Forest Hills, Tennessee

Forest Hills, Tennessee

Infobox Settlement
official_name = Forest Hills, Tennessee
settlement_type = City
nickname =
motto =



imagesize =
image_caption =


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mapsize = 250px
map_caption = Location of Forest Hills, Tennessee


mapsize1 =
map_caption1 =

subdivision_type = Country
subdivision_name = United States
subdivision_type1 = State
subdivision_name1 = Tennessee
subdivision_type2 = County
subdivision_name2 = Davidson

government_footnotes =
government_type =
leader_title =
leader_name =
leader_title1 =
leader_name1 =
established_title =
established_date =

unit_pref = Imperial
area_footnotes =

area_magnitude =
area_total_km2 = 24.0
area_land_km2 = 24.0
area_water_km2 = 0.0
area_total_sq_mi = 9.3
area_land_sq_mi = 9.3
area_water_sq_mi = 0.0

population_as_of = 2000
population_footnotes =
population_total = 4710
population_density_km2 = 196.1
population_density_sq_mi = 507.8

timezone = Central (CST)
utc_offset = -6
timezone_DST = CDT
utc_offset_DST = -5
elevation_footnotes =
elevation_m = 200
elevation_ft = 656
latd = 36 |latm = 4 |lats = 9 |latNS = N
longd = 86 |longm = 50 |longs = 9 |longEW = W

postal_code_type =
postal_code =
area_code =
blank_name = FIPS code
blank_info = 47-27020GR|2
blank1_name = GNIS feature ID
blank1_info = 1269581GR|3
website =
footnotes =

Forest Hills is a city in Davidson County, Tennessee, United States. The population was 4,710 at the 2000 census.

Geography

Forest Hills is located at coor dms|36|4|9|N|86|50|9|W|city (36.069092, -86.835912)GR|1.

Forest Hills is generally bordered by Old Hickory Blvd. which serves as a veritable dividing line between Davidson County and Williamson County, Granny White Pike, Harding Pike (which is also known as Harding Lane or Battery Lane) and Hillsboro Pike (also known as Hillsboro Rd.). The Forest Hills district is not an exact square, so of course, there are a few extra twists and turns in the road to this equation. The city hall is not located within city limits, as it is located in the Green Hills area of Nashville.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 9.3 square miles (24.0 km²), all of it land.

Like its neighbor, Belle Meade, it has distinct signage and sacred covenants concering land size and use. Forest Hills is considered a "satellite city" of Nashville and residents do not receive access to all city-county combined services, taking financial responsibility for many services like garbage collection on their own. Forest Hills is known for its beautiful, immaculately kept homes, winding roads, foliage and wildlife.

The area was developed as a suburb of Nashville in the wake of the post-World War II population and economic boom. Forest Hills was born as a result of the ensuing conflicts between suburban residents and Nashville city government as Nashville struggled to deal with the ramifications of suburban growth.

As its name implies, Forest Hills is composed primarily of steep wooded hills, many of which are one thousand feet above sea level. These steep­sided hills were covered with forest until the early twentieth century, when residential development extended south from Nashville. Several hills have water towers and cellular towers, and the WKRN radio tower is located on a 1,114­foot hill north of Old Hickory Boulevard. In addition to the area’s many hills, the south­central section of the community contains what was originally fertile farmland within the Otter Creek watershed. This area supported numerous small farms during the nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Nashville has enjoyed prosperity and growth during the past several decades, which is reflected in the development of Forest Hills. Since 1970, hundreds of dwellings have been built in Forest Hills, and the community no longer retains many tracts of open space or farmland. Most dwellings are sited on parcels of one to two acres, and only a small number of houses are located on tracts of ten acres or more. Several of the community’s hills and ridges — such as the properties along Laurel Ridge Drive and Fredericksburg Drive — also have been developed in recent decades.

The growth and development of Forest Hills has resulted in the loss of most of the community’s eighteenth­ and nineteenth­century dwellings. Only a handful of properties dating from this early period remain extant. One of the most notable of these is the McCrory­Mayfield House at 1280 Old Hickory Boulevard, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. This two­story log dwelling was built ca. 1798 and is the oldest remaining dwelling in Forest Hills.

