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Metro Parks and Rec Board asks for public input on Hadley Park name change Levi Ismail/WTVF and last updated 2021-04-15 17:31:12-04 The proposed name change would honor Kwame Leo Lillard, a local civil rights activist who died in December. The Parks Board will be taking public comments for 30 days Monday, April 19, 2021 and ending at 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 18, 2021. Board officials say they want the public input before making their final decision to change the name of the park. If you want to contribute your opinion, you can do so by sending comments via mail, email, phone or in-person during the May 4, 2021 Parks Board meeting and at a community meeting that is scheduled for 6 p.m., May 5, at Hadley Park Community Center. ....
Group requests Hadley Park be renamed after Nashville civil rights leader Copyright 2018 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. WTVF and last updated 2021-04-06 12:56:15-04 NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) â The Metropolitan Board of Parks and Recreation is meeting via teleconference Tuesday morning to hear a request by the Metropolitan Minority Caucus to rename Hadley Park to âKwame Leo Lillard Park.â The naming committee of the Board of Parks and Recreation will meet at 11:30 a.m., while the agenda meeting begins at noon. It will broadcast through the Metro Nashville Network. Ms. Sharon W. Hurt, president of the Metropolitan Minority Caucus, will be making the formal request to rename the park which opened in 1912. The park which sits on 28th Avenue in North Nashville has been the focus of a name change by several groups for years. ....
Tweet Share The route: From Nashville General Hospital, north on Dr. D.B. Todd Jr. Boulevard, left on Jefferson Street, then left on 28th Avenue to Hadley Park. Cranes: 1 Abandoned scooters: 2 Once a month, reporter and resident historian J.R. Lind will pick an area in the city to examine while accompanied by a photographer. With his column Walk a Mile, he’ll walk a one-mile stretch of that area, exploring the neighborhood’s history and character, its developments, its current homes and businesses, and what makes it a unique part of Nashville. If you have a suggestion for a future Walk a Mile, email [email protected]. ....