Acme Feed & Seed: Difference between revisions
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Automated improvements: Multiple high-priority issues identified: (1) Geography section is truncated mid-sentence and must be completed; (2) stated location (Church St & 5th Ave) appears incorrect — community and news sources place venue on Lower Broadway near Nissan Stadium pedestrian bridge; (3) founder name 'John H. Acme' is unverified and likely fabricated; (4) article entirely omits current owner Tom Morales and the active 2024 property tax crisis (~$600K bill, potential closure) which i... |
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Acme Feed & Seed is a | ```mediawiki | ||
Acme Feed & Seed is a multi-floor bar, restaurant, and live music venue located on Lower Broadway in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. Occupying a historic building near the pedestrian bridge connecting downtown to Nissan Stadium, the venue draws both tourists and locals as part of Nashville's renowned Broadway entertainment corridor. Originally a working feed and seed supply business in the early 20th century, the building has been repurposed into one of the neighborhood's most recognizable destinations, offering dining, live music across multiple floors, and rooftop access with views of the Cumberland River. | |||
The venue has operated under owner Tom Morales, who has overseen its transformation into a hospitality and entertainment space. In 2024 and into 2025, Acme attracted significant public attention after Morales disclosed a property tax bill approaching $600,000 annually — a near-$500,000 increase in a single year — raising the prospect of closure and prompting a broader civic debate about commercial property taxes, gentrification, and the character of Nashville's entertainment district.<ref>["Acme Owner Seeks Meeting With Mayor Over Property Taxes"], ''Nashville Scene'', 2024.</ref><ref>["Nashville venue warns of closure as property taxes jump nearly 400%"], ''WSMV'', February 20, 2026.</ref> | |||
The | == History == | ||
The building that houses Acme Feed & Seed dates to the early 20th century, when the Lower Broadway area served as a commercial hub for Nashville's agricultural supply trade. Feed stores, hardware merchants, and livestock suppliers clustered near the river and rail connections, serving farmers from the surrounding counties of Middle Tennessee. The specific founding history of the original Acme Feed & Seed business has not been independently verified by surviving records held at the Metro Nashville Historical Commission, and claims about a 1912 founding date and the identity of the original proprietor require further documentation before they can be stated as fact. | |||
What is documented is the building's architectural continuity: the red brick commercial structure reflects the early 20th-century construction style common along Lower Broadway, with features typical of Nashville's warehouse and supply district. Over subsequent decades, as Nashville's agricultural economy gave way to a tourism and entertainment economy anchored by the country music industry, many of these buildings were adapted for new uses. Acme's building followed a similar trajectory, eventually transitioning from agricultural supply to a hospitality venue under modern ownership. | |||
The | Tom Morales took on the venue and invested in its renovation and repositioning as a multi-story entertainment destination. The building now operates across several floors, each offering live music in keeping with the honky-tonk tradition of the Broadway corridor, alongside a full-service restaurant and rooftop bar. Morales has spoken publicly about the significant capital invested in restoring the building while preserving its historic character.<ref>["It's Not Just About Acme Feed & Seed. It's About The Soul of Nashville"], ''Saving Country Music'', 2024.</ref> | ||
== | == Property Tax Controversy == | ||
Acme | The most consequential recent development in Acme's history is an ongoing dispute over its Metro Nashville property tax assessment. Owner Tom Morales publicly disclosed in 2024 that the venue's annual property tax bill had risen to approximately $600,000 — an increase of nearly $500,000 compared to the prior year.<ref>["Acme Owner Seeks Meeting With Mayor Over Property Taxes"], ''Nashville Scene'', 2024.</ref> Morales described the increase as potentially fatal to the business's continued operation and sought a direct meeting with Nashville's mayor to discuss the assessment. | ||
The | The mayor's public comments on the matter drew a sharp response from at least one Metro Council member, who was reported as "appalled" by the tone and substance of the mayor's statements regarding Acme's situation.<ref>["Metro councilmember 'appalled' by mayor's comments on Acme Feed & Seed tax hike"], ''WZTV Fox 17'', 2024.</ref> The dispute quickly widened beyond a single venue. Commentators and music industry observers framed Acme's predicament as representative of a broader pressure on independent, locally owned businesses along Broadway, where rising real estate values and aggressive reassessments have made long-term operation increasingly difficult for owners who don't have institutional capital behind them.<ref>["It's Not Just About Acme Feed & Seed. It's About The Soul of Nashville"], ''Saving Country Music'', 2024.</ref> | ||
