The XPLR.NASH Podcast

Who Founded Nashville? | Episode 018

Episode Summary

Amazon announces what people will be shopping for at their new brick and mortar store. Also, who founded Nashville? We talk about the founding of this great city/

Episode Notes

Screened Threads

Events

Business News

Creator of the Day - @sigelarts | https://www.instagram.com/sigelarts/

Hisotry of Nashville

Episode Transcription

00:06 Hello everybody. I'm Stuart Deming with XPLR.Nash, I'm cohosting the Nashville daily podcast with Mr. Erin Pennington. Aaron, what did you do over the weekend?

00:15 So over the weekend I got to enjoy the wonderful world of opera land and the Gaylord Gaylord Opryland resort, the grand old Opry, all of that stuff. I got to experience all of that and I've been before but it's, it's good to be in that area and explore in that area. Yeah.

00:34 So is this your first time doing the backstage tour of the Opry? Yes, it was my first time doing the backstage tour. Let's talk about your experience cause they just introduced this brand new, like interactive $8 million video. They're a, I went two weeks ago and I've been about 40 times in hands down. That was the best experience I've had at the operating. Yes. I actually

00:55 Believe that that's the best part of the tour itself. Absolutely. There's a a room that you walk into and you get to experience a video that tells the history of the grand old Opry, the history of artists getting involved and how they got their start at the grand old Opry a, it's hosted the videos hosted by Trisha Yearwood and Garth Brooks. Oh, that sounds a fantastic, it's so much fun. And it's, it's like they make the experience to be like you are on the stage scene in witness witnessing history for the first time.

01:33 Yeah. When that was, when I, when I went through a couple of weeks ago I legitimately texted my wife Amanda and I said, okay, I want to write this a country music song now and try performing at the Opry.

01:46 It's, it's very inspiring. I will say that. So I really enjoy that part of it. The rest of it, to be honest, is very quick. And you, because they push so many people through the grand old Opry tours, you don't get time to sit there and Ooh and ah, a lot and really take it in. That's the only time you really get to take in what it's like to be a part of the grand old Opry. The rest of it, it's, it's kind of quick and you're sped through it.

02:16 Yeah, I definitely liked this new video of the grand old Opry that they have. I had clients do a buy at one time so we had the entire place to ourselves. That was an amazing experience. And the tour guide was really personable, but it's Monday morning. How is traffic looking right now Aaron?

02:34 Oh, you know, it's a Monday morning so everybody skipped work on Friday so they're trying to get there early on Monday. That just makes it [inaudible]

02:40 Bad. Just makes it bad. Well it was really interesting. Friday I was driving around in the evening. I'm like traffic is not bad at all right now. This is amazing. This is like a 6:00 PM and like I actually got home and a reasonable amount of time compared to normal on Friday. So you know why this kids, everybody, everyone took off of work. Thank you for taking our advice. Taking off of work tonight. You guys, if you're interested, Backstreet boys are performing at Bridgestone arena 8:00 PM. I always get Backstreet boys and incent confused. Really? How can I do that? I really want to sing like I really wanna sing, like buy, buy, buy, buy. I know that's in sync. What's a Backstreet boys song? I wanted that. Oh. Oh yeah. Okay. I remember APM, Bridgestone arena. We've talked about this one a couple of times. Whiskey jam is happening at min town. To learn more about that. Whiskey jam.com and then this is the large week four live on the green. This is the last week of 2019 for live on the green. Starting Thursday at 5:15 PM to Sunday. Literally concerts the entire weekend.

03:42 Gosh. Yeah, it's going to be big. Is Z

03:46 On my show? On our show notes, it literally says a lot of bands. We, I don't think we had time to name all of them. We'll take appointment. His name.