Although nineteenth­century dwellings are rare, Forest Hills contains a number of significant houses built in the early twentieth century. With improvements in automobiles and road systems, this section of Davidson County became a preferred area for country estates by the 1920s. Properties built along Hillsboro Pike mirrored those built in nearby Belle Meade as West Nashville became home to the area’s most prosperous businessmen and professionals. Representative of this type of rural country home is Longleat at 5819 Hillsboro Pike, which was completed in 1932 as the home of insurance executive Thomas Tyne. Longleat was listed on the National Register in 1984 for its architectural significance. Another twentieth century home is the “Hibbettage” at 2160 Old Hickory Boulevard. Built in 1939, this two­story brick dwelling was constructed as a replica of the Hermitage; it was listed on the National Register in 1998 for its architectural significance.

This study is based on a reconnaissance-level survey completed by Thomas Wooten in 1997. Wooten completed photographs and a listing of pre­1955 dwellings for the City of Forest Hills. Research for this project was provided through a review of tax records at the Metro Archives cominstances no reply was made to these attempts to gather information. Survey methodology included visiting each property identified as built prior to 1955. Photographs of all facades and outbuildings were completed along with architectural descriptions. Interior analysis was also completed where interior views were available or access was provided by the owners. Standard inventory forms utilized by the Tennessee Historical Commission for its statewide survey program were completed.

This architectural and historical survey of Forest Hills resulted in the noting or surveying of one hundred fourteen properties. Of these, twenty were originally surveyed in the 1980s during a countywide survey completed under the direction of the Metropolitan Nashville Historical Commission. The majority of the inventoried properties are frame and brick­veneer dwellings built after 1940 when Forest Hills became a preferred suburban residential area in Davidson County. As a result of this survey, an additional ten properties appear to meet eligibility requirements for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. These properties are included in the summary chapter of this report.

The National Register of Historic Places considers properties “historic” if they are fifty years old or older. This project attempted to identify all properties that met this criterion in Forest Hills, plus those built in the early 1950s. Additional survey efforts are recommended to take place in 2010 and/or 2015 when many more dwellings in Forest Hills meet the fifty­year criteria for survey consideration.

Historical Overview

Forest Hills in the Nineteenth Century

Various Native American cultures occupied the area comprising Forest Hills prior to Anglo­European settlement. The Mississippian culture of A.D. 900 to 1450 was the most prominent of these with many large mounds built throughout Davidson County. Later, the rich lands of Middle Tennessee were hunting grounds for the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Shawnee, and other tribes prior to the late 1700s. The Native American legacy can still be felt through the occasional finds of tools and arrowheads in fields and backyards. In recent years, the discovery of Native American graves at the southeast corner of Old Hickory Boulevard and Hillsboro Pike is a vivid reminder of their legacy.

Nashville was settled by Anglo­Europeans in 1780, and over the next two decades settlers staked claims on what was originally land cultivated and hunted by Native Americans. In addition, several land grants were awarded to Revolutionary War veterans. The recipients of these grants seldom settled the land themselves, but either sold them to individuals or passed them along to their children or other relatives. In the Forest Hills area, William Nash received a six hundred forty­acre grant along what is now Granny White Pike south of Tyne Boulevard. Nash opted to sell off parcels of his land, including a one hundred sixty­acre tract to Henry Compton in the early 1800s. Much of the land west of Hillsboro Road was part of a grant awarded to James Robertson.

