Additions:
Additions:
Orr’s “John Overton and Travellers Rest,” THQ XV (1956), 216-223.
Owsley’s “Andrew Jackson and His Ward, Andrew Jackson Donelson,” THQ XLI (1982), 124-139.
Deletions:
Orr’s “John Overton and Traveller’s Rest,” THQ XV (1956), 216-223.
Owsley’s “Andrew Jackson and His Ward, Andrew Jackson Donelson,” THQ XLI (1982), 124-139.
Additions:
McGlone’s “ ‘What Became of General Barrow?’ The Forgotten Story of George Washington Barrow,” THQ XLVIII (1989), 37-45.
Deletions:
Mc Glone’s “ ‘What Became of General Barrow?’ The Forgotten Story of George Washington Barrow,” THQ XLVIII (1989), 37-45.
Additions:
Kirby’s “The McKendree Chapel Affair,” THQ XXV (1966), 360-370.
McBride’s “The Historical Enrichment of the Governor’s Residence,” THQ XXX (1971), 215-219.
DeWitt, Jr.’s “Early Radio Broadcasting in Middle Tennessee,” THQ XXXI (1972), 80-94.
McBride’s “ ‘Northern, Military, Corrupt, and Transitory,’ Augustus E. Alden, Nashville’s Carpetbagger Mayor,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 63-67.
Owsley’s “Andrew Jackson and His Ward, Andrew Jackson Donelson,” THQ XLI (1982), 124-139.
Carlton-LaNey’s “Fisk Social Work Students’ Emergency Relief Work Following the East Nashville Fire of 1916,” THQ XLIV (1985), 371-379.
McConnell’s “Lou Cretia Owen and The Old Hickory Munitions Plant During World War I,” THQ LVIII (1999), 128-139.
Leforge's "State Colored Conventions of Tennessee, 1865-1866," THQ LXV (2006), 230-253.
Deletions:
Kirby’s “The Mc Kendree Chapel Affair,” THQ XXV (1966), 360-370.
Mc Bride’s “The Historical Enrichment of the Governor’s Residence,” THQ XXX (1971), 215-219.
De Witt, Jr.’s “Early Radio Broadcasting in Middle Tennessee,” THQ XXXI (1972), 80-94.
Mc Bride’s “ ‘Northern, Military, Corrupt, and Transitory,’ Augustus E. Alden, Nashville’s Carpetbagger Mayor,” THQ XXXVII (1978), 63-67.
Owsley’s “Andrew Jackson and His Ward, Andrew Jackson Donelson,” THQ XLI (1982), 124-139.
Carlton-La Ney’s “Fisk Social Work Students’ Emergency Relief Work Following the East Nashville Fire of 1916,” THQ XLIV (1985), 371-379.
Mc Connell’s “Lou Cretia Owen and The Old Hickory Munitions Plant During World War I,” THQ LVIII (1999), 128-139.
Leforge's "State Colored Conventions of Tennessee, 1865-1866," THQ LXV (2006), 230-253.
Additions:
Avery’s, ed. “The Second Presbyterian Church of Nashville during the Civil War,” THQ XI (1952), 356-375.
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-La Ney’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.
Mc Glone’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.
Mc Connell’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 errors and omissions in these citations. Please contact us in order that we can make corrections.
Return to NHN Table of Contents.
Deletions:
Avery’s, ed. “The Second Presbyterian Church of Nashville during the Civil War,” THQ XI (1952), 356-375.
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-La Ney’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.
Mc Glone’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.
Mc Connell’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 errors and omissions in these citations. Please contact us in order that we can make corrections.
Return to NHN Table of Contents.
Nashville Articles in the Tennessee Historical Quarterly
Nashville-related articles published in the THQ (1942-2006) 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 Mc Kendree 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.
Mc Bride’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.
De Witt, 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.
Mc Bride’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-La Ney’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.
Mc Glone’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.
Mc Connell’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 errors and omissions in these citations. Please contact us in order that we can make corrections.
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