Haunting Events in Nashville Tennessee

Nashville is becoming Scareville?

Middle Tennessee has some really scary attractions and not just haunted houses, the woods, the cemeteries and historic buildings all seem to come to play when the leaves start to fall. Join us for some fun and scary attractions.

Nashville Haunted Events

Below is a complete list of Nashville and middle Tennessee Haunted Events.

Adventure Science Center is Nashville's amazing, hands-on science and technology museum for guests of all ages.

Adventure Science Center
800 Fort Negley Blvd.
37203 Nashville , TN
Phone: 615-862-5160

Haunted Downtown Nashville Tour

TN
Phone: 888-844-3999
Each fall Sam Davis Home Ghost Tours storytelling event gives visitors a chance to hear a different tour of the historic house and property.
Historic Sam Davis Home
1399 Sam Davis Road
37167 Smyrna , TN
Phone: 615-459-2341

"Its a must see season at Millers Thrillers Haunted Woods and Zombie Paintball Hayride. This family friendly attraction is going all out for its 13 Year Anniversary Celebration!

Millers Thrillers
1431 Carters Creek Pike
38401 Columbia , TN
Phone: (931) 698-1664

This Fall at Canoe the Caney check out one of Tennessee’s most thrilling haunted attractions. Bring your friends and climb aboard for a spine-tingling, after-dark, historic ghost tour.

Haunted Canoe the Caney
17055 Smithville Hwy
38582 Silver Point , TN
Phone: 800-579-7893

The ORIGINAL walking, storytelling tour of downtown Murfreesboro. Join storytellers as they tell the tales of haunted happenings, eccentric characters and true crime. Tours start at 7pm and the last one heads out at 9pm.

Haunted Murfreesboro
25 Public Square
37127 Murfreesboro , TN

Explore Murfreesboro’s most mysterious mansion and experience some of the unusual mourning customs and creepy superstitions of the Victorian era at Oaklands Mansion.

Just for this holiday "Halloween" season The Nashville Ballet presents: Lizzie BordenDate October 26 through October 28, 2017 at James K. Polk Theater downtown Nashville. This is recommended as an adult performance.

Nashville Fall Activities

Cheekwood Museum and Gardens

THE HISTORY OF CHEEKWOOD

The history and origin of Cheekwood are intimately interwoven with the growth of Nashville, the Maxwell House coffee brand and the Cheeks, one of the city's early entrepreneurial families. Christopher T. Cheek moved to Nashville in the 1880's and founded a wholesale grocery business. His son, Leslie Cheek joined him as a partner.

In 1896, Leslie Cheek married Mabel Wood of Clarksville, Tennessee. Their son, Leslie, Jr. was born in 1908 and their daughter, Huldah, in 1915. By that year, Leslie Cheek was president of the family firm.
GOOD TO THE LAST DROP

During these same years, the elder Cheeks cousin, Joel Cheek, developed a superior blend of coffee that was marketed through the best hotel in Nashville, the Maxwell House. His extended family, including Leslie and Mabel Cheek, were investors. In 1928, Postum (now General Foods) purchased Maxwell House's parent company, Cheek-Neal Coffee, for more than $40 million.

With their income secured by the proceeds from the sale, the Cheeks bought 100 acres of what was then woodland in West Nashville for a country estate. To design and build the house and grounds, they hired New York residential and landscape architect, Bryant Fleming, and gave him control over every detail - from landscaping to interior furnishings. The result was a limestone mansion and extensive formal gardens inspired by the grand English houses of the 18th century. Fleming's masterpiece, Cheekwood, was completed in 1932.
BEGINNINGS AND ENDINGS

Leslie and Mabel Cheek moved into the mansion in January 1933. Leslie Cheek lived at Cheekwood for just two years before his death at 61.

In 1943, Mabel Cheek deeded the house to her daughter, Huldah Cheek Sharp and her husband, Walter Sharp. The Sharps lived at Cheekwood until the 1950s when they offered it as a site for a botanical garden and art museum.

The development of the property was spearheaded by the Exchange Club of Nashville, the Horticultural Society of Middle Tennessee and many other civic groups. The Nashville Museum of Art donated its permanent collections and proceeds from the sale of its building to the effort. The new Cheekwood opened to the public in 1960.

Docent led Tours

Cheekwood is pleased to offer docent-led tours of its permanent collection, botanical gardens as well as special traveling exhibitions to groups of 10 to 60. Cheekwood has a growing corps of well-trained docents who are excited to share their knowledge with interested groups of all ages. Tours are available Tuesday through Friday upon request. Reservations and a minimum two week notice are required. To schedule a group tour, please contact the Education Department at (615) 353-9827.
Public Tours

Public tours of the permanent collection, botanical gardens and special traveling exhibits are also available upon request. For reservations, please call (615) 353-9827 .
Museum and garden Tours for School Groups

For an exciting, educational field trip, Cheekwood is the place to come! Discipline-based art education, science and social studies tours of Cheekwood are conducted by trained docents. Tours can be requested for groups of 12 or more.

