2011 photo of the Fifth Avenue residences across the street from Bridgestone Arena. Image courtesy of MHC.
Stop 7 of 12
Nineteenth Century Residences
Imagine Andrew Jackson walking through this area in the 1820s to visit friends on Rutledge Hill or on his way to the state capitol. If he walked down Cherry Street, as it was called then, he would have seen this house just as you see it. The building, located at 104 Fifth Avenue South, was built in the 1820s between Jackson’s first and second runs for U.S. president. (He was elected in 1828.) While much has changed in downtown Nashville, this unassuming building dates back nearly 200 years and remains the oldest original residential house in downtown Nashville.
In the 1820s, Nashville was a small town on the rise. Named the permanent state capitol in 1843, this area was just beyond the wealthier neighborhood on the northern side of Broadway. The two-story Federal style house was more typical of a middle-class white family. According to the Downtown Partnership, “During a renovation in the 1980s, an eighteen-inch layer of silt and sand discovered in a sealed off basement provided evidence that the Cumberland River had indeed reached Fifth Avenue during the floods of the early nineteenth century.”
The building to the right, at 106 Fifth Avenue South was constructed in 1880. After the Civil War, the neighborhood grew more diverse with working-class families who lived here. This included African Americans and immigrants. In the early 1900s, both buildings shifted to mixed use. The ground floor of 106 Fifth Avenue was a shoe shop run by Isaac Otberry and his wife Dora, and the couple lived on the second floor above the store. Next door, Chester S. Williams ran a grocery store. From horses-drawn carriages to peddle taverns and from train whistles to honky tonks, these nineteenth century residences have seen it all.
From Fifth Avenue South, turn LEFT onto Broadway. Walk two blocks to Seventh Avenue South, and the next stop will be on your left at the historic marker for Nashville First Baptist Church.
Tour Stops
Captain Thomas Ryman's Home
514 Second Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37210
Rutledge Hill
100 Lea Avenue Nashville, TN 37210
Geddes Engine Company and Litterer Laboratory
629 Second Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37210
Elm Street Methodist Church
616 Fifth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Workmen's Circle Hall
521 Fifth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
St. Paul AME Church and Hatch Show Print
224 Fifth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Nineteenth Century Residences
104-106 Fifth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Nashville First Baptist Church
108 Seventh Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Customs House and Hume-Fogg High School
701 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Nashville Centennial and Christ Church Cathedral
801 Broadway Nashville, TN 37203
Union Station and Train Shed
1001 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Union Station Baggage Building and Cummins Station
209 Tenth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203


