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Mt Pleasant-Maury Phosphate Museum

4.0 (2 reviews)

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Elm Springs

Elm Springs

5.0(2 reviews)
10.5 mi

How awesome to go to a place that has connections to a book (Company Aytch) you just finished…read morereading!?! Elm Springs (Maury County) was built in 1837 by brothers James & Nathaniel Dick, wealthy New Orleans cotton merchants, as a gift for their sister, Sarah Todd. After Sarah & her husband Christophers deaths, the property went to their daughter, Susan Todd. She was the wife of Abraham M. Looney, a prominent attorney in Maury County and a Tennessee State Senator. During the Civil War, Looney served as a captain in command of Company H, 1st Tennessee Infantry which Sam Watkins of "Company Aytch" was a member. Looney was later promoted to lieutenant colonel. In November 1864, Confederate units of the Army of Tennessee began the march north for Nashville in the Franklin-Nashville Campaign. The Union Army had occupied Maury County for several months. As Union forces under the command of General John M. Schofield began withdrawal from Columbia, they began destroying the antebellum homes. In an act of retribution the historic home of Confederate Lieutenent Colonel Abram M. Looney was selected to be destroyed by fire as the last Union troops left Columbia. Confederate Brigadier General Frank C. Armstrong dispatched a squad of mounted infantry to ensure the safety of Looney's home. They extinguished existing fires on the property and potentially saved the home. In 1992, it became the headquarters of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. At the 2009 National Reunion at Hot Springs, Arkansas, the SVC voted in favor of building a museum and placing it at the Headquarters in Columbia. The official ground-breaking ceremony was held in October 2016. Four years later, the building opened to the public on October 10, 2020. The museum building was designed to resemble a large carriage house.

If I could give more than 5 stars, I would! The grounds are absolutely beautiful, the museum is…read morecaptivatingly informative and the home makes you feel like you stepped back in time! The staff went above and beyond to make our experience top notch! They don't treat you like just another ticket holder...but like family! I look forward to visiting many, many times in the future!

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Elm Springs
Elm Springs
Elm Springs

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The Hideaway Farm

The Hideaway Farm

4.9(30 reviews)
28.9 mi

We had a charmed day, tour and visit. Met Bob the rooster. And co-owner too who was exceptionally…read morecordial and welcoming. The museum and grounds include significant Americana, Johny Cash, Elvis, and a painting featuring Bob Dylan. Clean. Well cared for and presented. Loved it. We arrived on a quiet fall day, out of season and couldn't promise the same experience for others. There is a gathering area to enjoy music performances in the summer months that wasn't open. There wasn't any food sold and I'm unaware if guests can bring any snacks to the events.

My husband and I were spending a few days in Memphis, and I just happened to pick up a pamphlet…read morefrom the visitor's center about TN Music Pathways. The last night there I decided to read through it, thinking to myself that we needed to make another trip through Tennessee to hit all of these cool places. Some we have already been to, but wouldn't mind going again. My husband being a HUGE Johnny Cash fan, I suggested we make a detour on our way home, just to fit Storytellers Hideaway Farm in. We were NOT disappointed. We both thoroughly enjoyed the tour of the house and the barn with all sorts of memorabilia. The highlight of the experience was the music and camaraderie with Johnny Cash's nephew, Mark Alan Cash. We could sit there and listen to him all day. We loved listening to the stories from his personal experiences with his uncle. If we ever get the chance to come back through here, we definitely will.

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The Hideaway Farm
The Hideaway Farm
The Hideaway Farm

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Customs House Museum - Interactive learning

Customs House Museum

4.0(22 reviews)
69.1 mi

The most iconic building in Clarksville, TN, has over 125 years of documented history. The…read morewell-designed architecture even withstood an F3 tornado in January 1999. It transformed from a Federal Post Office to the Department of Electricity, and now a beautiful museum to showcase Clarksville's rich culture and history for all ages to enjoy. We enjoyed a group of self-guided and museum-guided tours that included story time, a craft activity, a scavenger hunt, and a plethora of hands-on educational fun. The kids enjoyed the interactive model trains exhibit, Explorer's Landing, and Art Studio. Check out their website membership, group rates, special events, and ways to donate to this beautiful museum. It's truly worth a visit. Highly Recommend!!!

