Nicholas Gotten House, Historic house museum in Bartlett, Tennessee.
The Nicholas Gotten House is a white frame building with a saltbox-style roof that slopes lower on the back side, creating its distinctive asymmetrical profile. Built in 1871, it now serves as the Bartlett Museum displaying local history exhibits and period furnishings.
Nicholas Gotten immigrated from Germany in 1854 and built this house in 1871 following service in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. It later became a police station before being saved and repurposed as a museum.
Today it functions as a local museum where visitors encounter exhibits about the region's past through photographs, documents, and period furnishings. The collections tell stories of the people and families who shaped this part of Tennessee.
The museum operates on limited hours and is best visited when you can confirm opening times in advance. The white building is easy to spot and centrally located in Bartlett for convenient access.
The City of Bartlett leased this former police station to the local historical society for 50 years at just one dollar per year to save it from demolition. This creative arrangement preserved the building and allowed it to become a community museum.
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