John B.
Yelp
This site is on the outskirts of Nashville, and as such is surrounded by roads and has freight trains going by so you don't exactly get the rustic aesthetic the place would have had back in the day. Of course, that also makes it convenient from the city. Various ticket options are offered, none of them cheap. Notably, they've split tours into a historic tour of the house and a separate tour on the history of slavery there that is outside the mansion. This epitomizes some trends I've seen with these sort of sites; they've moved to acknowledge some of the more difficult aspects of their history, and they've moved to monetize them by offering more programming. What's notable here I think is that with two different tours, you could theoretically have one group of people that gets the history of the mansion owners and another that gets the history of the people who worked there, and the two groups of tourists would never meet and would never get the other side of the story, which is kind of how a lot of America is these days. I'd prefer they offered a smoother integration. I also note that I arrived and simply asked for a ticket to see what they would do, and was pointed towards the (more popular) mansion tour, despite the other one starting at the same time.
Having said all that, I found the tour experience quick (really less than 45 minutes actually inside the house), but interesting. My tour guide was a local and knew quite a bit of detail, though I stumped him with one question about the OG Listerine bottle in the bathroom. The aesthetics of the mansion and the well-manicured surrounding grounds were certainly worth a gander. I expect that it is an excellent event space, and a game area with mini-golf, cornhole, and such probably sees more use during the summer.
It's an interesting site, but I wasn't sold that the price of a tour was worth the amount of engagement you get.