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About Nashville's Germantown

Germantown Nashville Homes For Sale

Stephen Strickhausen: Real Estate Agent in Franklin, TN

Germantown Nashville Homes For Sale

Germantown is an 18 square block in East Nashville. It is considered Nashville's oldest residential neighborhood dating back to the 1830's. Germantown is filled with beautiful architecture and culture. Oktoberfest is held right in the middle of Germantown and attracts thousands of people each year. Home prices in this neighborhood range from the low hundreds to over 1 million dollars. If you would like more information about homes for sale in historic Germantown Tennessee then please contact us or click the home search button below.

Germantown Nashville Homes For Sale Germantown Nashville Homes For Sale

Stephen Strickhausen
Benchmark Realty
7127 Crossroads Blvd, Suite 102
Brentwood, Tn 37027
Cell: (615)-480-5770


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Octoberfest in Nashville

09-08-10
Larry Brewer
Larry   Brewer: Real Estate Agent in Nashville, TN

TennesseeOctoberfest in the historic Germantown area of north Nashville will be held on Saturday October 9th. Let hope that we continue to have this fabulous weather.   As German customs dictate, beer is abundant. For complete adherence to German customs, large (64 oz?) beer steins are available for purchase and fill-up. There is a wine garden featuring German wine as well. One of the favorite foods is bratwursts soaked in beer, with grilled onions, German potatoes and sauerkraut. And don't forget the bock beer.

Oktoberfest is enjoyable for the whole family. There is a kids play area with crafts, bounce-houses, and face painting. The streets are lined with vendors with crafts and toys that kids and adults can enjoy. It's a great Nashville tradition, and everyone should come out and enjoy the fall colors of Tennessee at Octoberfest.

Click here to search for Germantown real estate

 

Nashville Neighborhood Profile: Germantown, Hope Gardens, Historic Buena Vista

Brian Copeland, CRS : Real Estate Agent in Nashville, TN


Nashville's first suburb was Germantown, just north of the Nashville skyline. When I moved to Nashville from a small town just east, I got lost in what I considered a wretched neighborhood called Germantown. I remember driving through the streets trying to find the then I-265 and being yelled at by the residents to get out. Now over a decade later, this neighborhood has overblossomed into one of Nashville’s picture perfect communities. No joke. If I had to photograph a representative of great Nashville neighborhoods, Germantown would be near the top of the list. Other neighborhoods within walking distance of the centerpiece Farmer's Market/Bicentennial Mall include Hope Gardens, Salemtown, The Market District and Historic Buena Vista.

A Different View of the the 'Projects'

Kimble Bosworth: Real Estate Agent in Nashville, TN

I got an interesting call from another agent this week that got me thinking...thus, also got me blogging.

She was working with a client who found a great loft at Werthan Mills (the same condos, coincidentally, where I have lived since 2006). He loved the place! But not the view. He was concerned that the unit he was considering looked out over a Metro Nashville Development Authority Housing Community, Cheatham Place.

Cheatham Place NashvilleLooking out on that community made him feel guilt. Guilt that he had so much and that the people he was looking down at did not.

I was touched. Touched that she came to me to ask for more information on how I feel about that. (For the record: I share the same view as her client - definitely not the same perspective, though.) Touched that her client shared such honest feelings.

I shared my perspective with her - and subsequently, in this blog, with others.

I live in the urban core - a neighborhood on the border of Germantown and Salemtown in Nashville. This neighborhood is filled with that something unique and special - DIVERSITY - that is so rare in the fabric of our suburbs. There are people of all incomes, races, religions...I call it the spice that keeps our neighborhood from tasting bland.

Looking back to when Boz and I moved here in 2006; we heard sirens at 1AM on our first night. They came from Cheatham Place. We both woke up when we heard them. And we made assumptions that I am ashamed of today.

The next day, I ventured out to learn a little more about Cheatham Place, which I had heard would someday be torn down and redeveloped into some fabulous housing community. The greyhounds and I went on a walk through the community. And, since neither of us has ever met a stranger, we made some friends. And over the years, we have learned a lot that has changed our view of the Cheatham Place neighbors.

I was lucky enough to meet Peaches, the sensational woman who manages the public housing program for Metro Nashville, whose office is across the street and next to Cheatham Place. She introduced me to the property manager, who explained those sirens I heard were an ambulance. Many of the residents of Cheatham Place are older, with limited health resources...ambulances are actually some of the only sirens we hear there.

Why not police cars? Turns out Cheatham Place is on the National Historic Register. It is an exceptionally well maintained community with long waiting lists to get in and close to a zero tolerance policy when it comes to bad behavior.

Over the years, Werthan and Cheatham have built a special relationship. There are many stories of this friendship, here are just a few:

  • One of my Werthan neighbors does light errands and grocery shopping for an elderly Cheatham resident. She was surprised to see a fridge full of casseroles and prepared meals when she first dropped off groceries. The resident explained that ladies in her church across the street bring her more food than she could possibly eat, so she shares with other needy neighbors on a regular basis.
  • Werthan organizes an annual Christmas gift drive for the Cheatham Place kids. As is typical of these events, the gift to us if far greater than the gifts the kids receive.
  • We also teamed up with the kids of Cheatham Place to spend an afternoon painting the NumberWall mural on 8th Avenue
*th Avenue Number Wall

So, I explained to that agent the view of Cheatham Place from where I sit on my Werthan balcony:

  • I see camaraderie as neighbors share the bounty of their lives with a community of friends and family during picnics and gatherings on our beautiful Nashville spring afternoons
  • I see fellowship at the Friday Fish Fry of the adjacent Baptist Church
  • I hear laughter of the children from both of our communities playing in the fire hydrants opened by the local firemen during the hot months of summer
  • I feel hope for people who are getting help from our city to improve their lives and raise happy, healthy families
  • I have respect for these people who have become my friends and neighbors.


So that's my view from the balcony...If you're considering Germantown or Salemtown, I hope this perspective helps.

Cheatham place from Werthan

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