I’m pleased to announce the publication of my latest article, “Tailor, Saloon Keeper, Grocer: Nashville Native John ‘Oly’ Eckhardt (b. 1860).” It appears in the Winter edition of the Tennessee Genealogical Society’s Ansearchin’ News.
Starting with a photograph of the dapper Oly Eckhardt, this biographical sketch tells the story of a Nashville resident whose ninety-year life spanned remarkable change—from his childhood during the Civil War through the Great Depression and World War II. Eckhardt carved out a place in Nashville’s merchant class, making three career transitions that reflected the economic shifts of his era.
The research follows Oly from his early years as a tailor learning the family trade, through his time running the Eckhardt Bros. saloon (complete with its colorful incidents), to his final fifty years as a neighborhood grocer. His story illuminates the experience of German immigrant families in nineteenth-century Nashville and demonstrates how one man adapted to changing times—including the arrival of Prohibition—to maintain his business and community standing.
I hope you enjoy reading about this long-time Nashville resident.
FEATURED IMAGE: Copilot AI, “Pen and Ink Sketch of Vintage Bar,” created 9 December 2025 from “Customers and Bartender at Saloon – DPLA – ce85ad814e1ec02a367f379e549a90ce (page 1).jpg,” Wikimedia.org (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Customers_and_Bartender_at_Saloon_-DPLA–ce85ad814e1ec02a367f379e549a90ce(page_1).jpg).

