Nashville’s Belle Meade Plantation

Were I a fabulously wealthy gal in 1853, I’d point my parasol toward Belle Meade, the Greek Revival manse that was the centerpiece of a plantation and stud farm. (Or maybe I’d wait until 1883, when the first two bathrooms were installed on the spacious rear porches.)

UnknownThe mansion motto is: History, Horses, Hospitality. Belle Meade resonates with me because I come from horse folks. My father was a railbird with empty pockets before he figured out he could make more money racing thoroughbreds than betting on them.When Dad was picking up horses in claiming races, he focused on bloodlines, the mounts descended from champions. Belle Meade is the home of Bonnie Scotland, sire of sires, which counts among its descendants Sir Barton, which in 1913 won the first Triple Crown, Secretariat, 1973 Triple Crown winner, and every horse entered in the 2003 Kentucky Derby.

images-1In the grand foyer, there’s a portrait of the big bay stallion and his groom Bob Green, painted in 1875. Green, a former slave, was the highest paid worker on the farm due to his widely admired horse sense and led Grover Cleveland on a tour when the president visited in 1887. (Years later, William Howard Taft visited Belle Meade during his presidency, where the portliest of all U.S. presidents famously got stuck in the bath tub.)

With a wide veranda and six massive limestone columns made from stone quarried on the property, Belle Meade is an impressive house. (There are bullet holes in the columns, souvenirs from the Battle of Nashville in the Civil War, waged, in part on the expansive front lawn.)

The mansion is decorated in period style, changed to reflect upcoming holidays or events, perhaps a Victorian wedding. A few pieces of furniture are from the Harding family, who lived in the mansion until 1903. Guides wear costumes ranging from the requisite hoop skirts to an undertaker’s coal dark suit and stove top hat.

images-2But it isn’t too precious. There aren’t velvet ropes cordoning off rooms. Visitors can literally walk through history, peering at such mementos as inkwells made from the hooves of Iroquois, the Belle Meade great which was the first American-born horse to win the English Derby. No photography is permitted inside the house, but guests can snap away outdoors.

I last visited Belle Meade in 2009. Since then, a winery has been added to the property and guests are invited to a free tasting after their tours.

The grounds include simple gardens, a log cabin, reconstructed slave quarters and a small cemetery. Belle Meade is open seven days a week. Tickets are: $16 for adults; $14 for seniors 65 and older; $10 for students age 13-18; $8 for children age 6-12. Children 5 and younger are admitted free. There also is a special rate of $45 for families with up to six members.