Mansions in Nashville
[Moonlight and Ice: Belmont Mansion]
To get a sense of the grandeur
and the grimness that was the Old South, there's at least one
"old house" you need to visit in Nashville. You may have a hard
time finding a place to park your car, but The Belmont
Mansion is worth a couple of blocks' walking.
Located on the Belmont University campus (a Southern Baptist
four-year liberal arts university), the mansion is an 1853 grand
house of nearly 11,000 square feet built in the style of an
Italian villa. You'll have to ring the doorbell and wait to
be admitted for a guided tour. Originally set within an estate
of elaborate gardens, with a two-hundred-foot greenhouse, a
private zoo of exotic animals, including alligators and monkeys,
a bear house, and a private water tower (still standing on the
campus), the mansion was home to one of the wealthiest women
in the country -- Adelicia Hayes Acklen Cheatham. Her history,
as you will hear it from the well-spoken and charming guides
who usher you through the mansion, gives you a picture of Nashville
in the mid-nineteenth century in details that bring the era
to life.
Adelicia would host magnificent parties, scheduled on nights
of the full moon and held late (after 11 p.m. and lasting until
dawn). The parties were scheduled late not only to take advantage
of the moonlight, but so it would be cooler for the guests (remember,
there was no air conditioning). Pitchers of water with ice cubes
were displayed prominently on the central table for the pleasure
of the guests and the honor of the hostess. Ice, you see, was
one of the premier signs of wealth.
All
was not moonlight and ice slivers, however, even for the wealthy;
almost every room in Belmont testifies to one of the harsher
realities of life in the 19th century -- the high child mortality
rate. Six of Adelicia's ten children died before the age of
eleven. Sculptures and portraits memorializing Adelicia's dead
children adorn the rooms of the mansion. Yet another grim aspect
of the Old South is told in the very architecture of the mansion,
where a definite upstair-downstairs class system existed. The
resplendent life at Belmont was underwritten by an ugly truth:
Adelicia own 750 slaves who labored in her cotton fields. Some
of these slaves served as the domestic "help" of the mansion
and lived in the 9,400-square-foot "service area" located in
the basement area of the house. The domestics did everything
from preparing and serving the meals, to carrying out the chamber
pots (you'll notice a conspicuous absence of bathrooms in the
house.)
The tour does not take you into the basement, but perhaps one
day it will. The story "below" is as integral as the story "above."
As it is, The Belmont Mansion provides a suggestive glimpse
into the dark underside of a grand house designed for light
and beauty.

Portrait of the Belmont's Adelicia Hayes Acklen Cheatham. Married three times, Adelicia was considered in her time to be the wealthiest woman in the country. A southern belle with gumption, she managed to talk a cotton shipment past both Confederate and Union lines during the war.

Belmont statue of Greyhound testifies to Adelicia's fondness for animals.
Cheryl Hiers
blueshoenashville.com/mansion2.html
For information about Belmont Mansion hours and admission fees: 615-460-5459.
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