Day 1: Friday, June 4, 1993
We went to the Festival of Lights in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. We met up with some of my husband's co-workers, Nelson Richardson Junior, Phillip Ritter, and their wives.
We stayed at The Hermitage Hotel in Downtown Nashville, 231 6th Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219, (615) 244-3121, which overlooked the Festival of Lights on Church Street.
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| City of Lights Festival |
Performing that weekend was Alison Krauss with her band Union Station.
When Alison came on stage to sing a couple of songs, the stage was almost blown away by a thunderstorm.
Information about Alison Krauss: I found on the internet:
"This was the year that she joined the Grand Ole Opry. She also signed with an independent record label, Rounder Records. Performing at the East end of the park is Martina McBride."
We walk down Printer's Alley, located between Third and Fourth Avenues, stretching from Union to Church Streets. The Alley began as the location of many of Nashville's first Publishing and printing companies before the turn of the century.
Without the Country Music influences that started in the 1930s, Nashville could not have possibly been known as the Printing Capitol of the World.
Nashville's first entertainment hotspot has long gone, but the World Famous Printers Alley remains, providing a Flair of Bourbon Street for those in search of Wine, Women, and Song.
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| Printers Alley |
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| Printers Alley |
I took several pictures of Printer's Alley, the Capitol Building, and Church Buildings.
I was wearing a cute white embroidered short set that I bought in Cancun, Mexico.
For dinner, we had plans to eat at the Old Spaghetti Factory, but it was booked solid.
History of the Spaghetti Factory: I found on the internet:
The Old Spaghetti Factory is a historic Victorian structure filled with period antiques.
Classy enough for a business lunch and casual enough for a family dinner. Long Island iced tea flows like water from the romantic bar with love seats and intimate seating for couples. Families can have an entire pasta dinner with salad and bread for about $8.00 per person. Altogether, it is a formula for success even in the touristy climate of Second Avenue. "
Information about The Music Queen:
"The Music City Queen was a dinner cruise that we had planned to take, but minors could not go aboard. It holds about 250 passengers. The Music City Queen offers exciting and unusual cruises on the beautiful Cumberland River departing from the Nashville Old Steamboat Dock (four blocks from the downtown Convention Center). Nashville is Tennessee's State Capital. "
To take the dinner cruise, you have to be twenty-one, and my daughter was only sixteen.
We shopped at the mall and at the downtown square.
"
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| Shopping |
Day 2: Saturday, June 5, 1993
We went to the Ryman Auditorium and Museum, which is located at 116 Fifth Ave. North, which was the home of the Grand Ole Opry from 1943 until March 16, 1974.
My daughter and I walked upon the stage, where many a Grand Ole Opry Star once stood and belted out singing.
The seats were empty, but that was okay because we were stars in our own right.
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| Singing at the Grand Ole Opry |
We stopped in at Music Valley Village where we saw "The Car Museum" Featuring cars of country music stars including Elvis' Cadillac, Marty Robbins' limo, Louise Mandrell's MG, Webb Pierce's "Silver Dollar" car, Roy Acuff's last touring car, Barbara Mandrell's Rolls Royce, Hank Williams Jr.'s Cadillac and many more - 45 cars in all!
Conway will be greatly missed, and he will live on in his music.





