spain’s “R.B.C. Howell: Nashville Baptist Leader in the Civil War Period,” THQ XIV (1955), 323-340.

  • Bacon II’s “Nashville’s Trade at the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century,” THQ XV (1956), 30-36.

  • Orr’s “John Overton and Traveller’s Rest,” THQ XV (1956), 216-223.

  • Crabb’s “The Twilight of the Nashville Gods,” THQ XV (1956), 291-305.

  • Bacon II’s “Some Problems of Adjustment to Nashville’s Site and Situation, 1780-1860,” THQ XV (1956), 322-329.

  • Cate’s “Timothy Demonbreun,” THQ XVI (1957), 214-227.

  • Weaver’s “Shifting Residential Patterns of Nashville,” THQ XVIII (1959), 20-34.

  • Matlock’s, ed. “The Battle of the Bluffs, From the Journal of John Cotton,” THQ XVIII (1959), 252-265.

  • Woolverton’s “Philip Lindsley and the Cause of Education in the Old Southwest,” THQ XIX (1960), 3-22.

  • Newcomer’s, ed. “Two New England Teachers in Nashville, 1818,” THQ XIX (1960), 74-79.

  • Horn’s “The Hermitage, Home of Andrew Jackson,” THQ XX (1961), 3-19.

  • Haunton’s “Education and Democracy: The Views of Philip Lindsley,” THQ XXI (1962), 131-139.

  • Nagy’s “Wanted: A Teacher for the Nashville English School,” THQ XXI (1962) 171-186.

  • Connelly’s “The Vanderbilt Agrarians: Time and Place in Southern Tradition,” THQ XXII (1963), 22-37.

  • Horn’s “Dr. John Rolfe Hudson and the Confederate Underground in Nashville,” THQ XXII (1963), 38-52.

  • Gross’ “The Bishops Versus Vanderbilt University,” THQ XXII (1963), 53-65.

  • Gower’s “Belle Meade: Queen of Tennessee Plantations,” THQ XXII (1963), 203-222.

  • Stealey III’s “French Lick and the Cumberland Compact,” THQ XXII (1963), 323-334.

  • Holding’s “John Wilkes Booth Stars in Nashville,” THQ XXIII (1964), 73-79.

  • Owsley’s, ed. “William Eakin’s Memoirs,” THQ XXIII (1964), 269-278.

  • Kaser’s “Nashville’s Women of Pleasure in 1860,” THQ XXIII (1964), 379-382.

  • Stokes’ “Hillsboro Pike and Something Personal,” THQ XXIV (1965), 70-84.

  • Graham’s “Desegregation in Nashville: The Dynamics of Compliance,” THQ XXV (1966), 135-154.

  • Dekle’s “The Tennessee State Capitol,” THQ XXV (1966), 213- 238.

  • Macdonald-Millar’s “The Grundy-Polk Houses, Nashville,” THQ XXV (1966), 281-286.

  • Owsley’s “The Morton B. Howell Papers,” THQ XXV (1966), 287-309.

  • White’s “The Governors’ Mansions of Tennessee,” THQ XXV (1966), 327-339.

  • Kirby’s “The McKendree Chapel Affair,” THQ XXV (1966), 360-370.

  • Lawrence’s “Tulip Grove: Neighbor to the Hermitage,” THQ XXVI (1967), 3-22.

  • Swint’s “Travellers’ Rest: Home of Judge John Overton,” THQ XXVI (1967), 119-136.

  • White’s “Another Breakfast at the Hermitage. Part I, 1907,” THQ XXVI (1967), 241-248.

  • Caldwell’s “Another Breakfast at the Hermitage. Part II, 1934,” THQ XXVI (1967), 249-254.

  • Goodpasture’s “Another Breakfast at the Hermitage. Part III, 1967,” THQ XXVI (1967), 255-262.

  • Robison’s “Robert Hays, Unsung Pioneer of the Cumberland Country,” THQ XXVI (1967), 263-278.

