unifying Jefferson Street

Most Recent Update

2024

Focus Area

Local Economies

Partner

Revitalization: a Long time Coming

Jefferson Street is a special center of Nashville’s Black-owned business community, and it has been that way since the 19th century. It was known for being home to a thriving music scene and economic center. Despite great outrage from community members, urban renewal of the 1960s brought a highway to North Nashville and physically divided much of the neighborhood from its business center. Urban renewal is synonymous with systemic racism throughout America, but reparations for the community are long overdue. Jefferson Street United Merchants Partnership (J.U.M.P.) has been long named the leader of resilience and revitalization in North Nashville, and we will be working alongside them to support Jefferson Street property owners with the creation of a Jefferson Street Master Plan.

This project supports our Guiding Principles for Local Economies, Neighborhood Identity, and Community Involvement. Check out the Guiding Principles to learn more about our goals.

Project Location

Project Context

2019: Coalition building efforts begin alongside J.U.M.P.

2004: Community engagement for The Plan of Nashville

2023: Formed Jefferson Street Property Owner Committee

2017: Community engagement for a Jefferson Street Pocket Park

2024: Pop-up Holiday Market Activation with Jefferson Street Historical Society

Project Information

project componeNts

Effects of the Interstate

Cartoon from 1968 Tennessean implying that the highway would divide Nashville

The highway had all of the expected effects from Avon Williams Jr.’s case and then some, first relocating or destroying 128 businesses, 80% of which were Black-owned. Remaining businesses were cut off from neighborhood clientele, effectively creating a ghost town where there was originally a bustling urban center. News articles abound identify the regrets of the interstate’s damaging economic effects and often claim that plans were being made to repair the fissure. The plans that were never implemented further exacerbated the distrust of local government to represent Jefferson Street. Today, with rising housing costs and an aging homeowner population in North Nashville, “revitalization” feels synonymous with “displacement.” Any efforts that the city takes now to right these historic wrongs could have even more damaging effects on the local population if they are not done correctly.

No matter where you are in the U.S., there is a huge infrastructure disparity in majority white and majority Black neighborhoods. Public input was not sought during urban renewal deepening the breech of trust between white decision makers and Black community members of North Nashville. Despite the 1967 case made by Avon Williams Jr. in opposition to the interstate placement, the court sided with the defense, and the damage was done.

After half a century of navigating the major issues that I-40 and I-65 created in our own city, The Plan of Nashville (2005) proposed the radical idea of removing large sections of interstate to reconnect neighborhoods. Of 800 Nashville community members, 94% of participants in design charettes (or group visioning sessions) were in favor of removing the interstate. Read the blog, Rethinking Interstates Within Neighborhoods, to learn more about the history and proposed infrastructure solutions.


We are here

What You Can Do to Help

Do you own property on Jefferson Street?

REsources

This project was made possible with grant support from: