Nathaniel A. McNairy (March 17, 1779 – September 7, 1851) was a prominent early settler of Nashville, Tennessee, United States.[1] He was a lawyer, his brother John McNairy was a federal judge, and another brother Boyd McNairy was a doctor.[3] In 1806 he was reportedly party to what the Papers of Andrew Jackson described as an "aborted duel" with Andrew Jackson. John Brahan wrote to John Overton about the conflict, "Now Coffee comes on the ground; it is said that he attacked McNary at Winns Tavern with a loaded whip, that in the scuffle Mr McNairy got the whip from Mr. Coffee: at which time Mr. Coffee drew a Pistol...Yesterday there was a Gentleman & Lady at Mr. [Thomas Norris] Clarks, who lives within five miles of Nashville, they told Mr. Clark that Mr. Coffee & McMcNairy had met & fought a day or two before they left Nashville, & that Mr. Coffee had recived a slight wound."[4]
Like his neighbors Joseph Erwin and Andrew Jackson, McNairy was a seasonal slave trader, traveling south to the Natchez District on at least one occasion and advertising for sale 29 slaves, one keelboat, and one gigg in 1808.[5]
One of series of "Nashville Memories" articles published in the Nashville Banner in 1884–85 stated, "In early times what were called good, old, blue stocking Presbyterians held sway. Dancing, theatre-going, and such like entertainments were not countenanced by them. Mr. Nathaniel McNairy gave the lot on which the first church was built. He gave it with the proviso that it should always be used as a church lot. Some years after the erection of the church the tinners, in soldering in some ornament about the tower, it is thought, were careless with the furnace they bad. At any rate, the church was burned [and] another was built."[6] According to the centennial history of Nashville's First Presbyterian Church, "On March 1, 1806, N. A. McNairy met Gen. John Coffee on the field of honor. The meeting grew out of the Jackson–Dickinson controversy, which ended in a duel fatal to Dickinson. The writer is of the opinion that this was the same N. A. McNairy who was elected an elder in 1824 and continued as such until his death, September 7, 1851."[7] In 1852, there were 50 "valuable negroes" to be sold at auction "in families" from a "great sale of negroes, cattle, mules" from McNairy's plantation.[8]