Puneet Varma (Editor)

Savage House (Nashville, Tennessee)

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Built
  
1850 (1850)

Opened
  
1850

Architectural style
  
Italianate architecture

NRHP Reference #
  
83003029

Area
  
800 m²

Added to NRHP
  
11 January 1983

Savage House (Nashville, Tennessee)

Location
  
167 8th Ave., N., Nashville, Tennessee

The Savage House is a historic three-storey townhouse in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.

Contents

History

The townhouse was built in the 1850s, prior to the American Civil War, and designed in the Italianate architectural style. In 1859, the house was acquired by Mary E. Claiborne, who turned it into a boarding house until 1881. Three years later, in 1884, it was acquired by Julius Sax, who rented it to the Standard Club, a Jewish private members' club, in 1891.

It was acquired by Dr. Giles Christopher Savage, an ophtalmologist and professor at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, in 1889. Savage used it as a practice, as did his daughter, Kate Savage Zerfoss, a Tulane University Medical School graduate who also taught at the Vanderbilt University Medical School. Her husband, Dr. Tom Zerfoss, was a physician with the Vanderbilt Student Health Service. Meanwhile, another one of Dr Savage's daughters, Portia Savage Ward, opened an antiques store, which closed down in 1980.

The building stands next to the Frost Building, another historic building listed on the NRHP.

Architectural significance

It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since January 11, 1983.

References

Savage House (Nashville, Tennessee) Wikipedia