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First published in 1974, Architecture of Middle Tennessee quickly became a record of some of the region's most important and most endangered buildings. Based primarily upon photographs, measured drawings, and historical and architectural information assembled by the Historic American Buildings Survey of the National Park Service in 1970 and 1971, the book was conceived of as a record of buildings preservationists assumed would soon be lost. Remarkably, though, nearly half a century later, most of the buildings featured in the book are still standing.

Vanderbilt staffers discovered a treasure trove of photos and diagrams from the HABS survey that did not make the original edition in the Press archives. This new, expanded edition contains all of the original text and images from the first volume, plus many of the forgotten archived materials collected by HABS in the 1970s.

In her new introduction to this reissue, Aja Bain discusses why these buildings were saved and wonders about what lessons preservationists can learn now about how to preserve a wider swath of our shared history.
(From the Foreword to the Paperback Edition)

When Vanderbilt University Press first approached me about writing a new foreword to a reissued book on local historic preservation from 1974, I was delighted and almost incredulous to hear that most of the buildings included were still standing. Nashville’s unprecedented growth is a dream for some and a nightmare for others, but no one can deny that one of the most visible manifestations of this reality has been the decimation of our historic landscape. Was this book a talisman? Did inclusion provide structures with some sort of protection against the city’s indifferent cannibalization of the places that form its character and sustain its people? I was enthusiastic, but a bit wary.

Then I received the publication: a selection of “thirty-five interesting and important structures representative of Middle Tennessee’s rich architectural heritage” drawn from the Historic American Buildings Survey work done in the state in the early 1970s. Complete with descriptions, photos, and architectural drawings, the book was edited primarily by Thomas B. Brumbaugh, then a professor of fine arts at Vanderbilt. Iconic structures like the Ryman Auditorium and Union Station were included alongside lesser-known gems like Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (now Church of the Holy Trinity) and, further afield, the Poston Buildings in Clarksville and Bear Spring Furnace in Dover. Working with a limited palette of pre-1920 structures (adhering to preservation’s apocryphal “fifty-year rule”) and a marked preference for classical and monumental forms, Brumbaugh assembled a respectable grouping of governmental, commercial, religious, institutional, and residential buildings that neatly embodies the preservation and public history standards of its time.

The book itself, then, is an artifact, a snapshot of the preservation ideals of the country on the cusp of the Bicentennial and its subsequent history and nostalgia boom. It is also a time capsule of our region (but primarily Nashville) at the transitional moment when it was redefining its role in the New Sunbelt South and its relationship to the past. Brumbaugh presciently warns the city of emulating too closely “dead Athens, that most cruelly vandalized of ancient cities,” and points us instead toward the model of Amsterdam, a bustling modern city that nonetheless preserves and cherishes its past.

If this work is so much a product of its time, why reissue it? Why share these half-century-old descriptions and views of structures, many of which one can visit today, which even Brumbaugh admits are not fully representative of the region’s architectural heritage? What is this book’s purpose in Nashville in 2020 and beyond?

Architecture of Middle Tennessee is a microhistory of the preservation field itself, with all its shifting biases, prejudices, and assumptions. It is a lens through which to view the evolution of preservation ideals and practices in our region and a roadmap for measuring how far we’ve traveled. It’s a behind-the-scenes look at history production  and the way societies construct a past that suits them through the built landscape. It’s a potent manifestation of the dangers of survival bias. It’s both a warning and a catalyst for hope.
The Historic American Buildings Survey
Foreword to the New Edition
Preface
Acknowledgments

Government & Public Buildings
Tennessee State Capitol (Nashville), 1845–1859
Tennessee State Penitentiary (Nashville), 1895–1897
Federal Building (Old Clarksville Post Office), 1897–1898

Commercial Structures
Poston Buildings (Clarksville), ca. 1843
S. D. Morgan and Company (Nashville), 1856
Grange Warehouse (Clarksville), 1858 or 1859
Second Avenue, North, Commercial District (Nashville), 1896–1920(?)
Werthan Bag Corporation (Nashville), 1871–1880s
Bear Spring Furnace (Dover), 1873
Ryman Auditorium (Nashville), 1888–1892
Union Station (Nashville), 1898–1900
Public Arcade (Nashville), 1902

Churches
St. Mary’s Cathedral (Nashville), 1844–1847
First Presbyterian Church (Nashville), 1849–1851
Zion Presbyterian Church (Columbia), 1849
Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (Nashville), 1852–1887

Schools, Institutions
University of Nashville—Children’s Museum (Nashville), 1853
Jubilee Hall, Fisk University (Nashville), 1876
Vanderbilt University Gymnasium (Nashville), 1880
West Side Row, Vanderbilt University (Nashville), 1886–1887

