Tennessee Travel

Tennessee Spiritual Sites & Sacred Places

June 4, 2026

Quick Summary

The Ryman Auditorium, built in 1892 as a revival tabernacle, is still called the Mother Church of Country Music. Pinson Mounds near Jackson has 17 burial mounds across 400 acres, including Sauls Mound — the second-tallest prehistoric earthwork in North America. Historic Jonesborough, founded in 1779, is Tennessee's oldest town with a preserved 18th-century streetscape.

Tennessee's spiritual landscape runs from the literal to the metaphorical. The Ryman Auditorium was built as a church and never quite stopped being one. The Cumberland Plateau and river valleys hold Native American ceremonial sites ranging from 2,000 to 10,000 years old. The state's oldest town preserves the ruins of an independent republic that predated Tennessee itself.

Eight sites below cover the full range of Tennessee's sacred geography.

Jump to: Nashville · Native American Sacred Sites · East Tennessee · Planning Notes


Nashville

Ryman Auditorium (Mother Church of Country Music) Must-see

Ryman Auditorium (Mother Church of Country Music)

Davidson County · Nashville · Paid admission

Built in 1892 as the Union Gospel Tabernacle by riverboat captain Thomas Ryman — a man converted at a tent revival who then funded a permanent revival hall. The building seated 3,000 for gospel meetings, opera, and political oratory before the Grand Ole Opry moved in for 31 years (1943–1974). The pew seating, original stained glass, and curved gallery give the room a reverence that persists regardless of what's on stage.

It is still an active concert venue and the finest acoustic hall in Nashville. Artists across every genre describe the Ryman as transformative to play. The daytime self-guided tour includes the stage and the preserved backstage corridor where country legends changed before shows.

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Native American Sacred Sites

Tennessee's river valleys and plateau were inhabited by successive Native American cultures for at least 12,000 years. Several major ceremonial centers survive.

Pinson Mounds State Archaeological Park Worth the detour

Pinson Mounds State Archaeological Park

Madison County · Jackson · Free

A 400-acre complex of 17 Native American earthen mounds built during the Middle Woodland period (200 BC – 500 AD). Sauls Mound, the central structure, stands 72 feet — the second-tallest prehistoric earthwork in North America after Monks Mound in Illinois. The complex's purpose was ceremonial and funerary; no village or residential area has been identified.

A free museum on-site interprets the builders, whom archaeologists identify as part of the Hopewell cultural tradition. 6 miles of walking trails connect the mound complex. Located just south of Jackson, 85 miles east of Memphis.

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Old Stone Fort State Archaeological Park Worth the detour

Old Stone Fort State Archaeological Park

Coffee County · Manchester · Free

An enclosure of stone and earthen walls built at the confluence of the Duck and Little Duck rivers over a period of 500 years (100 BC – 400 AD) by Native American builders of unknown cultural affiliation. The site covers 50 acres; the walls — up to 6 feet high and 4 feet wide — define a ceremonial precinct used for over four centuries. Early European settlers mistook the structure for a fort, giving it its misleading name.

The park includes a waterfall and 2-mile walking loop around the perimeter. Free museum on-site. Located in Manchester, 60 miles southeast of Nashville, easily combined with a drive through the Tennessee Walking Horse country.

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Moccasin Bend National Archaeological District Worth the detour

Moccasin Bend National Archaeological District

Hamilton County · Chattanooga · Free

A river bend on the Tennessee River below Lookout Mountain with documented human occupation spanning 10,000 years — Paleo-Indian, Archaic, Woodland, Mississippian, and Cherokee periods are all represented in the archaeological record. The site is a unit of Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park.

Moccasin Bend served as the primary Cherokee settlement in the Chattanooga area before the Trail of Tears. The landscape itself — the river bend, the mountain above, the floodplain — helps explain why the location was continuously inhabited across so many cultures.

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Sycamore Shoals State Historic Area Worth the detour

Sycamore Shoals State Historic Area

Carter County · Elizabethton · Free

The site of the first permanent American settlement outside the original 13 colonies (1772) and the staging ground where 1,000 Overmountain Men assembled in 1780 to march to King's Mountain, where they defeated a British force and changed the course of the Revolutionary War. The Cherokee called this stretch of the Watauga River the "Long Island of the Holston" — a sacred gathering place for generations before European settlement.