HOURS OF OPERATION
Tuesday – Sunday | 9 AM – 5 PM*
Thursday Night Out | 5 – 9 PM**
*Cheekwood opens early at 8 AM on Wednesdays for our Members to enjoy Mindfulness Walks on The Carell Trail.
**Select Thursdays through October 28

Cheekwood is closed on Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day.

Phillips Toy Mart

Phillips Toy Mart is a Nashville Family Tradition! You (and your kids) will be amazed at the huge selection of toys for children of all ages. Arts and crafts, educational toys, electronics, puzzles, games, costumes and accessories, toys that kids get really excited about receiving, and parents get really excited about giving.

All of our toys help build motor skills, encourage learning, and most of all allow the children in your life to develop their imaginations. We carry all major releases by name brand companies such as Alex, Playmobil, Small World Toys, Ugly Dolls, and many more!

Adventure Science Center

Adventure Science Center is Nashville's amazing, hands-on science and technology museum for guests of all ages. Located downtown atop a hill with spectacular views of the city, our 44,000 square-foot space features more than 175 exciting, hands-on exhibits exploring biology, astronomy, physics, earth science, energy, weather, sound, and space and offers daily live science demonstrations and activities and daily shows in state-of-the-art Sudekum Planetarium's 63-foot dome. From a swirling vapor tornado you can touch to virtual reality to flight simulation to a moonwalk EVA, guests of all ages will find something to delight and inspire them.

JURO STABLES

OUR GOAL IS:

TO ASSURE EACH OF OUR RIDERS LEAVE OUR STABLES A BETTER RIDER THAN WHEN THEY ARRIVED.

WE STRIVE TO GIVE EACH AND EVERY CLIENT A REAL CHANCE TO RIDE A HORSE THE WAY HORSEBACK RIDING IS MEANT TO BE.

RIDE AS YOU HAVE ALWAYS WANTED...IN OPEN FIELDS, OVER CREEKS AND THROUGH DEER TRAILS. WE RIDE SLOW, AT A NICE PEACEFUL PACE...OR WE CAN PICK UP THE PACE AND CANTER HERE AND THERE...

TELL US THE KIND OF RIDE YOU DESIRE WHEN MAKING YOUR RESERVATION AND WE'LL DO OUR BEST TO COMPLY.

Radnor Lake State Natural Area

Radnor Lake is a 1,200-acre natural area located in Davidson County in the Overton Hills approximately eight miles south of downtown Nashville. This natural area is an outlier of the Western Highland Rim and has some of the highest ridges in the Central Basin. These ridges can exceed 1,200 feet in elevation. The upper slopes and ridges are underlain with Fort Payne formation. The acidic soil derived from these rocks is atypical for the Central Basin and supports mountain laurel, various species of blueberry, sourwood, oaks and hickories commonly found on the Highland Rim. Its lower slopes and hollows support beech, sugar maple, tulip poplar, and shagbark hickory with spicebush, coralberry, and elderberry in the shrub layer.

Radnor Lake was protected largely because of public interest that resulted in a campaign to save it from development. This resulted in the State acquiring and then designating it as a state natural area in 1974. The Louisville and Nashville (L&N) Railroad Company had owned the property and impounded Otter Creek in 1914 to create the 85-acre lake. The reservoir was constructed to provide water for steam engines at Radnor Yard some three miles away via gravity through a downhill flowing pipe. The lake that was created and the surrounding forest provided excellent habitat for waterfowl and other birds and animals. Albert Ganier, who was founder of the Tennessee Ornithological Society, was instrumental in persuading the L&N to declare Radnor Lake a wildlife sanctuary in 1923.

Today Radnor Lake is one of the most frequently visited natural areas. It is readily accessible to Nashville’s urban population. It provides more than twelve miles of hiking trails, including the Ganier Ridge trail, named in honor of Albert Ganier. It is noted for its plethora of spring wildflowers, tranquil lake setting, and scenic topography. Its urban interface, however, has made it vulnerable to invasive exotic plants that have seriously impacted its forest ecosystem.

Radnor Lake is day use only and is protected as a Class II Natural Area, so the trails are strictly used for hiking and wildlife observation. Trails are off limits to pets, jogging, and bicycles.

Spillway Trail (.27m) easy
Lake Trail (1.3m) easy
Ganier Ridge Trail (1.55m) strenuous
Access Trail (.24m) moderate
South Lake Trail (.9m) moderate
South Cove Trail (1.3m) strenuous
Otter Creek Road (1.1m lot to lot) easy - Pets, jogging, and bicycles allowed.