Residences
Rock Castle (Hendersonville), 1784–1797(?)
Hays-Kiser House (Antioch), ca. 1796
Travellers’ Rest (Nashville), 1799–1885
Cragfont (Gallatin), 1802
Oaklands (Murfreesboro), 1815, 1825, 1859–1860
The Hermitage (Nashville), 1819
Wessyngton (Robertson County), 1819
Castalian Springs—Wynnewood (Gallatin), 1828
Carter House (Franklin), 1830
Fairvue (Gallatin), 1832
Rattle and Snap (Columbia), 1845
Adolphus Heiman House (Nashville), 1845–1850(?)
Belmont (Nashville), 1850
Worker’s House (Nashville), ca. 1850
Two Rivers (Nashville), 1859

Epilogue
Notes from 2020
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Date de parution

15 août 2020

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9780826500212

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

6 Mo

Architecture of Middle Tennessee

Architecture of Middle Tennessee
The Historic American Buildings Survey
EDITED BY
Thomas B. Brumbaugh, Martha I. Strayhorn, and Gary G. Gore
Foreword by Aja Bain
Photographs by Jack E. Boucher
Produced with the Cooperation of the Historic American Buildings Survey of the National Park Service
VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY PRESS
Nashville, Tennessee
© 1974 Vanderbilt University Press
Nashville, Tennessee
All rights reserved
First printing 1974
First paperback printing 2020
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Brumbaugh, Thomas B 1921– Architecture of Middle Tennessee. Based on an exhibit of photos and drawings from the Historic American Buildings Survey presented at Vanderbilt University. Includes bibliographies.
1. Architecture—Tennessee, Middle. 2. Tennessee, Middle—Historic houses, etc. I. Strayhorn, Martha I., 1925– joint author. II. Gore, Gary G., 1931– joint author. III. Historic American Buildings Survey. IV. Title.
NA730.T 4B78 917.68’03’5 72-2879
ISBN 0-8265-1184-8 (cloth)
ISBN 978-0-8265-0020-5 (paperback)
Contents
The Historic American Buildings Survey
Foreword to the New Edition
Preface
Acknowledgments
GOVERNMENT & PUBLIC BUILDINGS
Tennessee State Capitol
Nashville, 1845–1859
Tennessee State Penitentiary
Nashville, 1895–1897
Federal Building
Old Clarksville Post Office, 1897–1898
COMMERCIAL STRUCTURES
Poston Buildings
Clarksville, ca. 1843
S. D. Morgan and Company
Nashville, 1856
Grange Warehouse
Clarksville, 1858 or 1859
Second Avenue, North, Commercial District
Nashville, 1896–1920(?)
Werthan Bag Corporation
Nashville, 1871–1880s
Bear Spring Furnace
Dover, 1873
Ryman Auditorium
Nashville, 1888–1892
Union Station
Nashville, 1898–1900
Public Arcade
Nashville, 1902
CHURCHES
St. Mary’s Cathedral
Nashville, 1844–1847
First Presbyterian Church
Nashville, 1849–1851
Zion Presbyterian Church
Columbia, 1849
Holy Trinity Episcopal Church
Nashville, 1852–1887
SCHOOLS, INSTITUTIONS
University of Nashville—Children’s Museum
Nashville, 1853
Jubilee Hall, Fisk University
Nashville, 1876
Vanderbilt University Gymnasium
Nashville, 1880
West Side Row, Vanderbilt University
Nashville, 1886–1887
RESIDENCES
Rock Castle
Hendersonville, 1784–1797(?)
Hays-Kiser House
Antioch, ca. 1796
Travellers’ Rest
Nashville, 1799–1885
Cragfont
Gallatin, 1802
Oaklands
Murfreesboro, 1815, 1825, 1859–1860
The Hermitage
Nashville, 1819
Wessyngton
Robertson County, 1819
Castalian Springs—Wynnewood
Gallatin, 1828
Carter House
Franklin, 1830
Fairvue
Gallatin, 1832
Rattle and Snap
Columbia, 1845
Adolphus Heiman House
Nashville, 1845–1850(?)
Belmont
Nashville, 1850
Worker’s House
Nashville, ca. 1850
Two Rivers
Nashville, 1859
Epilogue
Notes from 2020
The Historic American Buildings Survey
THE HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY (HABS) is a national program created to assemble a comprehensive record of the building arts in the United States. Formally organized as a cooperative effort of the National Park Service, the Library of Congress, and the American Institute of Architects, the Survey—which has just commemorated its fortieth anniversary—is the federal government’s oldest operative historic preservation program.
Although early HABS recording in Tennessee did not delve deeply into the state’s rich architectural patrimony, the geographical distribution was well balanced. Log and stone structures characteristic of the eastern third of the state, as well as imposing antebellum mansions of West and Middle Tennessee, such as the Hermitage, were recorded in the 1930s. Perhaps the most impressive early recording effort resulted in a set of twenty-three sheets of architectural measured drawings of William Strickland’s State Capitol in Nashville.
World War II forced a temporary halt to the Survey’s active recording program throughout the country. By the late 1950s, however, several significant additions—primarily photographs and written historical and descriptive data—were made to the HABS Tennessee collection at the Library of Congress. During this period important measured drawings were also made of the President Andrew Johnson House in Greeneville and of several structures in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, as part of the National Park Service’s “Mission 66” program which was initiated in 1957. Many records were obtained on structures in the historic town of Greeneville which, collectively, give an idea of the character of the community. These records in a way may be regarded as a prototype of the urban neighborhood and area surveys that HABS frequently conducts today.
