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[[Category:Neighborhoods in Nashville]]
[[Category:Neighborhoods in Nashville]]
[[Category:Davidson County, Tennessee]]
[[Category:Davidson County, Tennessee]]
== References ==
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Latest revision as of 06:36, 12 May 2026

Donelson is a neighborhood in Nashville, Tennessee, named after the Donelson family. Most notably, John Donelson was a co-founder of Nashville who led the 1779-1780 river expedition that helped establish Fort Nashborough along the Cumberland River. Located in northeastern Davidson County along the Cumberland River, Donelson has transformed from a rural agricultural community into a suburban neighborhood within Nashville's city limits. It's retained its distinct identity, though. The family history, riverside geography, and proximity to Nashville International Airport all shape what Donelson is today.

History

Before European-American settlers arrived, the area was home to Cherokee and Shawnee peoples who hunted and fished along the Cumberland River. In the late 18th century, European-American settlers moved in, drawn by land grants issued after Fort Nashborough was founded in 1780. John Donelson led the river flotilla that accompanied James Robertson's overland party in that founding expedition. He gave his name to the broader area.

His daughter Rachel Donelson married Andrew Jackson, and the Donelson family became deeply woven into early Tennessee history. The Hermitage, Jackson's plantation home, sits just northeast of the Donelson neighborhood.

Here's an important distinction: don't confuse Donelson with Fort Donelson National Battlefield. That's in Dover, Tennessee in Stewart County, roughly 75 miles to the west. That fort was a Confederate stronghold on the Cumberland River and the site of the Battle of Fort Donelson in February 1862. Union General Ulysses S. Grant forced the unconditional surrender of Confederate forces there, earning him the nickname "Unconditional Surrender" Grant. Both places share the Donelson name through the same family lineage. They're geographically distinct, though.

After the Civil War, Donelson remained an agricultural community through the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Better road networks arrived, and so did suburban development pressure from Nashville's postwar growth. The neighborhood transformed. When Nashville annexed Donelson in 1963 as part of the city-county consolidation that created Metro Nashville-Davidson County, the area got city services and infrastructure investment for the first time.

Geography

Donelson occupies the northeastern corner of Davidson County. The Cumberland River forms its eastern edge. The terrain mixes rolling hills, typical of the Central Basin's limestone-underlain topography, with river bottomlands that widen in places along the Cumberland's western bank. Most residential development sits on higher elevations. Lower-lying ground along the river has been set aside for parks and green space.

Boundaries are generally understood as Briley Parkway to the north, the Cumberland River to the east, Ellington Parkway to the south, and Interstate 40 and Interstate 24 to the west. These corridors connect Donelson directly to downtown Nashville, the airport, and suburban communities farther east. Nashville International Airport sits just south of Donelson, making the neighborhood one of the closest residential areas to the airport terminal. [1]

Two Rivers State Park sits at the confluence of the Cumberland River and Stones River in the northern part of the neighborhood. It's one of the most prominent green spaces in eastern Nashville. Athletic fields, a water park, and riverside walking paths are all there. The park's location gives the Two Rivers sub-area much of its residential appeal.

Culture

Donelson's cultural character comes from its history as an independent community and decades of suburban growth. Long-time residents identify strongly with the neighborhood's distinct name rather than simply with Nashville. That's a pattern common among communities absorbed into Metro government during the 1963 consolidation.

Community events happen throughout the year: festivals, farmers' markets, things organized through local civic associations. The Donelson branch of the Nashville Public Library works as a community anchor. It hosts programs beyond traditional lending services, including the Fix-it-Fair. That's an event where volunteer repair specialists help residents fix household items at no cost. Small appliances, clothing, and similar goods all get fixed there. It reflects a broader network of library-hosted repair events across the Nashville branch system.

Nashville's music industry is close by, and that's tangible in Donelson. Many residents work in the broader entertainment and recording ecosystem centered in Nashville. Locally owned restaurants and gathering spots along the main commercial corridors reflect that mix of working-class and creative-industry demographics. The neighborhood doesn't trade heavily on Nashville's tourist-facing honky-tonk image. It reads more plainly as a working neighborhood with strong community ties.