03:53 Well they actually, they have some pretty cool things just besides bands at the beginning of the day. They have some yoga on the green, they've got kids yoga on the green during the early parts of the day. They've got, so they've got some kids activities and it's, you know, very, very mellow and chill until it gets down into your your big bands down at the bottom of the lineup. But it looks like they've got also some kind of kids Fest happening on the 605 stage. It's a separate stage that they have probably off to the side a little bit on Saturday. So I think that's on like Diedrich street, like where they shut down part of Diedrich street, but it's close to there. I think it's right beside Diedrich street. But if you're going to be driving a don't go anywhere near we're live on the green is this weekend because that's going to be a, we're going to be pretty busy.

04:47 Yeah. then you also have Peter Frampton finale a Thursday at ascent amphitheater at 7:30 PM. You love Peter Frampton, don't you? That it's

04:56 Going to be hard not to go to wow. Peter Frampton is just, if you are into seeing any kind of rock shows or somebody who is a fantastic guitarist, Peter Frampton is, there's not many people who are going to give on a better performance and a better experience than Peter Frampton. I wonder if this is one of his last shows because it says phenomenal. Yeah, he's doing a finale show. I'm not sure if that's a, just an, that may be the name of maybe a marketing. But you know, maybe hinting at something. I'm not sure. I haven't read up on the tour or anything. But gosh, Peter Frampton's an amazing performer and an amazing guitar, so he puts on a really good show. And then let's see, at the Ryman we have the Raconteurs tours, which I had never heard of before. So I looked up the definition of rock on tour and it is a person who tells anecdotes in a skillful and amusing way or a storyteller is a synonym of, so that's a pretty clever name for a band, but they're going to be at the Ryman a Saturday Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8:00 PM

06:05 O. So a whole nother weekend show. Wow. That's two in a row. Yeah. The Ryman must a, either these people are selling, I'll take it's fast or the Ryman just knows that these tickets are gonna sell. Yup. And then on Saturday we have Vanderbilt football verse, Georgia Bulldogs at 6:30 PM, then a and that is at Vanderbelt. That's going to be a crowd, especially with Georgia. Georgia will occupy that stadium. So if you want tickets for that VU comedy years.com, and then you can buy your football tickets. So last week we talked about this brick and mortar store coming into green Hill mall over on news channel five. They actually have confirmed whether it's going to be Amazon confirmed and it's not what we thought it was gonna be. No, we thought it was going to be like a fashion store or one where it was three stores.

06:53 Right. I thought it, I thought it was possibly gonna try to compete with the Apple store, the Microsoft store, since they were born with like all the Alexa and fire tablets and stuff. But you know, that's not the case at all, is it now? So Amazon confirms plans for brick and mortar, Amazon bookstore this is found on news channel five and basically they're gonna be able to sell Kindles there. That'd be pretty funny. Yeah, it's, it's, it's interesting how so there's actually a local bookstore in green Hills. I want to, I'm sorry if I mess up this name parsing this books. Parnassus books. Okay.

07:29 Yeah. So Parnassus books is a local bookstore that's been here

07:33 In Nashville for a while. Have you ever been in there in a I have not. I have not either. So I've heard, I don't think about Parnassus though. All my books are digital. I don't try buying new physical books because it takes up a lot of space, especially when you're moving a, so there's a brand new Amazon bookstore coming in, even though they're the ones who really helped close borders bookstore. You guys remember [inaudible]

07:56 Borders, right? And I love this statement. The Parnassus books manager says, I figured it was a matter of time before they opened a retail location and he says, there's certainly, there's a certain irony to F to find. They're opening a brick and mortar store considering, and this is the, he doesn't quote this, but the news channel five kind of fills this in. They already comes because they basically shut down a lot of Barnes and Nobles books, a million and everything and pointers. You know, they're opening, they're opening a, a thing that they helped put out of business because they couldn't get enough people in there. So I'm wondering what's going to be the draw that would bring somebody into an Amazon bookstore versus a Parnassus or a Barnes and noble or a books, a million.