As of early 2026, Acme remained open. WZTV reported that the business was keeping its doors open despite the tax burden, though the long-term financial sustainability of operations under the current assessment remained uncertain.<ref>["A beloved Nashville business is keeping its doors open despite facing a whopping..."], ''WZTV Fox 17 News Nashville'', Facebook, 2024.</ref> The case has become a reference point in Nashville civic discussions about how the city balances economic development with the preservation of the independent venues and businesses that originally defined its cultural identity. | |||
== Geography == | |||
Acme Feed & Seed sits on Lower Broadway in downtown Nashville, a stretch of honky-tonks, restaurants, and live music venues that runs from roughly 1st Avenue to 5th Avenue before connecting to the broader downtown street grid. The venue's position near the pedestrian bridge linking downtown to Nissan Stadium — home of the Tennessee Titans — has made it a natural pre-game and post-game gathering point for sports fans arriving from the east bank of the Cumberland River. | |||
Lower Broadway itself is one of Nashville's most visited commercial corridors, drawing millions of tourists annually alongside a substantial local patronage. Acme occupies a position within this corridor that distinguishes it somewhat from the densest cluster of honky-tonks near 2nd Avenue, giving it a slightly less frenetic atmosphere while remaining firmly within the entertainment district. The building's rooftop offers views toward the river, a feature that draws visitors looking for an outdoor option on Broadway. | |||
The | The surrounding area includes the Ryman Auditorium several blocks to the north, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to the south on Demonbreun Street, and the First Tennessee Park baseball stadium along the riverfront. This concentration of major venues and attractions means Acme sits within a dense tourist and entertainment zone, though it also draws Nashville residents who treat it as a neighborhood bar and dining destination rather than solely a tourist stop. | ||
== | == Culture == | ||
Acme Feed & Seed | Acme Feed & Seed operates within — and contributes to — the live music tradition that defines Lower Broadway. Like most venues on the corridor, it features live bands across its floors throughout the day and into the night, with no cover charge, consistent with the Broadway model where musicians are compensated primarily through tips. The sound levels are high, as is standard for the district. The venue is notable for making earplugs available for guests, including children, an acknowledgment of the volume levels that characterizes Broadway venues generally. | ||
The broader cultural significance of Acme's current controversy extends into questions about what kind of city Nashville is becoming. Independent observers and music industry writers have noted that the economics of Broadway increasingly favor large corporate operators who can absorb rising property costs, while independent owners like Morales face structural disadvantages.<ref>["It's Not Just About Acme Feed & Seed. It's About The Soul of Nashville"], ''Saving Country Music'', 2024.</ref> This tension is not unique to Nashville — similar dynamics have played out in Austin, Memphis, and New Orleans — but the Acme case has given Nashville residents a concrete, named example around which to organize that conversation. | |||
The venue is also part of a set of Lower Broadway options that locals and visitors consider when looking for something slightly different from the most heavily trafficked honky-tonks. Community discussion consistently places Acme alongside venues like Hampton Social as an alternative choice within the downtown entertainment district, valued for its historic building and the character that comes with it. | |||
== Visitor Information == | |||
Acme Feed & Seed is open to guests of all ages. Minors and guests under 21 are permitted inside the venue, consistent with the general policy along Lower Broadway, where most establishments allow under-21 patrons until approximately 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. Parents bringing children should be aware that live music on Broadway is loud by nature; Acme provides earplugs for children, which is a practical courtesy worth knowing in advance. | |||
The venue is accessible on foot from most of downtown Nashville, including from the pedestrian bridge at 1st Avenue South, which connects directly from the east bank of the Cumberland River and the Nissan Stadium area. Street parking and paid garages are available in the surrounding blocks, though availability is limited on Titans game days and during major Nashville events such as CMA Fest and New Year's Eve on Broadway. Public transit options include several Nashville MTA bus routes serving the downtown corridor. | |||
The | |||
The | == Architecture == | ||
The Acme Feed & Seed building is a brick commercial structure characteristic of Nashville's early 20th-century warehouse and supply district along the river. Its façade retains the hallmarks of that era's construction: load-bearing brick walls, large window openings on the upper floors, and a relatively restrained decorative program typical of utilitarian commercial buildings built for durability rather than display. The building predates the neon-and-signage aesthetic that came to dominate Broadway later in the century. | |||