While some additional recording of historic Tennessee buildings took place in the 1960s, it was not until the 1970s that one of the Survey’s most intensive statewide recording efforts was organized. Discussions leading to this ambitious project were initiated in 1969 by William T. Alderson, then a member of the HABS Advisory Board and Director of the American Association for State and Local History. As the program evolved, the Tennessee Historical Commission, local historical groups, and the Survey entered into cooperative agreements to record historic Tennessee structures. Five summer projects, from 1970 to 1974, were scheduled. The first, in 1970, was centered in Nashville and its immediate vicinity. Sponsored by the Commission, the Historic Sites Federation of Tennessee, and HABS, the project included several mid- and late-nineteenth-century commercial structures—a building type heretofore unrecorded in the state.
In 1971, the Middle Tennessee project was undertaken. This survey concentrated on many of the large antebellum mansions of the central section of the state. In 1972, the West Tennessee Historical Society joined the Commission and the Survey in sponsoring the West Tennessee project. Headquartered at Memphis State University, the team produced documentary records for several late-nineteenth-century churches and domestic structures in Memphis, Savannah, Bolivar, and LaGrange.
The 1973 recording team surveyed the eastern third of the state. The Commission, the East Tennessee Historical Society, and HABS cooperatively sponsored the project. Earlier recordings in East Tennessee had concentrated on pioneer structures; the 1973 team recorded later nineteenth- and early twentieth-century structures. The final East Tennessee project in 1974 preceded the publication of a HABS Tennessee Catalog which lists the complete holdings in the state for the first time since 1959.
The awareness in Tennessee of the state’s rich historic resources—as evidenced in the continuing support of the Historic American Buildings Survey—has produced some of the finest documentary records in our collections at the Library of Congress. Tennessee is to be commended.
JOHN POPPELIERS
Chief, Historic American Buildings | 1973
Foreword to the Paperback Edition
WHEN VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY PRESS FIRST approached me about writing a new foreword to a reissued book on local historic preservation from 1974, I was delighted and almost incredulous to hear that most of the buildings included were still standing. Nashville’s unprecedented growth is a dream for some and a nightmare for others, but no one can deny that one of the most visible manifestations of this reality has been the decimation of our historic landscape. Was this book a talisman? Did inclusion provide structures with some sort of protection against the city’s indifferent cannibalization of the places that form its character and sustain its people? I was enthusiastic, but a bit wary.
Then I received the publication: a selection of “thirty-five interesting and important structures representative of Middle Tennessee’s rich architectural heritage” drawn from the Historic American Buildings Survey work done in the state in the early 1970s. Complete with descriptions, photos, and architectural drawings, the book was edited primarily by Thomas B. Brumbaugh, then a professor of fine arts at Vanderbilt. Iconic structures like the Ryman Auditorium and Union Station were included alongside lesser-known gems like Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (now Church of the Holy Trinity) and, further afield, the Poston Buildings in Clarksville and Bear Spring Furnace in Dover. Working with a limited palette of pre-1920 structures (adhering to preservation’s apocryphal “fifty-year rule”) and a marked preference for classical and monumental forms, Brumbaugh assembled a respectable grouping of governmental, commercial, religious, institutional, and residential buildings that neatly embodies the preservation and public history standards of its time.
The book itself, then, is an artifact, a snapshot of the preservation ideals of the country on the cusp of the Bicentennial and its subsequent history and nostalgia boom. It is also a time capsule of our region (but primarily Nashville) at the transitional moment when it was redefining its role in the New Sunbelt South and its relationship to the past. Brumbaugh presciently warns the city of emulating too closely “dead Athens, that most cruelly vandalized of ancient cities,” and points us instead toward the model of Amsterdam, a bustling modern city that nonetheless preserves and cherishes its past.
If this work is so much a product of its

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