  • Davis’ “The Parthenon and the Tennessee Centennial: The Greek Temple That Sparked a Birthday Party,” THQ XXVI (1967), 335-353.

  • O’Donnell III’s “Taylor Thistle: A Student at the Nashville Institute, 1871-1880,” THQ XXVI (1967), 387-395.

  • Brumbaugh’s “The Architecture of Nashville’s Union Station,” THQ XXVII (1968), 3-12.

  • Armistead, Jr.’s “ ‘He Is a Great Rascal’: A Sketch of Byrd Douglas,” THQ XXVII (1968), 37-39.

  • Lloyd’s “The Legend of Granny White,” THQ XXVII (1968), 257-261.

  • Howell’s “The Editorials of Arthur S. Colyar, Nashville Prophet of the New South,” THQ XXVII (1968), 262-276.

  • Matlock’s “John Cotton: Reluctant Pioneer,” THQ XXVII (1968), 277-286.

  • Henderson’s “Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium,” THQ XXVII (1968), 305-328.

  • Tidwell’s “Luke Lea and the American Legion,” THQ XXVIII (1969), 70-83.

  • Folmsbee’s “The Journal of John Cotton, the ‘Reluctant Pioneer’-- Evidences of its Unreliability,” THQ XXVIII (1969), 84-94.

  • Arnold’s “The Hermitage Church,” THQ XXVIII (1969), 113-125.

  • Cummings’ “Richard Owen, Teacher in Tennessee,” THQ XXVIII (1969), 273-296.

  • Goff’s “A Physical Profile of Andrew Jackson,” THQ XXVIII (1969), 297-311.

  • Stamper’s “Felix K. Zollicoffer: Tennessee Editor and Politician,” THQ XXVIII (1969), 356-376.

  • Richardson’s “Fisk University: The First Critical Years,” THQ XXIX (1970), 24-41.

  • Tipton’s “The Fisk Jubilee Singers,” THQ XXIX (1970), 42-48.

  • Wolfe’s “Lucius Polk Brown: Tennessee Pure Food and Drug Inspector, 1908-1915,” THQ XXIX (1970), 62-78.

  • Plaisance and Schelver III’s “Federal Military Hospitals in Nashville, May and June, 1863,” THQ XXIX (1970), 166-175.

  • Owsley’s “The Tennessee Historical Society: Its Origin, Progress, and Present Condition,” THQ XXIX (1970), 227-242.

  • Jennings’ “Tennessee and the Nashville Conventions of 1850,” THQ XXX (1971), 70-82.

  • Durham’s “Kasper Mansker: Cumberland Frontiersman,” THQ XXX (1971), 154-177.

  • Morrow’s “A Brief History of Theater in Nashville, 1807-1970,” THQ XXX (1971), 178-189.

  • Sulzer’s “The Three ‘Tennessee Centrals’ of Tennessee,” THQ XXX (1971), 210-214.

  • McBride’s “The Historical Enrichment of the Governor’s Residence,” THQ XXX (1971), 215-219.

  • Kornell’s “Reconstruction in Nashville, 1867-1869,” THQ XXX (1971), 277-287.

  • Graham’s “Belmont I. Nashville Home of Adelicia Acklen,” THQ XXX (1971), 345-368.

  • Innis’ “Belmont II. Belmont Statuary: Four Pieces,” THQ XXX (1971), 369-378.

  • Benedict’s, Cannon’s, and Cayce’s “Belmont III. The Bells of Ward-Belmont: A Reminiscence,” THQ XXX (1971), 379-382.

  • Boniol, Jr.’s “The Walton Road,” THQ XXX (1971), 402-412.

  • Goff’s “The Confederate Veteran Magazine,” THQ XXXI (1972), 45-60.

  • DeWitt, Jr.’s “Early Radio Broadcasting in Middle Tennessee,” THQ XXXI (1972), 80-94.

  • Durham’s “Thomas Sharpe Spencer, Man or Legend,” THQ XXXI (1972), 240-255.