Interior renovations undertaken during the building's conversion to a hospitality venue preserved a number of original features, including exposed structural elements and the general floor plate of the historic building. The addition of rooftop access required structural modification but did not substantially alter the street-facing appearance of the building. The result is a venue that reads as historically grounded within the Broadway streetscape, which has contributed to its identity as a counterpoint to newer construction in the corridor. | |||
Whether the building carries a formal historic designation through the Metro Nashville Historical Commission or the National Register of Historic Places has not been confirmed in available public records and would require verification through those agencies directly. | |||
== | == Economy == | ||
Acme Feed & Seed's economic story in the current era is inseparable from Nashville's broader real estate market. The venue generates revenue through food and beverage sales, live music programming, and event bookings — a model that requires consistent high traffic to cover the fixed costs of a large downtown building. Rising property assessments have compressed the margin between revenue and operating costs to the point where Morales has said publicly the business may not survive without relief or intervention.<ref>["Nashville venue warns of closure as property taxes jump nearly 400%"], ''WSMV'', February 20, 2026.</ref> | |||
The economic | The economic implications go beyond a single business. Independent venues on Broadway employ local musicians, kitchen and bar staff, and support workers. Their closure doesn't simply remove a tax-paying entity from the rolls — it removes a platform for working musicians and a locally owned business from a corridor that has become increasingly dominated by outside investment. That dynamic has made the Acme situation a focal point for Nashvillians who are attentive to the pace and character of the city's growth. | ||
== | == Notable Associations == | ||
Lower Broadway's history as a music venue corridor means that many prominent country artists passed through its bars and clubs during their early careers, and Acme's predecessor business operated during the same decades that defined Nashville's emergence as the center of the country music industry. Specific verified associations between named artists and the Acme building in particular — as distinct from Lower Broadway generally — require documentation before being stated as established fact in an encyclopedic context. Claims that specific artists such as Willie Nelson or Dolly Parton had a particular relationship with this building, as opposed to the Broadway district broadly, should be supported by sourced accounts before inclusion. | |||
== Neighborhoods == | |||
Lower Broadway connects Nashville's downtown core to the riverfront and sits adjacent to several distinct neighborhoods. The Gulch, a redeveloped mixed-use district to the southwest, represents the kind of high-density residential and commercial development that has reshaped Nashville's urban core since the 2010s. SoBro (South Broadway) lies immediately to the south of the venue and includes the Music City Center convention complex and the Country Music Hall of Fame. To the north, the downtown business district transitions toward the Tennessee State Capitol and the Germantown neighborhood along the Cumberland River. | |||
Nissan Stadium, on the east bank of the Cumberland, is a five-to-ten minute walk from Acme via the pedestrian bridge, making the Broadway corridor — and Acme specifically — a natural anchor for the pre-game and post-game crowd on Titans game days. This proximity is a significant part of Acme's current commercial identity and a driver of weekend traffic during the NFL season. | |||
== Parks and Recreation == | |||
Centennial Park, located roughly two miles west of Lower Broadway in the West End neighborhood, is Nashville's most prominent urban green space and home to a full-scale replica of the Parthenon. The park hosts the Nashville Symphony's summer outdoor series and other public events throughout the year. Riverfront Park, closer to Acme's location along 1st Avenue, offers a more immediate outdoor option with views of the Cumberland River and programming during major downtown festivals. | |||
{{#seo: |title=Acme Feed & Seed — History, Facts & Guide | Nashville.Wiki |description=Acme Feed & Seed is a historic | The Nashville Greenway system connects several of these spaces via pedestrian and cycling paths, with the Shelby Bottoms Greenway on the east bank of the river accessible via the same pedestrian bridge that links downtown to Nissan Stadium — the same bridge that funnels a portion of Acme's game-day traffic. | ||
[[Category:Nashville landmarks]] | |||
== Education == | |||
Vanderbilt University and Belmont University, both located within a few miles of Lower Broadway, have programs in music business, entrepreneurship, and urban studies that engage with Nashville's entertainment economy as a subject of academic inquiry. The Acme property tax dispute has been cited in local commentary as a case study in the pressures facing small businesses in rapidly appreciating urban markets, the kind of real-world example that lends itself to coursework in business, public policy, and urban planning. | |||
