Airport Guide

Airports in Nashville

Nashville Flights and Travel Guide

Nashville photoNashville map

Attractions

Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

If you are a visitor to Nashville, chances are you are there because you are a country music fan. That being the case the best place to begin your visit is the not-to-be-missed Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in the Downtown entertainment district. The main permanent exhibit, Sing Me Back Home, is a journey through the history of country Music, drawing on the museum's rich collection of historical costumes, memorabilia, instruments, photographs, manuscripts and other objects. Live performances, interactive exhibits, and lots of great music supplement these artifacts. Among the exhibits are Elvis Presley’s gold-leaf covered Cadillac, Emmy Lou Harris’ jewelled cowboy boots and Bob Dylan’s autographed lyric sheets. Live music is played in the atrium and digital film presentations are offered in the theatre. Visitors can also watch museum archivists and restoration experts at work, and study a vast wall displaying chart-topping gold and platinum country records.

Address: 222 Fifth Avenue South

Telephone: (615) 416 2001

E-mail: info@countrymusichalloffame.com

Web site: www.countrymusichalloffame.org

Opening time: Daily 9am to 5pm. Closed Tuesdays in January and February, and closed Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day

Admission: $17.95 (adults); $9.95 (youth). Children under 5 are free

 

Ryman Auditorium

This National Historic Landmark in downtown Nashville is regarded as the founding home of country music, having been the performance venue for the Grand Ole Opry from 1943 to 1974. The theatre was originally built in 1892 as a gospel tabernacle and served as an evangelical meeting hall. A stage was built for the Grand Ole Opry broadcasts and such great names as Sarah Bernhardt, Patsy Cline and Elvis Presley trod the boards here in their time. Today the Grand Ole Opry has moved on to a new theatre, but the Ryman Auditorium has been restored and is still a popular performance venue where concerts are held regularly. By day the theatre acts as a museum, which visually portrays the stories of its rich history with a series of displays and exhibits.

Address: 116 Fifth Avenue North

Telephone: Box office: (615) 889 3060

E-mail: rymanticketinfo@ryman.com

Web site: www.ryman.com

Opening time: Daily 9am to 4pm for museum visiting, and in the evening for various shows

 

Grand Ole Opry

The home of the world-famous country music show, the Grand Ole Opry, is now in Opryland Drive in a vast 4,400 seat auditorium which is part of the Opryland resort complex north of Nashville’s city center. From here the world’s longest running radio show is still broadcast on the Nashville station WSM (650 on the AM dial), featuring new stars, superstars and legends of country and bluegrass music performing live on stage. No visit to Nashville is complete without attending a show at the Grand Ole Opry, which has been going strong on the airwaves since 1925.

Address: 2802 Opryland Drive, Opry Plaza

Telephone: (615) 871 6779

Web site: www.opry.com

Opening time: Shows generally take place on Friday at 7.30pm, Saturday 6.30pm and 9.30pm, and Tuesday at 7pm. (Times can vary according to season)

Admission: Ticket prices range from $32.50 to $47.50 (adults)

 

Belle Meade Plantation

One popular Nashville attraction that is not music related is the Belle Meade Plantation, known as 'the queen of Tennessee plantations', boasting an 1853 Greek Revival mansion that has been carefully restored to show its original elegance. The authentic Civil War bullet holes that riddle its columns are still visible. Among the outbuildings that survive on the 12-hectare (30-acre) site is one of the oldest houses in Tennessee, a log cabin built in 1790. There is also a carriage house, visitor center, tearoom and gift shop. The Belle Meade estate was one of America's first and finest thoroughbred breeding farms. Tours of the antebellum furnished mansion and grounds are given by guides dressed in period costume.

Address: 5025 Harding Road

Telephone: (615) 356 0501

Web site: www.bellemeadeplantation.com

Transport: The estate can be reached by public bus number 3 from Riverfront Park

Openingtime: Daily tours are from Monday to Saturday 9am to 5pm and Sunday 11am to 5pm. Last tour starts at 4pm

Admission: $11 (adults); $5 (children), under 6-years-old free

 

Parthenon

The centerpiece of Nashville's Centennial Park is the world's only full-scale replica of the Parthenon temple in Athens, Greece, complete with a re-creation of the 42ft (13m) high statue of Athena that stood outside the temple in ancient Greece. The Parthenon was originally built for Tennessee's 1897 Centennial Exposition, it's plaster decoration being direct casts of the Parthenon Marbles and original sculptures which adorned the pediments of the Greek Parthenon that was built in 438 BC. The building today serves as Nashville's art museum, with a permanent collection that highlights 19th and 20th century American artists. A variety of temporary shows and exhibitions are also presented.

Address: Centennial Park, West End Avenue and 25th Avenue

Telephone: (615) 862 8431

E-mail: info@parthenon.org

Web site: www.parthenon.org

Openingtime: Tuesday to Saturday 9am to 4.30pm. From June to August the museum is also open on Sundays from 12.30pm to 4.30pm

Admission: $5 (adults); $2.50 (seniors and children 4-17)

 

Tennessee State Museum

The interesting Tennessee State Museum is one of the largest of its kind in the nation with a huge array of permanent exhibits telling the story of Tennessee, starting out 15,000 years ago in prehistoric times and culminating in the early 20th century. Prominent historic figures are highlighted, like former US President Andrew Jackson, Daniel Boone and legendary frontiersman Davy Crockett. Exhibits include displays of furniture, silverware, weapons, uniforms, battle flags, quilts and artworks from the civil war period. The museum also features reproductions of a 19th-century gristmill, and 18th-century print shop, a frontier cabin, antebellum parlour and a Victorian painting gallery.

Address: 505 Deaderick Street

Telephone: (615) 741 2692

Web site: www.tnmuseum.org

Opening time: Tuesday to Saturday 10am to 5pm; Sundays 1pm to 5pm. Closed New Year's Day, Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas

Admission: Free

Back to previous page
Search by date

* Required

Ticket Type
Link to Calendar
Link to Calendar

Top flight deals

Cheap flights to Nashville

Washington (DCA) to Nashville (BNA)
from$288RTwith Expedia
Washington (DCA) to Nashville (BNA)
from$292RTwith CheapAir.com
Washington (DCA) to Nashville (BNA)
from$429RTwith OneTravel.com
Washington (DCA) to Nashville (BNA)
from$432RTwith CheapOair.com
Washington (DCA) to Nashville (BNA)
from$160RTwith Hotwire

Travel Tips

Read expert tips on getting the most out of travel

Airline and Air Travel Information
Airport Security
Getting Bumped
Airline Upgrade Guide
Find the Best Airfare Deals
Fat-Finger Fares
Alternate Airports
Last-minute Airfares 101
Booking Flights by Phone
International Travel Tips
Embassies and Consulates Abroad
Trip Planning
Timing Your Trip
Airport Amusements

More travel tips

Contributors to this guide: Word Travels, World Airport Guide, Cheapflights

Contributors

Close

Wordtravels.com

Destination guides to countries and cities worldwide www.wordtravels.com

World Airport Guides

Guide to more than 200 airports around the world www.worldairportguide.com

Cheapflights.com

Cheap airline tickets to domestic and worldwide destinations www.cheapflights.com

Supplementary navigation
Subscribe

Weekly travel deal alerts!

Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest travel deals as they happen.
TRUSTe Logo
We do not share your information with third parties and have a spam free policy. See our privacy policy

Follow us on

Up to the minute travel deals and discussions