08:50 I wonder if it has to do with them bringing in 5,000 employees. Like if that bookstore is going to be like a place for training, I will. You think they would have put it inside Amazon yards or Amazon yards? National yard [inaudible] Amazon yards. Yeah. yeah, that's really interesting. So the, another article, this is found on visit music city.com the Nashville sounds baseball ballpark is to be renamed first horizon park. So it's changing the name from first Tennessee park to first horizon park. Is that the name of the new bank? Well, yes. Okay. So I didn't know tennis first. Tennessee had officially changed their name to first horizon. I, yeah, this is, this is August 22nd. This article is found on visit music city.com. And it says in the second paragraph, first Tennessee park soon will be first horizon park as quickly captured the hearts of middle Tennessee ENS.

09:45 And we are honored to have our name on this magnificent facility. Yeah. So it was, I mean, it was only a matter of time. As soon as I knew first Tennessee was changing their name. And I knew that something would have to change with first Tennessee park. So first horizon park let's see if there's a timeline. I think they're going to finish out this season. Okay. Here we go. Here's something that I, this past June 1st horizon announced that it will unify its family of companies. First Tennessee bank, capital bank, FTB advisors, and FTN financial under the first horizon brand. So that's kind of where we get that merger of the name changes. They're merging all of their names into first horizon. So that's a, that's interesting. So it's good that the name change has been announced, so it'll only, it'll only be a matter of time probably before we see the signage start to change.

10:46 Yeah. I think they're going to finish out the season first. And then once the season's over, they'll start doing the name change. So next season it should be called first horizon park. This is found over on the Nashville business journal. A developer lands hotel pursues grocery at 1.7 billion Antioch project. That's an expensive project. One, we'll repeat that. 1.7 billion billion dollar Antioch project for hotels, plural. So it looks like there's more than one hotel and a grocery store. Where is this project happening? So the hotels were occupied about six acres of century farms development and Antioch at exit 60 off of I 24. All right, so if you're near exit 60, maybe don't move. Maybe that's where the property values are starting to increase. So you pass bell road that's where like that's where the IKO was initially talking about [inaudible] side. Yeah. And then you go to the next exit and it's going to be right there and they'd say one point $5 billion construction project. Wow. That's, that's so much.

11:55 Yeah. It looks like they're going to build a 125 room courtyard by Marriott and a 160 room hotel that would carry two brands, Hampton Inn and a home to suite. So three hotels total, two buildings.

12:10 And this is going to be a 310 property or 310 acre property construction.

12:16 Yeah. And looks like I'm kind of excited for this and potential 280,000 square foot shopping center from I think it's, I've always Tanger Tangier. I don't know how they say there. I've never heard it say it set out loud. A factory outlet centers which are all over all over the South end are really nice.

12:37 You see this map NES is NES moving their headquarters question Mark. Huh? But a NES expo. Yeah. This is work linking this in the show notes so you guys can see everything they're being built. Greenspace they're building a new Dunkin donuts cause that Dunkin donuts doesn't exist down there in Antioch anymore. CHS, I think that's a hospital office office, residential restaurants. If NES is moving down there, that's something that's crazy that they own a lot of property in downtown Nashville. Yes, they do. So I wonder if they are actually moving down there. That'd be really interesting. If somebody knows, please tweet us at X PLR underscore Nash if any S is moving down the Antioch.

13:18 Yeah. So that's cool to see. And it's just a a good reminder that, you know, Nashville is expanding beyond downtown. We've obviously seen it in cool Springs, that's been the big development area outside of downtown, but you know, now that's going into other pockets of the city and so that, that area might be the new hotspot for, for some development.

13:42 Obviously the space, it's probably the land is also cheaper down there than in Williamson County. So if I was a developer looking to buy some land, that's where I would go honestly. Oh, absolutely. So our tip of the day, we like to have a Nashville experience or tip of the day because it's almost fall. I said, go get a pumpkin spice coffee at Dunkin donuts or Starbucks and then go explore Radnor Lake. The weather is, it's, it's a nice ADZ this week fall is just around the corner except for next week. It's going to be in the high nineties. So go get that pumpkin spice coffee and then go explore Radnor Lake. There is a small gas station that, did they have white bison at that gas station right next to red or like, no, that's not a twice daily. I think that's like an independent owned. Okay. Yes. I know there's a gas station right hand side that few days.