A Revolutionary War veteran named McCrory chose to give his land grant to his son Thomas, who came to the area in 1790. The younger McCrory went on to acquire some three thousand seven hundred acres in Davidson and Williamson counties, including acreage along what is now Old Hickory Boulevard. McCrory built a two­story log dwelling on this property in 1798. The property was purchased by William B. Carpenter in 1837, and his daughter and son­in­law Mary E. and George Mayfield inherited the house in 1869. It remained in the Mayfield family until 1939. This is the oldest building remaining in Forest Hills, and it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. As Nashville assumed prominence on the western frontier, a road known as the Natchez Trace was created to provide an overland route for settlers returning from New Orleans. Many settlers in the Ohio and Cumberland River valleys floated on rafts down the Mississippi River to New Orleans to sell their goods. Prior to the invention of the steamboat, western settlers had no choice but to walk home through the wilderness to reach home. In order to provide an improved road, the Natchez Trace was provide an improved road, the Natchez Trace was Natchez, Mississippi.

Construction of the Natchez Trace began in 1802, and work continued on improving the road until it was officially declared complete in 1809. From the early 1800s to the 1820s, the Natchez Trace was the primary north/south route through central Tennessee. With the advent of steamboat travel, the use of the Natchez Trace declined significantly and the old roadbed was used as local farm roads by the mid­nineteenth century. Various surveys and land records of the nineteenth century refer to the “Natchez Trace” or “Natchez Road” located on at least three different routes in Davidson County, two of which ran through Forest Hills. As National Park Service historian Dawson Phelps wrote in the 1940s, “All this has been very confusing to many Nashvillians who dabble in local history. Each has a definite idea that one or the other of the roads mentioned above is the Old Trace and is eager, at the drop of a hat, to defend his position obstinately, profanely, and at great length.”1 However, a recent study of the Natchez Trace identified one of the main routes extending through what is now Forest Hills along either side of present­day Hillsboro Pike.

In northern Williamson County, the Nat­chez Trace crossed the Harpeth River in the vicinity of Union Bridge Road. A National Park Service study in 1935 stated that the Natchez Trace “crossed the Harpeth at Robinson Bend just upstream from Union Bridge, an old covered bridge.” The Natchez Trace then turned north along present­day Stockit Road, and two branches diverged in what is now Edwin Warner Park. One of these branches continued north along what is now Page Road, and then followed the route of present­day State Route 100 (Harding Pike) to its terminus at Cockrill’s Spring in Centennial Park.

The second of these branches ran east to present­day Hillsboro Pike, continuing north of Otter Creek before turning north through a gap, recrossing present­day Hillsboro Pike, and extending north through Green Hills to the terminus of the Natchez Trace at Cockrill’s Spring. This route is shown on a map prepared by the National Park Service in 1935. With the decline of travel on the Natchez Trace, this roadbed became known as Compton Road, named for the prominent Compton family of the vicinity. Compton Road, shown on various maps of the nineteenth century, was separate from Hillsboro Pike through Green Hills. Residential and commercial expansion has obliterated almost all traces of this road north of Harding Place. A small intact section of the historic roadbed of Compton Road is located just north of Woodlawn Drive.

In addition to these two branches of the Natchez Trace, a third route led from Franklin to Nashville along what was historically known as the Middle Franklin Turnpike. This branch of the Natchez Trace left the main road at Leiper’s Fork in Williamson County and extended east to Franklin. From Franklin, this route of the Natchez Trace followed the existing roadbed of the Middle Franklin Turnpike, now known as Granny White Pike. Although many travelers passed through the area on the Natchez Trace, settlement was initially not extensive. Compared to the rest of Davidson County, in the early nineteenth century few large farms existed within what is now Forest Hills. This was primarily because of the area’s topography of steep forested hills, which proved difficult to till. In the northwest corner of the city limits are rich bottomlands along the tributaries of Richland Creek. In the central section of the city also are the fertile lands along Otter Creek. With these exceptions, few other areas of Forest Hills supported large­scale farming. Oats, Indian corn, and potatoes were primary crops, and because the topography limited crop production, livestock were essential to most farms. Swine were the dominant livestock on most farms, and many settlers also raised sheep, which made wool an important product. The number of cattle raised was minimal, with most farms emphasizing milk cows and the production of butter over beef cattle.

