Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The table below includes sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in Jefferson County, Kentucky except those in the following neighborhoods/districts of Louisville: Anchorage, Downtown, The Highlands, Old Louisville, Portland and the West End (including Algonquin, California, Chickasaw, Park Hill, Parkland, Russell and Shawnee).
The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] Lincliff was recorded in the Courthouse Deed Book 5344, p. JF-531 in 1911 as a property and residence on approximately 29.6 acres on Louisville's River Road [ 7 ] along the Ohio River .
Riverside, The Farnsley–Moremen Landing is a historic 300-acre (120 ha) farm and house in south end Louisville, Kentucky, along the banks of the Ohio River. The house is a red brick I-house with a two-story Greek Revival. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 as Farnsley-Moremen House. [1] [2]
Boxhill, also called Winkworth, is a Georgian Revival house in Glenview, Kentucky, a small city east of Louisville, Kentucky.It was built in 1906 or 1910 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.
In 1910, 61,000 Black people lived outside of Louisville in rural Jefferson County, the Merriwether House nomination states, and they maintained a strong presence there until the 1930s when the ...
Crowds watching Thunder Over Louisville gather in the plaza. Riverfront Plaza/Belvedere is a public area on the Ohio River in Downtown Louisville, Kentucky.Although proposed as early as 1930, the project did not get off the ground until $13.5 million in funding was secured in 1969 to revitalize the downtown area (through which Interstate 64 had just been built).
The Galt House Hotel is a 25-story, 1,310-room hotel in Louisville, Kentucky, established in 1972. It is named for two consecutive nearby historic hotels, both named Galt House, erected in 1835 and 1869; the first was destroyed by fire in 1865, and the second, demolished in 1921. The Galt House is the city's only hotel on the Ohio River.
KFC Yum! Center, a 22,000-seat arena in Downtown Louisville, bounded by River Road and Main, Second, and Third Streets, that is now the home for the University of Louisville men's and women's basketball teams. The arena was the main part of a $450 million project that also included a 975-space parking garage and a floodwall; the arena itself ...