14:33 Yeah, it does have coffee. So if you, you can grab a coffee there. You can go to the, well on your way there if you're coming in from downtown Nashville because both are off granny white pike, so it'd be able to stop by the, well, on your way to Radnor Lake, there's a [inaudible]

14:46 Starbucks other coffee shops in Brentwood as well. Yeah. So plenty of opportunity for a, a nice coffee to walk if you're headed to Radnor Lake no matter kind of what side you're, you're coming in from. Who is our creator of the day, Aaron.

15:02 Okay. So our creator of the day is, I've, I've seen some people like this perform at, you know, conferences and stuff. Sometimes you'll see this at conferences. It's a, he's a live artist. His name is Justin and he is, his Instagram handle is at I wanna say Segal arts, S. I. G. E. L. A. R. T. S. A. He's a live artist, performer, graphic designer, hashtag live create, inspire. He has some videos on YouTube, but if you go to his Instagram, again that is at S I. G E L. A. R. T. S. he's a lot of videos and pictures of his paintings that he's done as a live artist. And I love the style of what he brings to these paintings and he, it looks like he has a good story telling ability that comes out of these works. So it's really cool to see. And you know, not only is it cool to see somebody who can paint, but who can paint, you know, almost in a matter of minutes.

16:03 It is story telling why performance. Yeah. With the music and it's all this huge art thing. Yeah, his art is amazing. His stranger right there at the beginning of his page, he has the I think it was Billy from stranger things. Yeah. Yeah. So it's a really good, it looks really good. So congrats on being our creator of the day.

16:25 Aaron, where did you eat at locally? Recently? Okay. So with me being out at the Gaylord Opryland resort, one of the meals that I had, I wanted to try the Mexican restaurant in there in the garden conservatory. They have some good restaurants down there in the garden conservatory. So I had Solario Cantina

16:46 And it was good. It was really good. I had a couple of their tacos, a really like more street tacos or where they like big, like tacos, like X. Just describe the taco. They were more street taco style. Okay. And I think they had a, it seemed like they had a flower and a corn tortilla on each taco. That's nice. Yeah. And I think both of those, yeah. I had a some, a really good CAISO with the chips that we got. It was just a good experience. It wasn't priced out of this world as well. You know, some of the places that at a Opry are priced out of this world. It was not actually that bad. So I had a good experience there. What about you? Where did you eat recently? So yesterday I had the opportunity to go, or not.

17:30 Yesterday on Saturday I had the opportunity to go up to Clarksville eight there at a restaurant. And I literally cannot remember the name of the restaurant I ate there, but the food was fantastic. But I wanted to cover this restaurant I ate at, it's called til five pizza on Murphysboro pike. Okay. I've seen those. They have a few places in Nashville, don't they? This is the only one they may have. There's a lot of those of pizza placers signs though. And they're open till five o'clock every single day. Yes. Okay. [inaudible] You and I have eaten there once or twice. But I had their, a Buffalo chicken salad. It was good. I, I definitely like Buffalo chicken salads from the up North, like up North a little bit more cause they cover it in mozzarella. That makes sense. One was like more like cheddar cheese and so that's just a preference of mine.

18:12 But and then also they they messed up with our order and they gave us a free 12 inch like steak sub, so Hey, add some of that too. So it was, it was good. So till five pizza on Murfreesboro pike, they're open until five. That's the nicest thing about them. If you're up late and you want that 5:00 AM for everybody, Hey am yes. Why? Just to stay open if you're going to be open to [inaudible] the next day, open 24, seven. Yeah, I guess. Well then your name goes out the white side, so I don't know. That's true. So this episode of the Nashville daily is brought to you by screened threads. Screened threads is a Nashville curated shop located in the historic marathon village. Used code Nashville daily to get 10% off your next online order. Their website is screened@threads.com go in store and mentioned this podcast and you also get 10% off on your order.