Usually I like to tie up my reviews with a nice ending of how my visit to a place was. For this…read morereview, I am cutting the foreplay to tell you how this review ends, so you will be compelled to read more or to skip this review entirely. Keep reading: In a nutshell, this is the place to go to learn everything you need to know about Clarksville, Tennessee. The museum is very clean. The staff is courteous and very professional. The art from the temporary exhibits was profound, sensational, and brought me to another time and world beyond Clarksville. If you are looking for this, please read the rest of my review. ******************** The Customs House Museum has been on my to go list since I moved here. The Museum is open to the public with free admission all day from 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. as part of their monthly Second Saturday Free Admission Day. It was the perfect rainy Saturday, and it was easy finding the museum.I found an empty parking space and headed off to the wrong direction. Turned around and found the place instantly. Megan at the front desk gave me a map to the museum. She even showed me a photograph of the music store Jimi Hendrix went to when he was a soldier in Fort Campbell. I wandered slowly to each room in the museum. The most fascinating exhibits were: 15 Over 50: A Women's History Month Exhibition March 7, 2019 - June 9, 2019 March 7 - June 9 Kimbrough Gallery This exhibition features 15 contemporary women artists from across the country all over age 50. Works include photography, painting, and sculpture done in a variety of styles. Johan Hagaman was my favorite artist. I found her statement very profound. It stood out more than the art she created to represent it. JOHAN HAGAMAN | SCULPTOR ARTIST STATEMENT: Passing clouds. Poetry. Climbing vines. Current events. I am a collector of often unrelated and ambiguous images and ideas - not looking for anything in particular, but noticing patterns; and I try to process what it means -- how we have been shaped, and what is seeking to emerge--by making something formal. Being covered in vines, leaves, birds - a metaphor that has become a dominant theme in my work for some time - is both about paying attention and also about how what we are paying attention to determines how we shape our world, and are shaped by and tied to it in a circle of reciprocity. - Johan Hagaman This statement was the most mind provoking Item in the museum to me. It still reverberates in my head. She put into words and art the idea of how we create our REALITY and design our world. She shows this by having vines, leaves, and birds emerging from her sculptures of people. ********* MIKE ANDREWS: A NEW VISION: Crouch Gallery - A local teacher & sculptor working in wood and limestone brings his new pieces to the Crouch Gallery. Included in the show are Andrew's figurative pieces, abstract benches, and wall-mounted forms. His work is simple, elegant, and compelled me. It reminded me of the time I touched gigantic expensive vases made of stone or clay that held skeletal remains of the dead. It was a burial reserved for the very wealthy. Absolutely mesmerizing how a sculpture or vase can evoke zen, calm, and a magical zing. ******* My third and final favorite: BECOMING CLARKSVILLE: HONORING LEGACIES OF LEADERSHIP Explore Clarksville's history in Becoming Clarksville: Honoring Legacies of Leadership. Find out how local agriculture, industry, education, culture, government, medicine, military, and transportation have all contributed to the city of today, and learn about the leaders who have shaped our history. The exhibit also includes engaging computer interactives and a film area. Very impressed with this historical exhibit and the film area. I watched all the films and read everything displayed about Fort Campbell. I plan to go back to the Custom Museum again and revisit this area again. I wanted to read everything about Clarksville, yet my time was limited. ************ In a nutshell, this is the place to go to learn everything you need to know about Clarksville. The museum is very clean. The staff is courteous and very professional. The art from the temporary exhibits was profound, sensational, and brought me to another time and world beyond Clarksville. Thank you for reading this review. 7:07 AM time to have a brand new day.

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Customs House Museum - The staff are great with kids!

The staff are great with kids!

Customs House Museum - Everyone loves the interactive train!

Everyone loves the interactive train!

Customs House Museum - Love bubbles?

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Love bubbles?

Fort Defiance

Fort Defiance

4.1(16 reviews)
70.1 mi

Fort Defiance (formerly also known as Fort Sevier & Fort Bruce)…read more We loved the little walking path that was here. It shows some of the original earthworks. Museum was very informative. Clarksville, TN in the 1860's was a vital communication/transportation center for the Confederacy. It was a major producer of tobacco and agricultural goods but became an important source of iron (its local foundries producing cannon, artillery shells and musket balls for the Confederate army early in the war). Clarksville's location at the confluence of the Cumberland and Red Rivers made it a strategic point. The Confederates in preparing for the city's defense constructed Fort Sevier on a hill that commands the two rivers. On February 19, 1862, Union gunboats came up the river from Fort Donelson and reported the fort displayed a white flag and was left deserted. The Union took over the fort and enlarged it so that it would control traffic on the Hopkinsville (Kentucky) Pike. After the Emancipation Proclamation in January 1863, Clarksville became a Federal recruitment center for the induction of free blacks and former slaves into the Union service.

