Independence High School is a 9–12 public high school in Thompson's Station, Tennessee. It is one of several high schools in the Williamson County Schools district.
Location
2.0 km
The James P. Johnson House is a building and property in Thompsons Station, Tennessee, dating from 1854. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1988. It has also been known as Laurel Hill. It includes Greek Revival and Central passage plan and other architecture.
The house is notable for its association with the Laurel Hill Stock Farm, a livestock farm founded in the 1830s by Thomas Johnson, which was later inherited by his son, James P. Johnson, in 1853. During the 1850s the farm was expanded to over 500 acres and is listed as one of the most successful farms in the county in the 1886 Goodspeed History.
2.4 km
The John Neely House is a property in Thompsons Station, Tennessee dating from c. 1810 that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. The property has also been known as Hilltop Manor.
The NRHP eligibility of the property was addressed in a 1988 study of Williamson County historical resources.
4.7 km
The Franklin Hardeman House is a property in Franklin, Tennessee that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. The property is also known as Sugar Hill and is denoted as Williamson County historic resource WM-291.
It was built or has other significance as of c.1835. It includes Greek Revival architecture. When listed the property included one contributing building, two non-contributing buildings, and one non-contributing structure, on an area of 8.1 acres.
The property was covered in a 1988 study of Williamson County historical resources.
4.9 km
FirstBank Amphitheater is an open-air music venue located on the site of a former rock quarry in Franklin, Tennessee. The amphitheater has hosted concerts since 2021, and can accommodate a capacity of 7,500.
6.1 km
The Dr. Hezekiah Oden House is a building and property in Franklin, Tennessee, United States, dating from c. 1850 that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. It has also been known as Walnut Winds. It includes Greek Revival, Central passage plan and other architecture. The NRHP listing included one contributing building, one contributing site and two non-contributing buildings on an area of 1 acre.
It was one of about thirty antebellum "significant brick and frame residences" built in Williamson County that have survived and that were centers of slave plantations. It is one of several of these located "on the rich farmland surrounding Franklin"; others were Glen Echo, the Franklin Hardeman House and the Samuel Glass House, the Thomas Brown House, the Stokely Davis House, the Beverly Toon House and the Samuel S. Marten House.
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