  • Creighton, Jr.’s “Wilbur Fisk Foster, Soldier and Engineer,” THQ XXXI (1972), 261-275.

  • Lamon’s “The Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial Normal School: Public Education for Black Tennesseans,” THQ XXXII (1973), 42-58.

  • Antone’s “The Y.M.C.A. Graduate School, Nashville, 1919-1936,” THQ XXXII (1973), 67-82.

  • Schulman’s “The Lumber Industry of the Upper Cumberland Valley,” THQ XXXII (1973), 255-264.

  • Leeper’s “ ‘A Minor Planet, Rhoda…’,” THQ XXXII (1973), 355-359.

  • Morrow’s “Adolphus Heiman’s Legacy to Nashville,” THQ XXXIII (1974), 3-21.

  • Wills, II’s “Letters From Nashville, 1862, I. A Portrait of Belle Meade,” THQ XXXIII (1974), 70-84.

  • Miller’s “Letters From Nashville, 1862, II. ‘Dear Master’,” THQ XXXIII (1974), 85-92.

  • Smith’s “Thomas Henry Huxley in Nashville, Part I,” THQ XXXIII (1974), 191-203.

  • Smith’s “Thomas Henry Huxley in Nashville, Part II,” THQ XXXIII (1974), 322-341.

  • Wells’ “Lafayette in Nashville, 1825,” THQ XXXIV (1975), 19-31.

  • Cornwell’s “Devon Farm: Harpeth Landmark,” THQ XXXIV (1975), 113-129.

  • Burran’s “The WPA in Nashville, 1935-1943,” THQ XXXIV (1975), 293-306.

  • Morrow’s “The Church of the Holy Trinity: English Countryside Tranquility in Downtown Nashville,” THQ XXXIV (1975), 333-349.

  • Barnes’ “James Robertson’s Journey to Nashville: Tracing the Route of Fall 1779,” THQ XXXV (1976), 145-161.

  • Goodstein’s “Leadership on the Nashville Frontier, 1780-1800,” THQ XXXV (1976), 175-198.

  • Hoobler’s “Karnack on the Cumberland,” THQ XXXV (1976), 251-262.

  • Doyle’s “ ‘Saving Yesterday’s City’ : Nashville’s Waterfront,” THQ XXXV (1976), 353-364.

  • Phillips’ “The Interracial Impact of Marshall Keeble, Black Evangelist, 1878-1968,” THQ XXXVI (1977), 62-74.

  • Nagy’s “The South Nashville Institute,” THQ XXXVI (1977), 180-196.

  • Owsley’s “The Marriages of Rachel Donelson,” XXXVI (1977), 479-492.

  • Stritch’s “Three Catholic Bishops From Tennessee,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 3-35.

  • Stewart’s “William T. Berry and His Fabulous Bookstore: An Early Nashville Literary Emporium Without Parallel,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 36-48.

  • McBride’s “ ‘Northern, Military, Corrupt, and Transitory,’ Augustus E. Alden, Nashville’s Carpetbagger Mayor,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 63-67.

  • O’Leary’s “Washington Bogart Cooper, 1802-1888: The Influences on His Work,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 68-75.

  • Riley’s “Edgefield: A Study of an Early Nashville Suburb,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 133-154.

  • Reynolds’ “Nashville’s Custom House,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 263-277.

  • Coke’s, Graham’s, and Shriver’s “First Ladies of Travellers’ Rest,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 321-328.

  • Dillingham, Jr.’s “The University of Nashville, A Northern Educator, and a New Mission in the Post-Reconstruction South,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 329-338.

  • Coke’s “Profiles of John Overton: Judge, Friend, Family Man, and Master of Travellers’ Rest,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 393-409.

  • Leeper’s “James Braid and His Telephone,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 410-415.

  • Kiser’s “Scion of Belmont,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 34-61.

  • Coke’s “Christ Church, Episcopal, Nashville,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 141-157.