We stopped by since we were killing some time in town for a wedding later in the day. The small…read moremuseum was pretty interesting as was the video. If so inclined they have a long walking path down to the river ( beware the path back is uphill). The fort itself is not much to see given it is just earthen walls. Nice views to downtown c-ville. Ok especially if you are a civil war history buff but for all others... meh.

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Fort Defiance
Fort Defiance
Fort Defiance

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Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum - Same here

Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum

4.0(936 reviews)
49.4 mi•Sobro, Downtown

This is a monster of a museum that really should be done among multiple visits. What made it easier…read morefor me was remembering what I learned within the Ken Burns Country Music series. I spend about 2 hours here and found that the audio handset option but a lot of "meat on the bone" in a place that can overwhelm you in exhibit detail. But even that overwhelms eventually. A Sampling of Things I Enjoyed: - Rotating Performer Spotlight (Clint Black and Lainey Wilson) - Chet Atkins guitars - Individual Instruments Used by Various Artists. - The Exhibits Featuring Session Artists. - The Leather-enhanced Nudie Cohen Pontiac Bonneville. - Elvis Presley's Solid Gold Cadillac - The Muscle Shoals exhibit. - Various videos, partially the popular culture ones. - John Prine's cherished 1942 Wurlitzer jukebox - Numerous Gold/Platinum Records on the Walls. - The Hatch Show Print Studio and Pop Up. - Individual Artist Exhibits (Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Eric Church, etc.) - The Rotunda: The Hall of Fame plaques honoring inductees.

An interesting place but I was a bit disappointed by most of it. I loved that they offered a decent…read moresection honoring Miss Dolly Parton! I really enjoyed that they had some old vehicles and old outfits was another also enjoyable. I felt a bit underwhelmed by the displays for artists. Some artists were seemingly granted much more appreciation than others and it seemed a bit backwards. For example, Lainey Wilson had a huge case, significantly larger than several other incredibly accomplished country musicians, and I just didn't understand that at all. Honestly, a $30 ticket was quite reasonable for a museum, especially for how large of a staple this museum is supposed to be. I think I would've been upset if it was more $, so luckily it wasn't. I wouldn't come back again though.

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Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum - 8th grade trip for second oldest daughter

8th grade trip for second oldest daughter

Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum - 10/17/24 FYI, Interior entrance

10/17/24 FYI, Interior entrance

Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum - Concert poster printing

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Concert poster printing

Tennessee River Museum

Tennessee River Museum

4.8(5 reviews)
62.5 mi

A real nice place to start a visit to Savannah. Vicki is a gem. Her knowledge is spot on…read more A tour is so insightful of the past and Savannah has been around for a real long time. Plenty of Indian information and river knowledge. You won't regret the time spent here

My wife and I are vacationing at the Pickwick Landing State Park, TN and decided to visit the…read moremuseum. It's small, and we didn't have high expectations, but we were pleasantly surprised. It covers the gamut of the river's lifetime, all the way back to pre-historic times when the Mississippi River Valley was an ocean. There are a variety of fossils and brief but well-written and informative placards describing everything. Not too wordy, but just enough to get the point across. The next room shows the development of the native (pre-western) cultures and it's really quite fascinating. Then comes the white man and the genocide (they don't say it quite that way). It even gives fair time to the Trail of Tears, including the fact that the Supreme Court ruled against President Jackson and he just ignored them. Then on to the civil war and the post war economic boom. One thing Wanda and I were surprised by is that this area of the Tennessee River is uniquely rich in fresh water mussels and became the main source of fresh water pearls and "pearl" buttons in the US. They would cut round pieces right out of the shells, polish them and turn them into buttons. It was really cool. It doesn't take too long to tour and is well worth the stop. The staff is friendly and the surrounding Savannah historic district makes for a nice walk afterwards with several nice little restaurants.

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Tennessee River Museum
Tennessee River Museum
Tennessee River Museum

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Mt Pleasant-Maury Phosphate Museum - museums - Updated May 2026

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