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Antioch, TN

Antioch
Neighborhood
Country USA
State Tennessee
County Davidson
Metropolitan government Nashville
ZIP code 37013

Antioch is a neighborhood in southeastern Davidson County, Tennessee governed by the Nashville metropolitan government. The area is assigned to postal zip code 37013.

The community known as “Antioch” began at the convergence of Antioch Pike, Hickory Hollow Parkway, Blue Hole Road, and Mt. View Road. The original town of Antioch began as a church located by Mill Creek in 1810. Antioch was a commuter town because workers traveled to and from downtown Nashville. From the beginning, the town provided immediate services like a post office and general store. For planning purposes, the community was given the name Antioch–Priest Lake because the study area encompassed areas near J. Percy Priest Lake and the neighborhoods that grew from the heart of Antioch in the early 1800s.

In 1810, The First Baptist Church was organized in the area near Mill Creek. Then in 1820, a large landowner by the name of Charles Hays donated land for the church to build on, and began referring to it as the Church at Antioch, giving the town its name. Charles Hays based the name change on Bible scripture (Acts 11:26 KJV) which states “…and the disciples were called Christians first in Antioch.” The village was known as Antioch from 1820 onward. For a short time in the 1870’s and 1880’s, the post office designation for the village was Oneyville, named after the post master of that time—Dr. J. H. Oney. However it was later changed back to the name Antioch.

Now a town featuring a post office, Antioch began to grow covering an area of one to two miles in either direction. The Antioch mail route itself also covered additional areas outside of those communities. Beyond that initial two mile boundary were the communities of Una, Mt. View, Cane Ridge, Tusculum and Bakertown.

Much of the land in the town of Antioch was owned by Charles Hays and he remained the largest land owner through the first few decades of Antioch’s existence. By the end of the 1840s however, road construction had begun on Mill Creek Valley Pike (now known as Antioch Pike), and the road opened for use in 1846. Construction also began on a rail road that would change the face of the community.

The railroad built near the town of Antioch was vital for mail delivery and those workers who had jobs in the “big city” of Nashville. Even back then, the commute to Downtown Nashville was a chore requiring a horse to Nolensville Road, followed by a trolley taking a half day to get to Downtown Nashville. The first train helped workers get to and from Nashville quickly. In its heyday, approximately 18 passengers were taking the train to and from the city of Nashville.


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