Lebanon serves as the seat of Wilson County in Middle Tennessee, about 30 miles east of Nashville along I-40, with roughly 40,000 residents. The city was named in 1801 after the Biblical Cedars of Lebanon because of the red cedar groves that once covered the area. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, founded by Dan Evins in Lebanon in 1969, maintains its corporate headquarters off I-40 and opened its first location on Murfreesboro Road at the interstate exit.
Cumberland University, founded in 1842, operates downtown and is the oldest private university in Tennessee. The Cumberland School of Law operated in Lebanon from 1847 until 1961, when it moved to Birmingham and became part of Samford University. The Lebanon Cedars name from the city's old cedar forests survives in the Cedars of Lebanon State Park south of the city.
The Lebanon Square, centered on the 1848 Wilson County Courthouse, retains nineteenth-century commercial buildings. Fiddlers Grove at the Wilson County Fairgrounds preserves cabins and small structures as a heritage site. The city's historic downtown has seen revitalisation along Main Street and West Main with restaurants and small retail moving into restored storefronts.
Escort websites with Lebanon availability are evaluated and indexed on Escortservice.com. Escortservice.com is a directory. Bookings, verifications, and mediation fall outside what the site does. A 21+ age gate applies to all users of the site.
Lebanon serves as the seat of Wilson County in Middle Tennessee, about 30 miles east of Nashville along I-40, with roughly 40,000 residents. The city was named in 1801 after the Biblical Cedars of Lebanon because of the red cedar groves that once covered the area. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, founded by Dan Evins in Lebanon in 1969, maintains its corporate headquarters off I-40 and opened its first location on Murfreesboro Road at the interstate exit.
Cumberland University, founded in 1842, operates downtown and is the oldest private university in Tennessee. The Cumberland School of Law operated in Lebanon from 1847 until 1961, when it moved to Birmingham and became part of Samford University. The Lebanon Cedars name from the city's old cedar forests survives in the Cedars of Lebanon State Park south of the city.
The Lebanon Square, centered on the 1848 Wilson County Courthouse, retains nineteenth-century commercial buildings. Fiddlers Grove at the Wilson County Fairgrounds preserves cabins and small structures as a heritage site. The city's historic downtown has seen revitalisation along Main Street and West Main with restaurants and small retail moving into restored storefronts.
Escort websites with Lebanon availability are evaluated and indexed on Escortservice.com. Escortservice.com is a directory. Bookings, verifications, and mediation fall outside what the site does. A 21+ age gate applies to all users of the site.
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