Hometown History

Nashville, Tennessee: Enslaved Lives at Jackson's Hermitage


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Behind the grandeur of Andrew Jackson's Hermitage plantation stood a community of enslaved people whose labor built and sustained one of Tennessee's most famous estates. This episode explores their lives, their work, and the archaeological discoveries that have finally brought their stories into focus—stories that, for too long, remained invisible beside the celebrated history of "Old Hickory" himself.

The Hermitage wasn't just Jackson's home; it was a working cotton plantation powered by the forced labor of dozens of enslaved men, women, and children. At its peak, the plantation's cotton operation produced substantial harvests—records show 94 bales in 1850—making Jackson one of Tennessee's wealthiest planters. The enslaved community lived in cabins near the mansion, working from dawn until dusk in the fields, the mansion house, and the various support buildings that kept the estate running. Their days were dictated by the rhythms of cotton cultivation—planting in spring, maintaining through summer, harvesting in fall, and processing through winter.

But archaeology has revealed something remarkable: even within the brutal constraints of slavery, the enslaved community at the Hermitage created spaces of their own. Excavations in the 1980s uncovered personal items, cooking implements, and architectural evidence that showed how enslaved families maintained cultural practices, exercised small choices, and built relationships that sustained them through unimaginable hardship. Fragments of pottery, glass, and metal tell stories of meals prepared after the workday ended, of objects treasured and carefully maintained, of a community that persisted despite everything designed to erase their humanity.

Perhaps most remarkable is the story of Alfred Jackson, an enslaved man who continued to care for the Hermitage after emancipation, serving as the site's unofficial guide and caretaker until his death in 1901. His decision to remain connected to the place where he had been enslaved speaks to the complexity of memory, place, and identity in the post-Civil War South. Today, his grave stands in the Hermitage garden, and his story has become central to how the site interprets its history.

Modern historical preservation at the Hermitage has worked to center these enslaved voices—using archaeological evidence, historical records, and scholarly research to reconstruct the daily lives of the people who built Jackson's wealth. It's painstaking work that continues to this day, as historians piece together fragments of lives that were deliberately left unrecorded, uncelebrated, and nearly forgotten.

This is the second part of our exploration of Andrew Jackson's Hermitage, focusing not on the president himself, but on the community of people whose forced labor made his life and legacy possible. Their stories deserve to be told alongside—and perhaps even before—the stories of the powerful men who built their fortunes on enslaved labor.

Timeline of Events

1804 – Andrew Jackson purchases the Hermitage property and begins acquiring enslaved workers to develop the land into a working cotton plantation.

1820s-1830s – The Hermitage reaches peak production, with the enslaved community numbering in the dozens and producing substantial cotton harvests that make Jackson one of Tennessee's wealthiest planters.

1845 – Andrew Jackson dies; the enslaved community continues working the plantation under his son's ownership.

1865 – Emancipation; Alfred Jackson and others are freed but Alfred chooses to remain at the Hermitage, serving as an unofficial caretaker and guide.

1980s-Present – Archaeological excavations uncover physical evidence of the enslaved community's daily lives, leading to major shifts in how the Hermitage interprets its history.

Historical Significance

The Hermitage represents a crucial intersection of presidential history and the history of slavery in America. For decades, historic sites focused almost exclusively on "great men," treating enslaved communities as background details rather than central characters in the American story. The archaeological and interpretive work at the Hermitage has helped change that paradigm, demonstrating how physical evidence can recover voices that written records deliberately excluded.

The site's evolution also reflects broader changes in public history and historic preservation. The Hermitage's commitment to telling the full story—including the uncomfortable truths about how Jackson's wealth and political power were built on enslaved labor—sets a standard for how other presidential homes and plantations approach their own complicated histories. The enslaved community at the Hermitage didn't just enable Jackson's lifestyle; they were integral to the economic and social systems that shaped the early American republic.

Sources & Further Reading
  • The Hermitage Official Site (https://thehermitage.com) – Archaeological reports and interpretive materials about the enslaved community
  • Tennessee State Museum – Collections and exhibits related to slavery in Tennessee
  • "Slavery at The Hermitage" – Ongoing research project documenting the lives of enslaved people at Jackson's plantation
  • Archaeological studies from the Ladies' Hermitage Association/Andrew Jackson Foundation
  • Alfred Jackson's documented testimony – Available through Hermitage archives
  • Digital Archive of Comparative Slavery (DAACS) – Nearly 800,000 artifacts from Hermitage excavations


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Hometown HistoryBy Shane Waters

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