Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association-Cheatham Co Museum

Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association-Cheatham Co Museum The Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association runs the Cheatham County Museum! We’re a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization established in 1994.

05/08/2026
CCCHS graduates Terri Dodson Atkins and her twin sister Sherri Dodson McClelland recently stopped by the Cheatham County...
05/08/2026

CCCHS graduates Terri Dodson Atkins and her twin sister Sherri Dodson McClelland recently stopped by the Cheatham County Museum to donate several special items connected to Cheatham County history.

One of the donated items was a memorable keepsake given in 1974 by beloved CCCHS teacher Miss Pinky Hudgens to Terri’s late husband, Mark Atkins.

Look forward to future social media posts featuring more of the wonderful items donated by the “Dodson twins” to the Cheatham County Museum.

Their generous contributions are helping preserve and “spark” stories, memories, and history of Cheatham County for generations to come.

Who was “sparked” by “Ol’ Tickler”?

The Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association invites you to attend our monthly meeting on Thursday, May 1...
05/07/2026

The Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association invites you to attend our monthly meeting on Thursday, May 14, at 6:30 p.m. at the Cheatham County Museum.

Whether you enjoy local history, genealogy, preservation, or simply learning more about the people and places that shaped Cheatham County, we would love to have you join us. Everyone is invited to attend!

📍 835 South Main St.Ashland City, Tennessee

Come be a part of preserving and sharing 170 years of Cheatham County history!

The Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association /Cheatham County Museum is open today from 10 until 4!Admiss...
05/07/2026

The Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association /Cheatham County Museum is open today from 10 until 4!

Admission is just $4 for non-CCHGA members. Admission is free for CCHGA members and for children under the age of 10.

Stop by and browse 170 years of Cheatham County history, explore exhibits, or spend some time doing genealogical and family research. Docents Gary and RD would love to see you at the museum today!

Grab your tickets while they last! 🇺🇸The Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association has only 10 tickets rem...
05/07/2026

Grab your tickets while they last! 🇺🇸

The Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association has only 10 tickets remaining for our May 9th “A Cup of LIBERTEA” patriotic tea fundraiser!

Celebrate history, patriotism, and community at this special event honoring America, Tennessee, and Cheatham County.

This event invites men and women to enjoy a casual afternoon of fun.

Celebrate you, your family, mothers’ day, your election win, local history!

Wear your red, white and blue attire and top it off with a crazy hat!

🎟 Tickets are $50 each.

Stop by the Cheatham County Museum today between 10 and 4 to purchase your tickets before they are gone!

Can’t make it to Ashland City today? Call Shirley +1 (615) 587-0805 to make other arrangements!

Thank you for supporting the Cheatham County Museum and helping preserve 170 years of local history.

Thank you to our Table Sponsors :

1776- Cheatham County Sports Hall of Fame
1796-Rex and George Anne Raines
1856-Margaret Brady, Attorney at Law
2026-First Saturday Garden Club

The Tennessean • Wed, Jun 15, 1983 • Page 60 • (Nashville, Tennessee)Story of 'Kingston' Springs Covers Rich CanvasBy AN...
05/07/2026

The Tennessean • Wed, Jun 15, 1983 • Page 60 • (Nashville, Tennessee)

Story of 'Kingston' Springs Covers Rich Canvas

By ANN BETTS
KINGSTON SPRINGS - With plentiful fish, wildlife and mineral springs, and with a hardwood forest, the Harpeth River Valley near here has been rich in natural blessings since before the memory of man.

About 1,200 years ago people came into the region - perhaps overland, perhaps on the waters that white people would later call Turnbull and Harpeth. The sulphur springs may have drawn them here, as they would draw holiday crowds in much later times.

Indians of the Mississippian era left a silent legacy on the land, which continues to yield evidence of their presence. They hunted, made pottery and buried their dead in slate-lined graves, creating mounds which sculpt the Cheatham County landscape to this day.

According to Sam Smith, archeologist for the state Department of Conservation, a large area of the county has been appropriated for study. Excavations made at Mound Bottoms in the late 1970s are intended for eventual public access.