A reconstructed fort and interpretive center are free. Sycamore Shoals carries the weight of both the Cherokee world it displaced and the American frontier tradition it inaugurated — an unusually layered historic site.

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East Tennessee

Historic Jonesborough (Tennessee's Oldest Town) Worth the detour

Historic Jonesborough (Tennessee's Oldest Town)

Washington County · Jonesborough · Free

Founded in 1779 on the Holston River frontier, Jonesborough predates Tennessee statehood by 17 years and briefly served as the capital of the State of Franklin (1784–1788) — an independent republic that formed between the Revolutionary War and Tennessee's formal admission to the Union. The main street preserves a continuous run of 18th and 19th-century buildings — courthouse, tavern, and commercial facades — largely unaltered from the frontier era.

Andrew Jackson tried his first legal cases here. The National Storytelling Festival, held every October, draws 10,000 people to Jonesborough's streets for the oldest and most prominent storytelling event in the US. Free to walk; the History Museum charges admission.

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Meriwether Lewis Monument (Natchez Trace) Worth the detour

Meriwether Lewis Monument (Natchez Trace)

Lewis County · Hohenwald · Free

The gravesite and monument of Meriwether Lewis — co-leader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition — on the Natchez Trace Parkway in Lewis County, named for him. Lewis died here in 1809 at Grinder's Inn under disputed circumstances: officially ruled a suicide, though historians have argued for murder. A broken column monument, symbolizing a life cut short, marks the grave.

The site is a unit of the Natchez Trace Parkway National Scenic Byway — free to visit, maintained by the National Park Service. The Trace itself runs 444 miles from Nashville to Natchez, Mississippi — a National Scenic Byway with no commercial development or billboards along its length.

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Planning Notes

Natchez Trace connection: Three of these sites sit on or near the Natchez Trace Parkway: the Meriwether Lewis monument, Old Stone Fort (nearby), and the general Middle Tennessee corridor. The Trace is a National Scenic Byway with no commercial development — driving it is itself a meditative experience.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the Ryman Auditorium called the Mother Church of Country Music?

The Ryman was built in 1892 as the Union Gospel Tabernacle, a non-denominational revival hall, by riverboat captain Thomas Ryman after he was converted at a Sam Jones revival. It hosted religious revivals, political speeches, and opera before the Grand Ole Opry made it home in 1943. The pew seating, stained-glass windows, and acoustic design rooted in worship architecture give it a reverence unusual for a concert hall — artists and audiences both describe performing and listening there as spiritual.

What are the Native American sacred sites in Tennessee?

Pinson Mounds in Madison County is a 400-acre Middle Woodland period site with 17 burial and ceremonial mounds, including Sauls Mound at 72 feet — the second-tallest prehistoric earthwork in North America. Old Stone Fort in Coffee County is a 2,000-year-old ceremonial enclosure built over 500 years by unknown Native American builders. Moccasin Bend in Chattanooga has 10,000 years of continuous human occupation. Red Clay in Bradley County held the last Cherokee National Council before the Trail of Tears.

What is Historic Jonesborough, Tennessee?

Jonesborough, founded in 1779, is the oldest town in Tennessee and one of the oldest in the trans-Appalachian frontier. It briefly served as the capital of the State of Franklin (1784–1788), an independent republic that existed between the Revolutionary War and Tennessee's statehood. The main street preserves an extraordinary concentration of 18th and 19th-century buildings. Andrew Jackson practiced law here before moving to Nashville.

What is Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis?

Elmwood Cemetery, established in 1852, is Memphis's oldest active cemetery — 80 acres with over 75,000 burials, Victorian and Gothic Revival funerary monuments, and mature hardwood trees. It holds the graves of yellow fever epidemic victims from 1878 (when 5,000 Memphians died in 90 days), Civil War soldiers, and notable Tennesseans. Walking tours are offered regularly.

USA Travel Planner — Google Sheets

One purchase. Every US state. Forever.

A pre-filled travel dashboard for every US state — we are actively building them out.

  • 75+ curated attractions — pre-researched for you
  • Built-in budget tracker (countdown, expenses, remaining)
  • Step-by-step planning tabs
  • Buy once — get all future states free as they launch