Lower Broadway
Category: History and Architecture Tour
Details
Broadway National Register Historic District
The Broadway Historic District, in the shadow of the famed Ryman Auditorium, is probably best known for the many music and tourist-related businesses that remain in this area. Known as Lower Broad, this section of Broadway has for decades attracted country music fans to its honky-tonk bars. Several of the street’s furniture and hardware stores played a key role in Nashville’s economy in the late nineteenth-century; many of these have been adaptively-reused as restaurants catering to locals and tourists alike. The Ernest Tubb Record Shop, at 417 Broadway, was the site of the second-longest running radio show in history, the Midnight Jamboree, still broadcast on Saturday nights on WSM Radio. Singer Ernest Tubb opened the record store and mail-order business in 1947 and moved to this location in 1951.
- Jimmy Buffett's Margaritaville Nashville322 Broadway (99 feet NW)
- Broadway Brewhouse & Mojo Grill317 Broadway (102 feet E)
- LandShark Sports Bar & Grill322 Broadway (114 feet NW)
- Tin Roof Broadway316 Broadway (130 feet NE)
- Nashville Gifts325 Broadway (73 feet SE)
- Betty Boots321 Broadway (84 feet SE)
- Boot Barn318 Broadway (113 feet N)
- Music City Showcase323 Broadway (127 feet E)
- Big Time Boots410 Broadway (184 feet W)
- The Patsy Cline Museum119 3rd Ave S (356 feet E)
- The Johnny Cash Museum119 3rd Ave S (377 feet E)
- Ryman Auditorium116 5th Ave N (426 feet W)
- Goo Goo Chocolate Co.116 3rd Ave S (427 feet E)
- Holt Lot315 Broadway (183 feet E)
- Gruhn Lot400 Broadway (211 feet NW)
- 333 Garage128 4th Ave N (246 feet NW)
- Smead Lot110 4th Ave S (265 feet SE)