Economy

Agriculture gave way to other industries in the postwar decades. Today, Donelson's economy is anchored by commercial activity along Briley Parkway and Lebanon Pike, alongside healthcare facilities and businesses serving the airport corridor. Nashville International Airport is the single largest economic driver in the immediate area. Direct employment and a cluster of hospitality, logistics, and transportation-related businesses all follow from the airport's presence.

In April 2026, Waymo opened a vehicle hub in Donelson. It brought new jobs to the neighborhood and established the area as part of the company's expanding autonomous vehicle operations in Tennessee. [2] The hub's arrival reflects broader investment interest in the eastern Nashville corridor. Land costs stay lower than in core Nashville neighborhoods, and infrastructure access is strong.

Business leaders and community organizations have worked together to attract new housing, restaurants, and retail to Donelson and the adjoining Hermitage area. Late 2025 saw plans announced that identified specific commercial corridors for mixed-use development and targeted infrastructure improvements to support increased density. [3]

Transportation

Several major corridors provide access to Donelson. Briley Parkway (Tennessee State Route 155) loops around the northern boundary, connecting to Interstate 40 west toward downtown and east toward the airport and Interstate 840. Ellington Parkway runs south to north along the neighborhood's western edge, linking it to downtown Nashville. Interstate 24 provides access to southeastern destinations including Murfreesboro.

The Music City Star commuter rail line has a stop in Donelson. It runs between downtown Nashville and Mount Juliet. The Donelson station sits near the airport and offers a rail connection to Union Station in downtown Nashville. It's one of the few direct rail transit options available in the broader Nashville region.

A significant upgrade of the existing Donelson train and bus station was announced in 2025. It'll become a full transit center, including new bus rapid transit connections and direct links to Nashville International Airport. [4] The project integrates WeGo Public Transit bus routes, the Music City Star, and airport shuttle service into a single hub. Donelson would become a transfer point for transit riders moving between downtown Nashville and the airport.

WeGo Public Transit operates multiple bus routes through Donelson. Service reaches downtown Nashville and other parts of Davidson County for residents without personal vehicles.

Attractions

The most historically prominent attraction with the Donelson name is Fort Donelson National Battlefield, but it's located in Dover, Tennessee, not here. It's approximately a 90-minute drive west of Nashville. The National Park Service operates a visitor center there with preserved earthworks, cannon emplacements, and interpretive exhibits. [5]

Within the Donelson neighborhood itself, Two Rivers State Park is the principal natural attraction. Riverfront access, athletic facilities, and a seasonal water park are all there. The park's position at the junction of the Cumberland and Stones rivers provides scenic views and easy water access. Boating, fishing, and kayaking are common recreational activities along this stretch of the Cumberland.

The Hermitage is Andrew Jackson's plantation home, located just east of the Donelson neighborhood in an area that shares the Hermitage name. The Ladies' Hermitage Association manages it and draws visitors interested in early American and Tennessee history. It sits within easy driving distance of the Donelson commercial core.

Neighborhoods

Donelson encompasses several smaller areas with their own local identities. Two Rivers, in the northern section of the neighborhood near the state park, is primarily residential. Mid-century single-family housing and riverside green space characterize the area. Areas closer to the airport tend to mix commercial and residential uses, reflecting the economic pull of airport-adjacent land.

The mid-2020s brought renewed residential development interest. New housing projects targeted the area because land is relatively affordable compared to west Nashville and the urban core. Townhouse and mixed-use projects emerged along key commercial corridors. These projects added density without significantly altering the predominantly single-family character of most of Donelson's residential blocks.

Broader investment in Nashville's eastern neighborhoods drives the ongoing growth. The city's overall population expansion matters here. So does Donelson's particular appeal: airport access, riverside parks, and transit connections all matter.

Notable Residents

Rachel Donelson was born into the Donelson family whose name the area carries. She married Andrew Jackson. Jackson himself lived nearby at The Hermitage. The Donelson family's centrality to early Nashville and Tennessee political history gives the area a notable historical lineage. Contemporary notable residents are less prominently documented.

References