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Item Name
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Lockeland Mansion
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Creator
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John Phillip Aguilar
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Lede
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The plantation home that made room for a school
Factoid - Lockeland Mansion was demolished in 1939.
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Story-Subject
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Lockeland Elementary School, otherwise known as Lockeland Design Center, was once the site of Lockland Mansion, named for Jane Locke. The first Anglo-American settler at this site was Daniel Williams who obtained 640 acres as a Revolutionary War veteran from the government of North Carolina. In 1786, he built a log cabin on “a hill by a spring.”
Col. Robert Weakley of Halifax County, Virginia purchased the land in 1800. According to an 1880 account, Weakly came to Middle Tennessee in 1785 bringing only “…a horse and bridle and one and three-quarter dollars in money.” He was described as “a man of quick-perceptions, great courage, an Indian-fighter, and a soldier of the Revolution at the early age of sixteen years.” Weakley was already a Tennessee land speculator before he purchased this parcel.
On a trip back to Salisbury, North Carolina, Weakley married Jane Locke, daughter of the Revolutionary War General Matthew Locke. Upon their return, Weakley built “Lockeland” for his wife. Weakley was a member of the Tennessee Constitutional Convention, he served in the U.S. Senate 1809-1811, and was the Second President of the Nashville Bridge Company.
From 1887 to 1902, parts of the estate were subdivided for development. By 1890, electric streetcar lines linked East Nashville to the central business district across the river and further propelled suburban development. In 1939, the City of Nashville purchased the mansion and demolished it to build the school.
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Subtitle
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The Legacy of Robert Weakley
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Subject
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Lockeland Springs, Lockeland Mansion
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Source
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File #62: “Lockeland Mansion”
Title - Lockeland Mansion
Description - Photograph of the Lockeland Mansion.
Creator - The Tennessean
Source - The Tennessean. Friday, 14 Aug 1981. First Edition, Page 51. Accessed 29 Nov 2018. Web.
https://www.newspapers.com/image/112215798/?terms=Lockeland%2BMansion#
Date - Friday, 14 Aug 1981
Rights - Copyright © 2018 Newspapers.com. All Rights Reserved.
File #63: https://omeka4.mtsu.edu/files/original/56ebbc3ec438184fb0a1f7d5dc4404ca.jpg
File #64: https://omeka4.mtsu.edu/files/original/9aeed5f013f64406774a04f14afd0a7a.jpg
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Related Resources
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Saunders, Sara B. Weakley Descendent Cites His Records. The Tennessean, Sunday, March 16, 1980. Accessed November 8, 2018. https://www.newspapers.com/image/111977847/?terms=Weakley%2BDescendant
Thomason, Philip J. M. A preservation study of the East End and Lockeland Springs neighborhoods of Nashville, Tennessee. History Department, Middle Tennessee State University, 1981. Accessed November 8, 2018. http://lockelandsprings.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/lockland-excerpt.compressed.pdf
Clayton, W. W., and Robert Allen Ragland. History of Davidson County, Tennessee: With Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers. Philadelphia: J. W. Lewis & Co., 1880.
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Bibliographic Citation
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John Phillip Aguilar, “Lockeland Mansion,” Bygone Nashville, accessed September 16, 2025, https://bygone-nashville.mtsu.edu/admin/items/show/28.
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Title/Location
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Lockeland Mansion
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Address
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105 S 17th St, Nashville, TN 37206