19:00 You got to whisper it to when they say, are you ready to check out? You just go.

19:03 It's filled daily. Nashville daily. It's a secret code. Yeah. That's all right. That's all right. That's our secret code. So one thing that we wanted to discuss with you guys is the history of the city of Nashville. And the reason we wanted to discuss that is because we think it's important for you to know the history of the place that you live or the

19:25 Place you're visiting. Yeah. Yeah. I think history has, at least for me, when I go and travel history has a huge effect on how I see a place. Right? and I, I learned this a lot in new Orleans when traveling to new Orleans gush. You can't, you can't look at anything in new Orleans. When you know the history of it, you could 300 year olds, you can't see anything. And disassociated with some influence that's been brought in over those past 300 years because there's just, history has shaped that town almost more than I think any other city in the, in the United States. But history is very important when getting to know a town because you get to know how and why the town was formed. Maybe why this area is developed, why this area is not. And you get to know kind of how the, the town got it started and got its economic peak.

20:27 That makes a huge different. You have to learn that history to truly understand like, Hey, where are this? Where is this city going? Without history, you can't know where to go. Yeah, absolutely. So today, you know, we're not going to slam you with a bunch of Nashville history from, because we can literally be like a six hour episode. We're not going to slam you with, from beginning

20:48 Of Nashville to end of Nashville today. We're going to take it decade by decade. And today we're going to primarily focus on the founding of Nashville and a little bit before the founding of Nashville. So you, so you know, you know how Nashville became a city in the first place and, and who was here and, and how it even happened. And Stuart's, you know somebody who, you know, has studied on this a lot and knows this. So Stewart's gonna really take us through this. And you know, I'm going to kind of just be a, a, a person who is learning a lot of this as well. I know Stewart's history is, is top notch, but I'll probably be asking him some questions along the way just as you might be at home or in your car because probably some of this information is going to be new to me as well. So I'm very excited to start with this. But the steward, I'll start, I'll start with this question. Where do we start as a city? We're, where does all of this come from? I feel like there's, it comes down to maybe one, one person that had a big influence on the start of our city.

21:55 Yeah. So there's actually, there's a few people but I would say you have to start before the start. Yes. And you had three or four different native American tribes that lived in this area. So you had to chick a Cherokee Creek cheek Indians and chick was all Indians that lived in this area. And a really historic thing that you guys have to look at to begin this area is you have this thing called the Natchez trace Parkway. The native Americans didn't call it that, but basically it was this trading route from Natchez, Mississippi up here to middle Tennessee.

22:31 You can still see along the way if you drive there, you could still see the actual trail.

22:36 Does that, yeah. Right. Absolutely. So if you drive about 30 miles down the Natchez trace Parkway, absolutely stunning drive. It is my favorite drive in middle Tennessee. You could see segments of that old trail that they would've used to come up here, but historically this area was a hunting grounds area. So you have a lot of, you have a lot of,

22:58 So it wasn't big on, it wasn't a big settled place. It was more hunting grounds. It's,

23:02 Yes, you will have more of your settlements in South. So down like towards Columbia. Okay, gotcha. There's also like out West, like towards Montgomery bell state park. You have settlements there. Okay. But this area was primarily used for hunting. And so you have this guy named Timothy Demonbrun. Do not ask me his French name cause he has like six names. It's like data loss. Ah, my Timothy, that whatever. I can't, I can't even pronounce it. It's crazy. His name is long. But he was actually a French fur trader that came from Quebec into this middle Tennessee area and they called this the French lick. So yes, right there at the Cumberland river, right where live on the green is happening. That area was the French lick. And that's because of the the Tennessee limestone that basically made this bluff overlook over the Cumberland river.

23:54 Correct? Yes. So, and, and that was, I think this area was also very mineral rich, extremely mineral. And so it was, it was kind of a good area for everybody to, you know, be trading at for those reasons. So Timothy [inaudible] arrived here, so they, they, historians called Timothy the remembering the first citizen of Nashville, and he first traded with the native American native Americans. Yes. So if you look into the life of Timothy [inaudible] remembering he served in the revolutionary war he got up in status in the army and then he, he was also related to some Royal blood and France. I don't know the actual relation to that. Okay. But he became a French fur trader from Quebec and he came here about 1769 to trade with the native Americans. Okay. And there was actually a cave that he lived in on the Cumberland river.

