Christopher Cheek founded a wholesale
grocery business in Nashville in the 1880s. His son, Leslie Cheek, joined him as a partner, and by 1915 was president of the family-owned company. Leslie's wife, Mabel Wood, was a member of a prominent
Clarksville, Tennessee, family. Meanwhile,
Joel Owsley Cheek, Leslie's cousin, had developed an acclaimed blend of
coffee that was marketed through Nashville's finest hotel, the
Maxwell House Hotel. Cheek's extended family, including Leslie and Mabel Cheek, were investors. In 1928, the
Postum Cereals Company (now
General Foods) purchased
Maxwell House's parent company, Cheek-Neal Coffee, for more than $40 million. After the sale of the family business, Leslie Cheek bought of woodland in West Nashville for a country estate. He hired
New York residential and landscape architect
Bryant Fleming to design the house and gardens, and gave him full control over every detail of the project, including interior furnishings. The resulting
limestone mansion and extensive formal gardens were completed in 1932. The estate design was inspired by the grand
English manors of the 18th century. Leslie Cheek died just two years after moving into the mansion. Mabel Cheek and their daughter, Huldah Cheek Sharp, lived at Cheekwood until the 1950s, when Huldah Sharp and her husband offered the property as a site for a botanical garden and art museum. The
Exchange Club of Nashville, the Horticultural Society of Middle Tennessee and other civic groups led the redevelopment of the property aided by funds raised from the sale of the former building of the defunct Nashville Museum of Art. The new Cheekwood museum opened in 1960. == Art museum ==