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- Q7295969 subject Q8515468.
- Q7295969 subject Q8516211.
- Q7295969 subject Q8525331.
- Q7295969 subject Q8526446.
- Q7295969 subject Q8650349.
- Q7295969 subject Q8664099.
- Q7295969 abstract "Rattle and Snap is a Greek Revival mansion near Columbia, Tennessee.It was built in 1845 by George W. Polk, a relative of president James K. Polk and the son of William Polk. William was a North Carolina native who was appointed surveyor-general of the Middle District of Tennessee in 1784. The plantation originally stood on 5,648 acres.Rattle and Snap was built from slave labor and is the largest, most extravagant mansion in Maury County, Tennessee. The mansion is made of limestone and brick, surrounded by ten columns on the exterior, and standing two and a half stories tall. George Polk and his family lived in this mansion for fifteen years. During the American Civil War, most plantations and mansions in the south, were either looted or burned by Union soldiers. Rattle and Snap survived. At the end of the war the Polk family went bankrupt and could not afford the land or mansion, and Rattle and Snap was sold to Joseph John Granbery in 1867. The Granberys lived in the mansion for over fifty years.It is said to have been given its name from the fact that the land on which it was built was won from the Governor of North Carolina in a game of chance called 'Rattle and Snap'.It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1971.It is located on Andrew Jackson Highway, Tennessee State Route 243, near Columbia.".
- Q7295969 added "1971-11-11".
- Q7295969 architecturalStyle Q1513688.
- Q7295969 nearestCity Q5675279.
- Q7295969 nrhpReferenceNumber "71000825".
- Q7295969 thumbnail Rattle_and_Snap,_Columbia_(Maury_County,_Tennessee).jpg?width=300.
- Q7295969 wikiPageExternalLink rattle-snap-plantation-nashville-historic-homes.
- Q7295969 wikiPageExternalLink www.rattleandsnapplantation.com.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q11891.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q1454.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q1513688.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q5675279.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q624232.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q7201620.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q7201627.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8515468.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8516211.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8525331.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8526446.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8650349.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8664099.
- Q7295969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8676.
- Q7295969 yearOfConstruction "1845".
- Q7295969 added "1971-11-11".
- Q7295969 architecture Q1513688.
- Q7295969 built "1845".
- Q7295969 name "Rattle and Snap".
- Q7295969 nearestCity Q5675279.
- Q7295969 refnum "71000825".
- Q7295969 type Place.
- Q7295969 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q7295969 type Building.
- Q7295969 type Location.
- Q7295969 type Place.
- Q7295969 type Thing.
- Q7295969 type Q41176.
- Q7295969 comment "Rattle and Snap is a Greek Revival mansion near Columbia, Tennessee.It was built in 1845 by George W. Polk, a relative of president James K. Polk and the son of William Polk. William was a North Carolina native who was appointed surveyor-general of the Middle District of Tennessee in 1784. The plantation originally stood on 5,648 acres.Rattle and Snap was built from slave labor and is the largest, most extravagant mansion in Maury County, Tennessee.".
- Q7295969 label "Rattle and Snap".
- Q7295969 depiction Rattle_and_Snap,_Columbia_(Maury_County,_Tennessee).jpg.
- Q7295969 name "Rattle and Snap".