24:49 So I believe it's, it's, it's still there. It's still there. So do you guys know that joke from Saturday night live in a van down by the river Timothy [inaudible] and lived in a cave down by the river? I actually on the river. So he was a French fur trader and he traded with the native Americans. And then you have two guys, about 10 years later you have James Robertson who came by land. And then you also have a guy named John Donaldson. Both of these guys were explorers from North Carolina. Where did he come by? James James Robinson and John Donaldson. Yeah. So they came in at about 1779 I thought, you know, the a, they all wanted to buy land and tooth by sea and I on the opposite shore will be, I didn't know if no, I have no idea. Best from that situation, Paul about it.

25:36 No. If you were starting to say that first line that you were going to say somebody else came by sea. No. So Timothy [inaudible] was still in this area about 10 years after he came here. But he didn't live here full time. He would come here and trade and then leave for a couple months, come back trade and got ya. So this area stayed kind of a hunting and a trading ground, still unoccupied? Pretty much. So you have James Robertson and John Donaldson. This was 1779. There's a couple arguments here. So the art, the one argument is Nashville was founded on Christmas day in 1779 or the other argument is Nashville was found on new year's day in 1779. If you check your resources, and I've done this numerous times, there is, it's a, it's a diverse issue. Like it's a, it's an issue. There's a lot of no one really knows.

26:30 Yeah. So even that's on nashville.gov and encyclopedia. So it's a, I think it was founded Christmas day 1779. So you have James Robertson like Christmas day, Christmas day. That's a good, you're, you're already in a celebrative mood. Well you are for new year's, but I think Christmas is more of a celebratory where you are. Probably just remembering things and in a great way. So I liked Christmas day. So you have James Robertson and John Donaldson and these guys were explorers for North Carolina and North Carolina actually commissioned these two guys to go into middle Tennessee. You have this land purchase called the Transylvania purchase a, which is basically middle Tennessee and North Carolina purchased that land and I can't remember who they purchased it from. Yeah, that would be a, that would be interesting to see who they purchased it from. So these two guys were sent from North Carolina. James Robertson came to Nashville by land, and then John saw Donaldson took a thousand mile Trek from North Carolina onto the Cumberland river and other rivers to get here by river.

27:39 And he came with about 200 men. So this is 1779 Christmas day. And guess what? Both of these guys served in the revolutionary war underneath a guy named Francis Nash. Francis Nashville was a burgundy, a burgundy or general in North Carolina. He served underneath George Washington. That's awesome. And he was actually injured in the battle of German town and then he died a few days from a bullet wound. And that's German town Nashville? No. Okay. So that would have been like, I think German town, Virginia or North Carolina. I'm not exactly sure where the battle of Germantown happened. But so when they, John Donaldson and James Robinson came here, they called it a Fort Nash borough. So that means borough means city. It's an English word. Yes. So for national borough in remembrance of Francis Nash. Very cool. That's interesting. That's, that's cool to see where the Nasha actually came from.

28:43 But you know, that's, that's cool to also hear that it wasn't called Nashville just to begin with. No. And it's, so they named that for Francis Nash to remember his life. Frances Nashville was very involved in North Carolina politics before the revolutionary war. And then he died in that battle of Germantown. And so, I don't know the exact date. I think it was like 1801. So this is 1779. Let's fast forward a little bit. 18 on one. I think that they changed the name from Nasha borough to Nashville. Right. Then the city of Nashville was incorporated as a city in 1806. Gotcha. And was this a part of North Carolina at the time? No. So this, this was, this would have been part of the state of Tennessee. Okay. So the state of Tennessee became the 16th state in 1796. Gotcha. So we already had Tennessee just barely before we had.

