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Riverwood (Nashville, Tennessee)

Riverwood
Historic American Buildings Survey, Lester Jones, Photographer August 19, 1940 VIEW FROM SOUTHEAST. - Riverwood, Nashville, Davidson County, TN HABS TENN,19-NASH.V,4-1.tif
Riverwood (Nashville, Tennessee) is located in Tennessee
Riverwood (Nashville, Tennessee)
Riverwood (Nashville, Tennessee) is located in the US
Riverwood (Nashville, Tennessee)
Location 1833 Welcome Lane, Nashville, Tennessee
Coordinates 36°12′0″N 86°42′36″W / 36.20000°N 86.71000°W / 36.20000; -86.71000Coordinates: 36°12′0″N 86°42′36″W / 36.20000°N 86.71000°W / 36.20000; -86.71000
Area 6 acres (2.4 ha)
Architectural style Greek Revival
NRHP reference # 77001264
Added to NRHP July 20, 1977

Riverwood is a privately owned historic house located in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. At 9,200 square-feet it sits on 8 acres of its original 2,500 acres. It has been a wedding and event facility since 1997.

The mansion is located at 1833 Welcome Lane in Nashville, Tennessee.

The rear wing was built in 1799 by Alexander Porter, an Irish immigrant who came to Nashville in the mid-1790s. He originally named it Tammany Woods after his family home in Ireland. By the 1820s, he built a two-story Federal-style home a few feet away from the rear wing. In 1850, a third story was added, alongside a Greek Revival portico supported by six Corinthian columns. Guests included President Andrew Jackson (1767–1845) and his wife Rachel Jackson (1767-1828), who was an aunt to Alexander's son's wife.

In 1859, Judge William Frierson Cooper (1820–1909), a member of the Tennessee Supreme Court, purchased the property. He renamed it Riverwood as it was by the Cumberland River. His brothers and their wives lived in the house with him. In the 1880s and 1890s, plumbing and electricity were added. The dining room was also extended, and the two houses were united. After his death in 1909, his brother Duncan Brown Cooper inherited the property.

When Cooper died in 1922, his sister Sarah and her husband Dr. Lucius E. Burch, a Dean of the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, inherited the house. They had a son, Lucius E. Burch, Jr.. Their annual Christmas Dinner was attended by the Nashville elite.Robert Penn Warren spent a summer in one of their cottages during his stay at Vanderbilt University. Presidents Andrew Jackson, James K. Polk (1795–1849), Franklin Pierce (1804–1869), Andrew Johnson (1808–1875), Grover Cleveland (1837–1908), Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919), and William Howard Taft (1857–1930) and Vice President Adlai Stevenson I (1835-1914) visited the house. The Burches lived in it until 1975.


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