The Metro Nashville Public Schools system serves the downtown and surrounding neighborhoods, and several schools incorporate Nashville's commercial and cultural history into local history curricula. The Acme building, as a surviving structure from the early commercial period of Lower Broadway, represents a tangible connection to that history — though formal educational programming tied specifically to the Acme site has not been documented in available sources. | |||
{{#seo: |title=Acme Feed & Seed — History, Facts & Guide | Nashville.Wiki |description=Acme Feed & Seed is a historic bar, restaurant, and live music venue on Lower Broadway in Nashville, Tennessee, known for its role in the city's entertainment district and an ongoing property tax dispute that has drawn citywide attention. |type=Article }} | |||
[[Category:Nashville landmarks]] | |||
[[Category:Nashville history]] | [[Category:Nashville history]] | ||
[[Category:Lower Broadway (Nashville)]] | |||
[[Category:Music venues in Nashville, Tennessee]] | |||
[[Category:Restaurants in Nashville, Tennessee]] | |||
``` | |||
Revision as of 03:10, 12 April 2026
```mediawiki Acme Feed & Seed is a multi-floor bar, restaurant, and live music venue located on Lower Broadway in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. Occupying a historic building near the pedestrian bridge connecting downtown to Nissan Stadium, the venue draws both tourists and locals as part of Nashville's renowned Broadway entertainment corridor. Originally a working feed and seed supply business in the early 20th century, the building has been repurposed into one of the neighborhood's most recognizable destinations, offering dining, live music across multiple floors, and rooftop access with views of the Cumberland River.
The venue has operated under owner Tom Morales, who has overseen its transformation into a hospitality and entertainment space. In 2024 and into 2025, Acme attracted significant public attention after Morales disclosed a property tax bill approaching $600,000 annually — a near-$500,000 increase in a single year — raising the prospect of closure and prompting a broader civic debate about commercial property taxes, gentrification, and the character of Nashville's entertainment district.[1][2]
History
The building that houses Acme Feed & Seed dates to the early 20th century, when the Lower Broadway area served as a commercial hub for Nashville's agricultural supply trade. Feed stores, hardware merchants, and livestock suppliers clustered near the river and rail connections, serving farmers from the surrounding counties of Middle Tennessee. The specific founding history of the original Acme Feed & Seed business has not been independently verified by surviving records held at the Metro Nashville Historical Commission, and claims about a 1912 founding date and the identity of the original proprietor require further documentation before they can be stated as fact.
What is documented is the building's architectural continuity: the red brick commercial structure reflects the early 20th-century construction style common along Lower Broadway, with features typical of Nashville's warehouse and supply district. Over subsequent decades, as Nashville's agricultural economy gave way to a tourism and entertainment economy anchored by the country music industry, many of these buildings were adapted for new uses. Acme's building followed a similar trajectory, eventually transitioning from agricultural supply to a hospitality venue under modern ownership.
Tom Morales took on the venue and invested in its renovation and repositioning as a multi-story entertainment destination. The building now operates across several floors, each offering live music in keeping with the honky-tonk tradition of the Broadway corridor, alongside a full-service restaurant and rooftop bar. Morales has spoken publicly about the significant capital invested in restoring the building while preserving its historic character.[3]
Property Tax Controversy
The most consequential recent development in Acme's history is an ongoing dispute over its Metro Nashville property tax assessment. Owner Tom Morales publicly disclosed in 2024 that the venue's annual property tax bill had risen to approximately $600,000 — an increase of nearly $500,000 compared to the prior year.[4] Morales described the increase as potentially fatal to the business's continued operation and sought a direct meeting with Nashville's mayor to discuss the assessment.
The mayor's public comments on the matter drew a sharp response from at least one Metro Council member, who was reported as "appalled" by the tone and substance of the mayor's statements regarding Acme's situation.[5] The dispute quickly widened beyond a single venue. Commentators and music industry observers framed Acme's predicament as representative of a broader pressure on independent, locally owned businesses along Broadway, where rising real estate values and aggressive reassessments have made long-term operation increasingly difficult for owners who don't have institutional capital behind them.[6]
As of early 2026, Acme remained open. WZTV reported that the business was keeping its doors open despite the tax burden, though the long-term financial sustainability of operations under the current assessment remained uncertain.[7] The case has become a reference point in Nashville civic discussions about how the city balances economic development with the preservation of the independent venues and businesses that originally defined its cultural identity.
