The site that Jackson named Hermitage was located from the
Cumberland and
Stones Rivers after settlers of European descent
ethnically cleansed the region of Native Americans. The land was originally settled in 1780 by
Robert Hays, who was the
grand uncle of
Texas Ranger John Coffee Hays and Confederate General
Harry Thompson Hays. Hays sold the farm to Jackson in 1804.
Cotton plantation Jackson and his wife moved into the existing two-story log blockhouse, built to resist Indian attacks. A
lean-to was added on the back of the cabin and to the rear, a group of log outbuildings were erected, including slave cabins, store rooms, and a smokehouse. This complex is known historically as the First Hermitage. At the peak of operations, Jackson held 161 slaves in total: 110 at the Hermitage and 51 at
Halcyon plantation in
Coahoma County, Mississippi. Due to debt and bad investments, Jackson Jr. began selling off portions of the estate. In 1856, he sold the remaining , the mansion, and the outbuildings to the State of Tennessee, with a provision that the Jackson family could remain in residence as caretakers of the estate. The state intended to turn over the property to the federal government for use as a southern branch of the
United States Military Academy, but the outbreak of the
American Civil War in 1861 disrupted this plan.
Civil War and afterwards On May 5, 1863, units of the
Union Army from
Indiana approached the Hermitage. Pvt. Joseph C. Taylor wrote an account in his diary:
Museum Andrew Jackson's grandson, Andrew Jackson III, and his family were the last to occupy the Hermitage. The family moved out in 1893, and it ceased being a family residence. The Hermitage was opened to the public by the Ladies' Hermitage Association, who had been deeded the property by the state of Tennessee for use as a museum of both Jackson's life and the
antebellum South in general. The Association restored the mansion to its 1837 appearance. Over time, the organization bought back all the land that had been sold, taking ownership of the last parcel that restored the site boundaries in 2003. The trees once hid the house from passers-by on
U.S. Route 70, but their loss left the mansion in plain sight. Using wood from the fallen trees,
Gibson Guitar Corporation produced 200 limited-edition "Old Hickory" guitars. The first guitar produced was presented to the Smithsonian, although , it was not on display. The mansion is the most accurately preserved early presidential home in the country. Each year, the home receives more than a quarter million visitors, making it the fourth-most-visited presidential residence in the country (after the White House,
Mount Vernon, and
Monticello). The property was declared a
National Historic Landmark in 1960. Based on archaeological excavations and other research, the Hermitage mounted an exhibition on slave life at the plantation in 2005. It is installed in the Visitor Center and provides much more focus on the lives of enslaved African American families at the plantation, ranging from the domestic staff to field laborers.
Enslaved Memorial In 2006, the remains of 61 enslaved people who had been the legal property of Rachel Jackson's nephews were discovered near the Hermitage. Their burials were unmarked, but they were arranged in family groups and were estimated to range in age from 1 to 45. The Ladies Hermitage Association took charge of their burials in a new common grave on the Hermitage site. Atop their reburial, a memorial was built in 2009 in remembrance of the enslaved people of the area. The site design, "Our Peace: Follow the Drinking Gourd—A Monument to the Enslaved," proposed by Aaron Lee Benson, includes an unmarked stone wall over the burial site and seven trees arranged in the shape of the
Little Dipper. Both the constellation and "follow the drinking gourd" refer to the practice of navigating by the North Star to escape from slavery.
Hermitage slave cemetery In 2024, researchers found a burial ground believed to hold the graves of 28 enslaved people. More than 480 veterans who died there were buried in an onsite cemetery, each marked with a white, military-style gravestone and arrayed in circles around a monumental stone. ==Legacy==