  • Patrick’s “The Architecture of Adolphus Heiman, Part I,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 167-187.

  • Kiser’s “Scion of Belmont, Part II,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 188-203.

  • Patrick’s “The Architecture of Adolphus Heiman, Part II,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 277-295.

  • Sobel’s “ ‘They Can Never Both Prosper Together’: Black and White Baptists in Nashville, Tennessee,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 296-307.

  • Hoobler’s, ed. “The Civil War Diary of Louisa Brown Pearl,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 308-321.

  • Goodstein’s “Black History on the Nashville Frontier, 1780-1810,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 401-420.

  • Ely, Jr.’s “The Legal Practice of Andrew Jackson,” THQ XXXVIII (1979), 421-435.

  • Crouse’s “Allen D. Carden: Early Tennessee Muscian,” THQ XXXIX (1980), 11-15.

  • Connelly’s “Old North Nashville and Germantown,” THQ XXXIX (1980), 115-148.

  • Remini’s “The Final Days and Hours in the Life of General Andrew Jackson,” THQ XXXIX (1980), 167-177.

  • Frank’s “Nashville Jewry During the Civil War,” THQ XXXIX (1980), 310-322.

  • Mackin’s “Wartime Scenes From Convent Windows: St. Cecilia, 1860 Through 1865,” THQ XXXIX (1980), 401-422.

  • Thweatt’s “James Priestley: Classical Scholar of the Old South,” THQ XXXIX (1980), 423-439.

  • Jones, Jr.’s “Mose the Bowery B’hoy and the Nashville Volunteer Fire Department, 1849-1860,” THQ XL (1981), 170-181.

  • Summerville’s “The City and the Slum: ‘Black Bottom’ in the Development of South Nashville,” THQ XL (1981), 182-192.

  • Lanier’s “The Carmack Murder Case,” THQ XL (1981), 272-285.

  • Tanner’s “Cornelia Fort: A WASP in World War II, Part I,” THQ XL (1981), 381-394.

  • Lovett’s “Nashville’s Fort Negley: A Symbol of Blacks’ Involvement with the Union Army,” THQ XLI (1982), 3-22.

  • Thomason’s “The Men’s Quarter of Downtown Nashville,” THQ XLI (1982), 48-66.

  • Tanner’s “Cornelia Fort: A WASP in World War II, Part II,” THQ XLI (1982), 67-80.

  • Owsley’s “Andrew Jackson and His Ward, Andrew Jackson Donelson,” THQ XLI (1982), 124-139.

  • Durham’s “How Say You, Senator Fowler?” THQ XLII (1983), 39-57.

  • Faulkner’s “Return Jonathan Meigs: Tennessee’s First State Librarian,” THQ XLII (1983), 151-164.

  • Summerville’s “Albert Roberts, Journalist of the New South, Part II,” THQ XLII (1983), 179-202.

  • Conn’s “Waverly Place: The Study of a Nashville Streetcar Suburb Along the Franklin Pike,” THQ XLIII (1984), 3-24.

  • Carlton-LaNey’s “Fisk Social Work Students’ Emergency Relief Work Following the East Nashville Fire of 1916,” THQ XLIV (1985), 371-379.

  • Hoobler’s “William Strickland, Architect,” THQ XLV (1986), 3-17.

  • Turnbow’s “Nashville’s Vine Street,” THQ XLV (1986), 18-29.

  • Weesner’s “William Washington Girard,” THQ XLV (1986), 30-40.

  • Hoobler’s “T.M. Schleier, Photographer,” THQ XLV (1986), 230-243.

  • Summerville’s “Science in the New South: The Meeting of the AAAS at Nashville, 1877,” THQ XLV (1986), 316-328.

  • Wills II’s “The Eclipse of the Thoroughbred Horse Industry in Tennessee,” THQ XLVI (1987), 157-171.

  • Howell’s “Jesse Wills and the Conflicts of the 1920s,” THQ XLVII (1988), 41-53.

