Photograph of one set of stairs that descend to the underground offices and tunnel of Legislative Plaza 2020. Courtesy of Kayleigh Whitman.
Stop 4 of 18
Legislative and War Memorial Plazas
As you ascended the steps to War Memorial Plaza from Deaderick Street, you probably noticed a set of stairs on either side of the lamp posts. Those small stairs lead to Legislative Plaza and a secret maze of hallways and offices. There is even a tunnel that runs underneath Dr. MLK Jr. Blvd. that leads straight into the lower floor of the capitol!
Construction on what is called the Motlow Tunnel began in 1958 after a recommendation of Reager Motlow, the great-nephew of whiskey-distiller Jack Daniels. According to historian Elizabeth K. Goetsch, it was initially proposed to provide legislators and visitors easier access to the building, but there is speculation that it was actually a retaliation against the infamous prohibitionist Edward Ward Carmack. He was a prominent newspaper editor and congressman who abruptly switched his position on temperance. Just before his bid for Tennessee governor in 1908, he sided with those who desired to make alcohol completely illegal. Local newspapers and his political opponents had a field day with this “change of heart.”
While it was enough to win the support of the Prohibitionist faction, it was not enough to win the election. After the loss, he returned to the newspaper business. Not far from where you are standing, Carmack was shot by his newspaper rivals, Duncan and Robin Cooper, over the victim’s slander of Duncan in their paper. Viewed by many as a martyr for the Prohibitionist cause, a statue of Edward Ward Carmack was erected right in front of the capitol. Motlow’s Tunnel, which runs underneath, was completed in 1958 and remains an amusing irony for Nashvillians.
So are there other secret tunnels running underneath the streets of Nashville? Speculation abounds. There are rumors of tunnels used to transfer cadavers between medical colleges and hospitals on the southern end of downtown as well as a tunnel running from the basement of Hume-Fogg Academic Magnet High School. However, most historians remain skeptical.
Turn LEFT and walk toward Union Street and the opposite end of the plaza. Once you get to the end of War Memorial, take a RIGHT. You will see a number of statues in a courtyard. The Military Branch Museum is on the side of War Memorial facing this smaller courtyard.
Tour Stops
Public Square
1 Public Square, Nashville, TN 37201
Andrew Jackson Hotel
505 Deaderick Street, Nashville, TN 37219
Tennessee State Capitol
600 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37243
Legislative and War Memorial Plazas
301 Sixth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37243
War Memorial Building and Military Branch Museum
301 Sixth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37243
Hermitage Hotel
231 Sixth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219
National Life and Accident Insurance Company (Snodgrass Tower)
312 Rosa L. Parks Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37201
Ben West Library
225 Polk Avenue, Nashville, TN 37203
James K. Polk Place & Powder Magazine Explosion
213 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219
Hotel Tulane
201 Polk Avenue Nashville, TN 37203
Watkins Institute & McKendree United Methodist Church
523 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219
Maxwell House Hotel
201 Fourth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219
Noelle Hotel
200 Fourth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219
Printers Alley
Printers Alley, Nashville, TN 37201
The Arcade
65 Arcade Alley, Nashville, TN 37219
Woolworth on 5th and Nashville Sit-Ins
221 5th Ave N, Nashville, TN 37208
Sarah Estell and 5th Avenue Murals
217 Fifth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219
Ryman Auditorium
116 Fifth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219

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