One of the most prominent early families his cousin Henry built homes and established farms along Hillsboro Pike and later served under Andrew Jackson in New Orleans.3 William began with a farm of about one hundred fifty acres, but had acquired around one thousand acres by the time of his death. His sons Felix and Henry W. also acquired substantial property in the area. In 1860, Felix Compton owned a four hundred sixty­acre farm and three hundred acres of woodlands valued at forty thousand dollars. Corn and oats were his main crops along with ample livestock of mostly swine and sheep.4 Felix Compton’s home along Hillsboro Pike, which was on the land that has been developed into Burton Hills, stood until the 1980s when it was dismantled and moved to Dickson County.

Henry Compton Sr. (1784­1873) came to Tennessee in 1806. Shortly after his marriage to Sarah Cox in 1815, Compton settled on three hundred twenty­five acres in what is now Forest Hills.5 Around 1819, Compton erected a two­story log dwelling near what is now Tyne Boulevard. The dwelling was enlarged ca. 1900 to accommodate the Compton’s growing family, which included ten children. Henry Compton became one of the area’s most prominent landowners with nine hundred improved acres and four hundred acres of woodlands in 1860. At this time his substantial farm was valued at one hundred ninety­five thousand dollars and produced seventy­five hundred bushels of Indian corn, eighteen hundred bushels of oats, fifteen hundred bushels of potatoes, and thirteen hundred bushels of wheat. Compton’s livestock included two hundred swine, one hundred fifty sheep, and twenty­nine horses. He also owned forty­sheep, and twenty­nine horses. He also owned forty­one cattle, twenty­one of which were milk cows.

The Compton estates grew over generations, and by the late nineteenth century their lands “stretched from the Belle Meade plantation on the west to the Lealand estate on the east”. An 1871 map of Davidson County confirms this statement and shows the estates of Felix Compton, Henry Compton Sr., and Henry Compton Jr. in the Richland Creek area. Henry Compton Sr.’s ca. 1819 two­story log house remains extant at 1645 Tyne Boulevard (DV­11567). Also on the property is the Compton family cemetery, which contains approximately twenty­five graves.

William Scruggs also established a large estate in the Forest Hills area during the nineteenth century. Scruggs purchased land along Hillsboro Pike in the 1830s and eventually owned some seven hundred acres. At his death, his nephew Edward Scruggs inherited the property. Edward Scruggs continued to operate a successful farm and was a key figure in the community as part shareholder in the Hillsboro Turnpike Company, which constructed Hillsboro Pike. In 1890, Scruggs built an elaborate two­story, frame, Queen Anne style dwelling with Eastlake detailing along Hillsboro Pike. With perforated gables and pediments, carved panels, a fishscale shingle roof, and numerous spindles and lattice work, the Scruggs house served as a landmark along the Pike. This house remains extant at 6251 Hillsboro Road (DV­24931)....

Demographics

As of the censusGR|2 of 2000, there were 4,710 people, 1,729 households, and 1,471 families residing in the city. The population density was 507.8 people per square mile (196.2/km²). There were 1,791 housing units at an average density of 193.1/sq mi (74.6/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 96.14% White, 1.40% African American, 0.06% Native American, 1.38% Asian, 0.40% from other races, and 0.62% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.76% of the population.

There were 1,729 households out of which 36.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 79.4% were married couples living together, 3.9% had a female householder with no husband present, and 14.9% were non-families. 11.7% of all households were made up of individuals and 6.0% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.72 and the average family size was 2.96.

In the city the population was spread out with 25.8% under the age of 18, 3.5% from 18 to 24, 20.4% from 25 to 44, 34.3% from 45 to 64, and 15.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 45 years. For every 100 females there were 97.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 95.8 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $124,845, and the median income for a family was $154,148. Males had a median income of $100,000 versus $41,125 for females. The per capita income for the city was $68,228, the second highest in the state after Belle Meade. About 1.2% of families and 1.7% of the population were below the poverty line, including 0.5% of those under age 18 and 3.6% of those Age 65 or over.

Notable Residents

*CeCe Winans (multiple Grammy Award winning gospel artist)

References

External links


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