  • Gadski’s “The Tennessee State Capitol: An Architectural History,” THQ XLVII (1988), 67-120.

  • Hoobler’s “Afterword: The 1984-1988 Capitol Restoration,” THQ XLVII (1988) 121-123.

  • Cannon, Jr.’s “Flags of the Rock City Guards,” THQ XLVII (1988), 191-197.

  • Wills II’s “Tennessee Day, June 17, 1889, Hunt’s Point, New York,” THQ XLVII (1988), 206-215.

  • McGlone’s “ ‘What Became of General Barrow?’ The Forgotten Story of George Washington Barrow,” THQ XLVIII (1989), 37-45.

  • Minnix’s “ ‘That Memorable Meeting:’ Sam Jones and the Nashville Revival of 1885,” THQ XLVIII (1989), 151-161.

  • Ikard’s “The Short and Stormy Nashville Career of Joseph Jones, Tennessee’s First Public Health Officer,” THQ XLVIII (1989), 209-217.

  • Howell’s “James I. Vance: Transformations in Religion and Society, 1922-1932,” THQ XLIX (1990), 18-27.

  • Anderson’s “Nashville’s City Manager Government: 1921-1923,” THQ XLIX (1990), 84-90.

  • Coleman’s “From Monument to Museum: The Role of the Parthenon in the Culture of the New South,” THQ XLIX (1990), 139-151.

  • Clark’s “James Carroll Napier: National Negro Leader,” THQ XLIX (1990), 243-252.

  • Gaston’s “A World Overturned: The Civil War Experience of Dr. William A. Cheatham and His Family,” THQ L (1991), 3-16.

  • Wills II’s “Black-White Relationships on the Belle Meade Plantation,” THQ L (1991), 17-32.

  • Jones, Jr.’s “Municipal Vice: The Management of Prostitution in Tennessee’s Urban Experience. Part I: The Experience of Nashville and Memphis, 1854-1917,” THQ L (1991), 33-41.

  • Wynn’s “The Dawning of a New Day: The Nashville Sit-Ins, February 13-May 10, 1960,” THQ L (1991), 42-54.

  • Thweatt’s “The Archival Tradition in Tennessee--the Moore Years,” THQ L (1991), 152-156.

  • Spence’s “John Donelson and the Opening of the Old Southwest,” THQ L (1991), 157-172.

  • Sims’ “ ‘Powers that Pray’ and ‘Powers that Prey’: Tennessee and the Fight for Woman Suffrage,” THQ L (1991), 203-225.

  • Perry’s “ ‘The Very Best Influence’: Josephine Holloway and Girl Scouting in Nashville’s African-American Community,” THQ LII (1993), 73-85.

  • Spinney’s “The Jewish Community in Nashville, 1939-1949,” THQ LII (1993), 225-241.

  • Durham’s “Westward With Anthony Bledsoe: The Life of an Overmountain Frontier Leader,” THQ LIII (1994), 2-19.

  • Turner’s “Class, Controversy, and Contraceptives: Birth Control Advocacy in Nashville, 1932-1944,” THQ LIII (1994), 166-179.

  • Remini’s “Andrew Jackson Takes an Oath of Allegiance to Spain,” THQ LIV (1995), 2-15.

  • Bucy’s “Quiet Revolutionaries: The Grundy Women and the Beginnings of Women’s Volunteer Associations in Tennessee,” THQ LIV (1995), 40- 53.

  • Scribner’s “Nashville Offers Opportunity: The Nashville Globe and Business as a Means of Uplift, 1907-1913,” THQ LIV (1995), 54-67.

  • Oliver’s “A Crumbling Fortress: The Tennessee Lunatic Asylum, 1837-1865,” THQ LIV (1995), 124-139.

  • Laska’s “ ‘The Dam’st Situation Ever Man Was Placed In’: Andrew Jackson, David Allison, and the Frontier Economy of 1795,” THQ LIV (1995), 336-347.