Kingston Springs native Raymond Mays recalled that in his youth Indian paintings were plainly visible on a nearby bluff.

Since then the paintings have faded out of existence.

Not until the late 1700s did white people settle in the valley.

A man named Samuel Kingston dwelled here for a time before returning to Nashville to live.

The first families known to have established permanent homes here were the Dunns and the Mayses, whose descendants to the sixth generation continue to call Kingston Springs their home.

The Dunn place, a large home built of massive native logs, is still a landmark on Kingston Springs Road. On the town's highest hill the Dunns started a family cemetery which now serves as final resting place for many of the community's families.

"Kingston," as it is most often referred to by natives, has had several reasons for existence over the years, but the most obvious has always been “the springs."

Old-timers remember when the four sulphur springs and one free stone spring were the center of activity in the neighborhood and a drawing card for tourists from Nashville, Memphis and “all over the country."

Each of the springs had a different concentration of minerals, including black sulphur, white sulphur and types called lythia and chalybeate.

Advertised as a cure for indigestion, stomach problems and kidney trouble, the waters bubbled from concrete fountains.

Those "taking the waters" drank from dippers attached to the rock walls, and a shed provided shade for women in Victorian finery.

An 1855 advertisement in the Nashville Union and American announced that E.J. and J. Kreider were "ready to accommodate visitors" at the popular watering place, Kingston Springs.

The inn at which the Kreiders entertained guests was a rambling log structure surrounded by 200 shade trees. Grant's Band of Music provided entertainment, and cottages were avallable for those who preferred privacy.

Many visitors spent whole summers at the spa.

Room and board at the hotel ran to $1.50 a day in 1855, and that included the medicinal benefits of the famous springs.

Just after the turn of the century Matt Allen sold the springs and hotel to Arthur (Ott) Beard and W.C. West.

Beard, as a teenager, had helped Allen build the hotel, a replacement for the original structure which had been destroyed in a fire.

Through the early decades of this century, people continued to flock to Kingston Springs to socialize and take the waters. "Mr. Ott" quickly became one of the town's most memorable characters.

In addition to overseeing operations at the springs, he ran a general store, one of seven such businesses in the village at that time. ("Mr. Ott's" granddaughter, Priscilla Beard Dorris, with help from Raymond Mays, listed the other early mercantile establishments as Page's, Pendergrass', Major Moore's, Lampley's, Richardson's, and Smith & Davis.)

"Mr. Ott" also was the village undertaker, banker and, eventually, car dealer. When horseless carriages were a novelty, he undertook not only to sell them, but to teach each new owner to drive as part of the deal.

Dorris recalled her grandfather's account of a trip to Nashville with a fledgling driver who had a tendency to holler "whoa" rather than hit the brakes in emergencies. The new driver ran down a sow and her piglets, as well as a vegetable cart on West End, and upon returning home drove in the front and right out the back wall of his new garage.

Before autos became the main
of locomotion in Kingston life revolved around the railroad. Every boy in town wanted to be either a conductor or an engineer.

The "accommodation” a commuter train which ran short hops out of Nashville, brought guests to the springs. Trains also handled timber from the mill.

"This was a timber town," Raymond Mays declared. In the early days of this century much of Cheatham County's timber was still virgin. "The stave mill covered four acres," Mays rcalled.

Dorris recalled the names of three country doctors who served the area. Drs. Liles and Harris Grove buggies through the countryside, while Dr. Moore tended later generations, making house calls in a car.

Education in the village began with Vanderbilt Preparatory School, a private academy with no known connection to the Nashville university. It is thought to have been endowed by the Methodist Church.

Youngsters attending the school were governed by strict rules regarding compulsory church attendance and limited contact with students of the opposite s*x. Parents responded to the advertisement for a school in a "healthy place, with good society, and no whiskey sold in the village."

Kingston Springs' first public school, now more than 80 years old, still stands next to the Methodist Church. It has been purchased by the city for restoration as a historical landmark.