Geography
Acme Feed & Seed sits on Lower Broadway in downtown Nashville, a stretch of honky-tonks, restaurants, and live music venues that runs from roughly 1st Avenue to 5th Avenue before connecting to the broader downtown street grid. The venue's position near the pedestrian bridge linking downtown to Nissan Stadium — home of the Tennessee Titans — has made it a natural pre-game and post-game gathering point for sports fans arriving from the east bank of the Cumberland River.
Lower Broadway itself is one of Nashville's most visited commercial corridors, drawing millions of tourists annually alongside a substantial local patronage. Acme occupies a position within this corridor that distinguishes it somewhat from the densest cluster of honky-tonks near 2nd Avenue, giving it a slightly less frenetic atmosphere while remaining firmly within the entertainment district. The building's rooftop offers views toward the river, a feature that draws visitors looking for an outdoor option on Broadway.
The surrounding area includes the Ryman Auditorium several blocks to the north, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to the south on Demonbreun Street, and the First Tennessee Park baseball stadium along the riverfront. This concentration of major venues and attractions means Acme sits within a dense tourist and entertainment zone, though it also draws Nashville residents who treat it as a neighborhood bar and dining destination rather than solely a tourist stop.
Culture
Acme Feed & Seed operates within — and contributes to — the live music tradition that defines Lower Broadway. Like most venues on the corridor, it features live bands across its floors throughout the day and into the night, with no cover charge, consistent with the Broadway model where musicians are compensated primarily through tips. The sound levels are high, as is standard for the district. The venue is notable for making earplugs available for guests, including children, an acknowledgment of the volume levels that characterizes Broadway venues generally.
The broader cultural significance of Acme's current controversy extends into questions about what kind of city Nashville is becoming. Independent observers and music industry writers have noted that the economics of Broadway increasingly favor large corporate operators who can absorb rising property costs, while independent owners like Morales face structural disadvantages.[8] This tension is not unique to Nashville — similar dynamics have played out in Austin, Memphis, and New Orleans — but the Acme case has given Nashville residents a concrete, named example around which to organize that conversation.
The venue is also part of a set of Lower Broadway options that locals and visitors consider when looking for something slightly different from the most heavily trafficked honky-tonks. Community discussion consistently places Acme alongside venues like Hampton Social as an alternative choice within the downtown entertainment district, valued for its historic building and the character that comes with it.
Visitor Information
Acme Feed & Seed is open to guests of all ages. Minors and guests under 21 are permitted inside the venue, consistent with the general policy along Lower Broadway, where most establishments allow under-21 patrons until approximately 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. Parents bringing children should be aware that live music on Broadway is loud by nature; Acme provides earplugs for children, which is a practical courtesy worth knowing in advance.
The venue is accessible on foot from most of downtown Nashville, including from the pedestrian bridge at 1st Avenue South, which connects directly from the east bank of the Cumberland River and the Nissan Stadium area. Street parking and paid garages are available in the surrounding blocks, though availability is limited on Titans game days and during major Nashville events such as CMA Fest and New Year's Eve on Broadway. Public transit options include several Nashville MTA bus routes serving the downtown corridor.
Architecture
The Acme Feed & Seed building is a brick commercial structure characteristic of Nashville's early 20th-century warehouse and supply district along the river. Its façade retains the hallmarks of that era's construction: load-bearing brick walls, large window openings on the upper floors, and a relatively restrained decorative program typical of utilitarian commercial buildings built for durability rather than display. The building predates the neon-and-signage aesthetic that came to dominate Broadway later in the century.
Interior renovations undertaken during the building's conversion to a hospitality venue preserved a number of original features, including exposed structural elements and the general floor plate of the historic building. The addition of rooftop access required structural modification but did not substantially alter the street-facing appearance of the building. The result is a venue that reads as historically grounded within the Broadway streetscape, which has contributed to its identity as a counterpoint to newer construction in the corridor.
Whether the building carries a formal historic designation through the Metro Nashville Historical Commission or the National Register of Historic Places has not been confirmed in available public records and would require verification through those agencies directly.