  • Gordon’s “Nashville and the U.S. Christian Commission in the Civil War,” THQ LV (1996), 98-111.

  • Couto’s “Race Relations and Tennessee Centennials,” THQ LV (1996), 144-159.

  • Harvey’s “ ‘The Holy Spirit Come to Us and Forbid the Negro Taking a Second Place’: Richard H. Boyd and Black Religious Activism in Nashville, Tennessee,” THQ LV (1996), 190-201.

  • Murphy’s “The Social Memory of the South: Donald Davidson and the Tennessee Past,” THQ LV (1996), 257-269.

  • Cook, Jr.’s “The Shelby Street Bridge: A Modern Engineering Marvel in Nashville,” THQ LV (1996), 320-336.

  • Sumner’s “The Publisher and the Preacher: Racial Conflict at Vanderbilt University,” THQ LVI (1997), 34-43.

  • Wills II’s “The Old Boys’ Schools of Middle Tennessee,” THQ LVI (1997), 56-69.

  • Kaplowitz’s “A Breath of Fresh Air: Segregation, Parks, and Progressivism in Nashville, Tennessee, 1900-1920,” THQ LVII (1998), 132-149.

  • Gaston’s “George Dickel Tennessee Sour Mash Whiskey: The Story Behind the Label,” THQ LVII (1998), 150-167.

  • McConnell’s “Lou Cretia Owen and The Old Hickory Munitions Plant During World War I,” THQ LVIII (1999), 128-139.

  • Toplovich’s “The Tennessee Historical Society at 150: Tennessee History ‘Just and True’,” THQ LVIII (1999), 194-215.

  • Irwin’s “Voice in the Wilderness: John Haywood and the Preservation of Early Tennessee History,” THQ LVIII (1999), 238-253.

  • Quirin’s “ ‘Her Sons and Daughters Are Ever on the Altar’: Fisk University and Missionaries to Africa, 1866-1937,” THQ LX (2001), 16-37.

  • Rogers’ “Clover Bottom Farm: A Tennessee Agricultural Treasure,” THQ LX (2001), 144-161.

  • Ikard’s “Signor de Luca and the Nashville Conservatory of Music,” THQ LX (2001), 176-194.

  • Bucy's "Interracial Relations in the YWCA of Nashville: Limits and Dilemmas," THQ LXI (2002), 182-193.

  • Tayor's "Uncle Sam's Landlord: Quartering the Union Army in Nashville in the Summer of 1863," THQ LXI (2002), 242-265.

  • Warner's "Henry Maney Revisited," THQ LXII (2003), 152-165.

  • Gudmestad's "The Troubled Legacy of Isaac Franklin: The Enterprise of Slave Trading," THQ LXII (2003), 192-217.

  • Cheathem's " 'I Shall Persevere in the Cause of Truth': Andrew Jackson Donelson and the Election of 1856," THQ LXII (2003), 218-237.

  • Rose's "The Nashville Tornado of March 14, 1933," THQ LXII (2003), 264-273.

  • Hendricks' "Stokely Carmichael and the 1967 IMPACT Symposium: Black Power, White Fear, and the Conservative South," THQ LXIII (2004), 284-304.

  • Smith's "Civil War Battlefield Preservation in Tennessee: A Nashville National Military Park Case Study," THQ LXIV (2005), 236-247.

  • Clements' "An Analysis of the 'Original' Donelson Journal and Associated Accounts of the Donelson Party Voyage," THQ LXIV (2005), 338-349.

  • Warner's "George Earl Maney: Soldier, Railroader, and Diplomat," THQ LXV (2006), 130-147.

  • Warshauer's "Andrew Jackson: Chivalric Slave Master," THQ LXV (2006), 202-229.

  • Leforge's "State Colored Conventions of Tennessee, 1865-1866," THQ LXV (2006), 230-253.

    Beyond a doubt, there are inadvertent omissions from this list as well as mistakes in these citations. Please contact us with either.




    Last Update: 12/13/2006