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Story Making

The SLaM Lab has worked with The Jefferson Street Sound Museum , schools in Nashville and Boston, and with community partners to engage people in making spatial stories using archival materials and situated in place. These rich stories have a palimpsestic quality that helps the story authors think about “here and then” not just “then and now” while also serving as a counter narrative to dominant or typically told narratives about history in schools.                           Nashville’s Historic Jefferson Street was once home to a vibrant economically successfully and socially cohesive black community.  Beyond the three HBCU universities, an elementary and high school, innumerable business and numerous civic organizations, it also starred as Nashville’s original music row. The neighborhood was home to 100’s of businesses including nightclubs and music venues from the 1930’s through the 1960’s.  Over those years the neighborhood was visited by innumerable famous artists including Duke Ellington, Ray Charles, and Etta James among others, and it also provided venues for Nashvillians such as Jimi Hendrix, Marion James, Gene Allison, Jessie Boyce and more. In the late 1960’s the routing of interstate I40 destroyed this music row, and many residents argue, the neighborhood and community.  This set of interactive maps is our small attempt to document that history and give voice to people who once lived, worked, and played there. Use the navigation menu at the top of the page to see pointers to some of the music and civil rights history, and visit the Storylines item to see some personal stories from past and present residents of the neighborhood.