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The Tennessee State Museum

Item

Title
The Tennessee State Museum
Alternative Title
The Tennessee State Museum
Identifier
The Tennessee State Museum's former and present location and its plan for a new museum organized by the Douglas Henry State Commission members
Creator
Amy Inthavong
Type
The Tennessee General Assembly built the Tennessee State Museum to protect and show memorable items from World War One. The museum was established in the War Memorial building in 1937 on 6th Avenue North. The museum eventually moved to the James K. Polk Building in 1981. The building’s space is also shared with the Tennessee Performing Arts Center. The museum’s business is managed by the Douglas Henry State Museum Commission. The members of the commission are tasked with showcasing the cultural history contained in the museum for the public. The members hold meetings at least four times each year to discuss museum ethics, new employee training, budgets, new business plans and much more. The board meetings are essential for the museum’s daily function. Their mission is to make sure that visitors receive the best access to the historic collections and ever-changing exhibits and all the artifacts are well preserved adequately for the public.

The museum covers 120,000 square feet on three floors and displays exhibits ranging from prehistoric people in 13,000 BCE to the history of the early 1900s with paintings, silver, weapons, furniture, uniforms, and one of the largest Confederate battle flags from the Civil War.
In 2013, the Douglas Henry State Museum Commission made plans for a new state museum to hold a wider range of artifacts such as the possessions of past high-ranking state officials and constitutional officers. The plan was approved in August 2013 with the cost of construction totaling $475,000. The new museum opened on October 4, 2018.

The Tennessee State Museum remains as the best home to secure Tennessee’s valuable history of artifacts including old documents, paintings, furniture and weapons used by people from the past.
Subject
The Tennessee State Museum of History
Source
File #56: "The Tennessee State Museum Inside"
Description - The Tennessee State Museum from the inside showing one of their exhibits of weapons and paintings
Source
https://www.expedia.com/pictures/central-tennessee/nashville/tennessee-state-museum.d6080771/historical/
Rights - Expedia

File #57: "The Tennessee State Museum/War Memorial Building"
Description - An old postcard of the former location of the Tennessee State Museum, the War Memorial Building. Year of vintage postcard is unknown
Source
http://bennel.blogspot.com/2013/12/war-memorial-building-and-state-capitol.html
Date - unknown

File #58: "The Tennessee State Museum"
Description - The front entrance of the Tennessee State Museum
Source
http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/local/story/2015/aug/18/i-am-museum-executive-director-tn-state-museum-rejects-calls-her-be-replaced/320442/
Date - August 18, 2015
Rights - Times Free Press
prefix name
Tennessee State Museum and the Douglas Henry State Museum Commission
locator
1000 Rosa L Parks Blvd, Nashville, TN 37208
annotates
“Commission Members.” Tnmuseum. 2020. Accessed March 22, 2020 from www.tnmuseum.org/Commission/Commission_Members/.

“History.” Tennessee State Museum. 2020. Accessed March 22, 2020 from www.tnmuseum.org/Information/History/.Owens, Anne -Leslie.

“Tennessee State Museum.” Tennesseeencyclopedia. Middle Tennessee State University. December 25, 2009. Accessed March 22, 2020 from tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entry.php?rec=1354.

“The Douglas Henry State Museum Commission.” Tnmuseum. 2020. Accessed March 22, 2020 from www.tnmuseum.org/commission/Commission_Members/.
weblog
http://www.tnmuseum.org
Bibliographic Citation
Amy Inthavong, “The Tennessee State Museum,” Bygone Nashville, accessed September 16, 2025, https://bygone-nashville.mtsu.edu/admin/items/show/25.