The present elementary school serves grades K-4. Residents speak hopefully of location of a high school here in the near future.

The town now boasts what is considered one of the finest volunteer fire departments in the Midstate. Five active church congregations (Baptist, Church of Christ, Methodist, Nazarene and Pentecostal) offer spiritual guidance to the town's population of approximately 1,100.

Kingston has had rural mail delivery since the late 1800s.

Carrier Tom Moss, with his horse Joe, regularly took a buggy full of letters up the hollows and across Turnbull in the years before World War I.

During Prohibition, "Kingston was a pretty rough place," according to Raymond Mays.

Revenuers raided stills throughout the hollows, and on one occasion a complete still was assembled as an example and warning against
manufacturing moonshine. Mays says a small boy walking through the crowd with his father spotted the exhibit and cried out, "Look, daddy, they got out still!

Several new businesses have sprung up in Kingston since completion of Interstate 40. Motels, restaurants and subdivisions continue to thrive in the area.

Today, the fertile valley is still green. The old Beard home still gazes benevolently down from its oak-clad hill, though no one comes to take the waters anymore.

Hey students! Need to pick up some last-minute community service hours? We’ve got you covered!At our A Cup of LIBERTEA o...
05/06/2026

Hey students!

Need to pick up some last-minute community service hours? We’ve got you covered!

At our A Cup of LIBERTEA on May 9th, the Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association is looking for volunteers to help make this special event a success.

There are plenty of ways to earn hours while supporting your local museum:
• Set up tables and chairs
• Help decorate
• Assist during the event
• Break down tables and chairs
• Clean up afterward
• Load and unload cars

It’s a great way to give back, meet people, and be part of a meaningful community event celebrating history.

📅 May 9th at the Thrive 55+ Center
Between 7:30 am - 5:00 pm

Interested? Email us at [email protected] to sign up!

The Cheatham County Museum is open today 10:00-4:00! A Cup of Libertea is Almost Here! Join us on May 9th from 1:00–3:00...
05/06/2026

The Cheatham County Museum is open today 10:00-4:00!

A Cup of Libertea is Almost Here!

Join us on May 9th from 1:00–3:00 PM for a delightful afternoon at our A Cup of Libertea Tea, hosted by the Cheatham County Historical and Genealogical Association!

🎟 Tickets: $50 per person
👥 Seating: Tables of six — gather your friends and enjoy the experience together!

Come dressed in your favorite red, white, and blue casual attire and don’t forget—there will be a Patriotic Hat Contest! Get creative and show off your festive spirit for a chance to stand out.

This special event is more than just tea—it’s a celebration of history, community, and tradition. Your support helps preserve and promote the rich heritage of Cheatham County.

Purchase your tickets and be part of this memorable afternoon!

The Cup of Libertea is a welcoming event for both men and women who share a passion for the stories of Cheatham County, the heritage of Tennessee, and the enduring history of the United States.

Email [email protected] or stop by the museum during hours open.

Table Sponsors:

-Margaret Brady, Attorney at Law
-Cheatham County Sports Hall of Fame
-First Saturday Garden Club
-Rex and George Anne Raines

The Tennessean • Page 13• Sunday, September 26, 1943• Nashville, Tennessee
05/06/2026

The Tennessean • Page 13
• Sunday, September 26, 1943
• Nashville, Tennessee

The Cheatham County Museum is open today from 10:00-4:00. Stop by a pick up a Cup of Libertea ticket! The tea  is Saturd...
05/05/2026

The Cheatham County Museum is open today from 10:00-4:00. Stop by a pick up a Cup of Libertea ticket!

The tea is Saturday May 9 from 1:00-3:00. Table Sponsors:

Margaret Brady, Attorney at Law
First Saturday Garden Club
Cheatham County Sports Hall of Fame
Rex and George Anne Raines

Address

835 S. Main Street
Ashland City, TN
37015

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 4pm
Wednesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 4pm
Saturday 12pm - 4pm

Telephone

(615) 792-3623

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