Demonstrators sitting at the McLellan’s lunch counter, 1960. Photograph courtesy of the Nashville Public Library.

Howard Gentry

Peace Summit: A Reflection on the Past, A Call to Action

Howard Gentry

Howard Gentry

Criminal Court Clerk of Davidson County 

Howard Gentry serves the Metropolitan Government of Nashville as the Criminal Court Clerk of Davidson County in the Twentieth Judicial District. In this capacity, his office is responsible for performing the clerical duties (hard copy and electronic forms) for the operation of the General Sessions and State Trial Criminal Courts.

He was appointed Criminal Court Clerk in 2011 and reelected, without opposition, in 2012. Under his administration, an employee policy handbook was instituted; the office website was redesigned for greater public-at-large access to criminal records (case information, dockets and reporting, map crime viewing and arrest data); and an assertive outreach was established to help individuals who qualify for expunged cases, driver license reinstatements as well as voter restorations. (These efforts have resulted with close to 30,000 expungements annually, driver license reinstatements by the thousands, and since 2019, over 4,000 voter rights restored.)

A Nashville native, Gentry was elected three times to countywide public office. He was a Metro Council member-at-large before being elected Metro Nashville-Davidson County’s first African American vice mayor. He was re-elected in 2003. In 2007, Gentry was a candidate for Mayor and narrowly missed the run-off by less than 300 votes. He received his B.S. and master’s degrees in education from Tennessee State University.