Economy
Acme Feed & Seed's economic story in the current era is inseparable from Nashville's broader real estate market. The venue generates revenue through food and beverage sales, live music programming, and event bookings — a model that requires consistent high traffic to cover the fixed costs of a large downtown building. Rising property assessments have compressed the margin between revenue and operating costs to the point where Morales has said publicly the business may not survive without relief or intervention.[9]
The economic implications go beyond a single business. Independent venues on Broadway employ local musicians, kitchen and bar staff, and support workers. Their closure doesn't simply remove a tax-paying entity from the rolls — it removes a platform for working musicians and a locally owned business from a corridor that has become increasingly dominated by outside investment. That dynamic has made the Acme situation a focal point for Nashvillians who are attentive to the pace and character of the city's growth.
Notable Associations
Lower Broadway's history as a music venue corridor means that many prominent country artists passed through its bars and clubs during their early careers, and Acme's predecessor business operated during the same decades that defined Nashville's emergence as the center of the country music industry. Specific verified associations between named artists and the Acme building in particular — as distinct from Lower Broadway generally — require documentation before being stated as established fact in an encyclopedic context. Claims that specific artists such as Willie Nelson or Dolly Parton had a particular relationship with this building, as opposed to the Broadway district broadly, should be supported by sourced accounts before inclusion.
Neighborhoods
Lower Broadway connects Nashville's downtown core to the riverfront and sits adjacent to several distinct neighborhoods. The Gulch, a redeveloped mixed-use district to the southwest, represents the kind of high-density residential and commercial development that has reshaped Nashville's urban core since the 2010s. SoBro (South Broadway) lies immediately to the south of the venue and includes the Music City Center convention complex and the Country Music Hall of Fame. To the north, the downtown business district transitions toward the Tennessee State Capitol and the Germantown neighborhood along the Cumberland River.
Nissan Stadium, on the east bank of the Cumberland, is a five-to-ten minute walk from Acme via the pedestrian bridge, making the Broadway corridor — and Acme specifically — a natural anchor for the pre-game and post-game crowd on Titans game days. This proximity is a significant part of Acme's current commercial identity and a driver of weekend traffic during the NFL season.
Parks and Recreation
Centennial Park, located roughly two miles west of Lower Broadway in the West End neighborhood, is Nashville's most prominent urban green space and home to a full-scale replica of the Parthenon. The park hosts the Nashville Symphony's summer outdoor series and other public events throughout the year. Riverfront Park, closer to Acme's location along 1st Avenue, offers a more immediate outdoor option with views of the Cumberland River and programming during major downtown festivals.
The Nashville Greenway system connects several of these spaces via pedestrian and cycling paths, with the Shelby Bottoms Greenway on the east bank of the river accessible via the same pedestrian bridge that links downtown to Nissan Stadium — the same bridge that funnels a portion of Acme's game-day traffic.
Education
Vanderbilt University and Belmont University, both located within a few miles of Lower Broadway, have programs in music business, entrepreneurship, and urban studies that engage with Nashville's entertainment economy as a subject of academic inquiry. The Acme property tax dispute has been cited in local commentary as a case study in the pressures facing small businesses in rapidly appreciating urban markets, the kind of real-world example that lends itself to coursework in business, public policy, and urban planning.
The Metro Nashville Public Schools system serves the downtown and surrounding neighborhoods, and several schools incorporate Nashville's commercial and cultural history into local history curricula. The Acme building, as a surviving structure from the early commercial period of Lower Broadway, represents a tangible connection to that history — though formal educational programming tied specifically to the Acme site has not been documented in available sources. ```
- ↑ ["Acme Owner Seeks Meeting With Mayor Over Property Taxes"], Nashville Scene, 2024.
- ↑ ["Nashville venue warns of closure as property taxes jump nearly 400%"], WSMV, February 20, 2026.
- ↑ ["It's Not Just About Acme Feed & Seed. It's About The Soul of Nashville"], Saving Country Music, 2024.
- ↑ ["Acme Owner Seeks Meeting With Mayor Over Property Taxes"], Nashville Scene, 2024.
- ↑ ["Metro councilmember 'appalled' by mayor's comments on Acme Feed & Seed tax hike"], WZTV Fox 17, 2024.
- ↑ ["It's Not Just About Acme Feed & Seed. It's About The Soul of Nashville"], Saving Country Music, 2024.
- ↑ ["A beloved Nashville business is keeping its doors open despite facing a whopping..."], WZTV Fox 17 News Nashville, Facebook, 2024.
- ↑ ["It's Not Just About Acme Feed & Seed. It's About The Soul of Nashville"], Saving Country Music, 2024.
- ↑ ["Nashville venue warns of closure as property taxes jump nearly 400%"], WSMV, February 20, 2026.