29:43 Yeah. So basically 10 years after the state, Tennessee became the 16th state. We had an incorporated city. Gotcha. So that's a, a very brief history into the main parts of Tennessee. And then, so let's cover the decades a little bit. So you have 1779, you have James Robinson, John Donaldson, the 1780s. There was not one of action happening here in the city of Nashville. These two guys build a Fort on the French lick, which we can see if you guys go to the live on the green, you could see where the kind of, where the Fort remains. Right. And James Robertson had three sons. No, I think it was five sons, and three of them were killed by the native Americans because the native Americans would have attacked James Robinson and that foot, hence why they had to build a Fort. Yep. He actually had a son that was scalped and survived, which is super interesting.

30:36 And then James Robertson was married to a woman named Charlotte Robertson. Guess where we got Charlotte Avenue, I'm guessing from Charlotte Robertson. Yeah. Interesting. And then you also have a town near Dickson called Charlotte, Tennessee. That town is named after Charlotte Robertson. Wow. And she was if you read the history books, she, she killed some native Americans herself. A after her sons were killed, she went out and she, she killed some native Americans. I think she killed like upwards of 20. Oh gosh. Yeah. She was a, Hey, if you got your revenge, she was a fierce woman. Then you have John Donaldson. He has a daughter named Rachel Donaldson. I can't remember John Donaldson's wife, but Rachel Donaldson is the one who married the seventh president of union, a United States. Yep. Jackson. Yup. So you have this start of Nashville, you have the start of Tennessee and then you have very deep American history almost immediately afterwards.

31:32 Yeah. So we'll well, or were we going to park it there for the day? Cause we we get in D after that, don't we? Yeah. So if we, if we get really into it one thing I do want to cover, so in 1807, we're incorporated as a city. You have a guy named John Harding. He came from West Virginia and he founded Bellmead plantation. Dun, dun dun dun Bellmead plantation is historically known for raising the thoroughbred American horses. And we'll do a whole history segment on Bellmead plantation. Yup, absolutely. Gosh, that's a lot of information just in, in these few minutes. But Oh, you already have so many names that are prevalent around Nashville. The, you have the area in the city of Donaldson, you have Harding Harding place and Harding pike. And you have Charlotte Avenue and EV pretty much 30% of the downtown and city names in and around Nashville already just with these founders.

32:37 Oh, absolutely. And so if you guys are interested in looking up some history behind 12 and Nashville street names go over, we'll link it in our show notes. It's that style blueprint. It gives you some of the brief history of some of our street names. That's really cool. And then also a really interesting article. A photographer took the same exact journey on kayak, that thousand mile journey that John Donaldson did. Wow. And guess who made and then die a documentary about it? Ken burns. No, I wish. But it was the Nashville public television. Oh, very cool. They do some great work. They made a documentary about this photographer doing the thousand mile journey and you could watch that over at the Tennesseean. So we'll link those in the show notes. That's awesome. This is just the star of Nashville history. There is so much that I even left out.

33:27 Cause there's just so much deep American and Tennessee history here in the city of Nashville. Absolutely. So be sure to stay tuned and we will be covering a lot more Nashville history in depth. And we'll continue with learning about our amazing city and you'll get to learn more about how Nashville became the place that it is today. And I'm still attending for explore dot. Nash. Makes sure to go follow us on Instagram at X PLR dot. Nash. go watch some of our YouTube videos X PLR. Dot. Nash, follow us on Twitter and tweet at us at X PLR. Underscore Nash had to throw a curve ball in there somewhere to throw a curve ball. And then also if you guys need some Nashville merchandise X plr.life. It's Monday afternoon. Make sure to go to work tomorrow cause it's a Tuesday. I feel like we need to make some historic merge now. I think we should make some historic joke emerge. Like that would be funny. I think we could do that. [inaudible] Down that down in a cave by the river now, man. Yeah, that'd be really funny. All right, so guys, it's Monday afternoon, made sure to go to work Tuesday morning and we'll see you guys tomorrow morning.