Irish Hill

Irish Hill

Irish Hill

Irish Hill

Originally known as Billy Goat Hill, Irish Hill acquired its name because it’s on a ridge above the Ohio River flood plain, and was settled by Irish Catholics in the mid-1800s, although many German Catholics settled there as well.

During the 1937 flood of the water reached the bottom of the hill and a “pontoon bridge” was located at Baxter Ave. at Lexington Road to help people escape downtown for higher ground. 20,000 people passed through the neighborhood and relocated in the Highlands and Crescent Hill.

From the 1850s until it was demolished in 1968, the City Workhouse, which housed criminals convicted of minor crimes, was located at Lexington and Payne Streets, at what is now Breslin Park, which is across from what is now Distillery Commons, which was originally the Old Kentucky Distillery, which was the largest distillery in the world in its day.

The historic St. Aloysius Catholic Church and School (c. 1890-1996), was the cornerstone for many generations of families of Irish Hill, until the Archdiocese closed the school and church, against the objections of the parishioners and neighbors.

Early neighborhood businesses were the Beargrass Slaughter House, Doll Lumber, Roppel’s Grocery, Stottmann’s Cafe, Otte’s Grocery, Leibert Farm and Seitz’s Drugstore.

In addition to the shotgun houses, there are a few larger historic houses in the area, including the Valentine Schneikert house, and the Nicholas Finzer house, built around 1869. Other historic sites are the St. Aloysius church, and the old Rogers Street fire house (c. 1893 – 1977), all on the National Register of Historic Places.

The neighborhood is bounded by Baxter Ave. to the west, Lexington Rd. to the north, the middle fork of Beargrass Creek, and I-64 to the east. Cave Hill Cemetery is directly south.

www.irishhillneighbors.org

advertisment

GALLERY

Thomas Edison House

Thomas Edison House

Thomas Edison House

Thomas Edison House

Just after the Civil War, a 19-year old Thomas Edison is thought to have rented a room in this building during part of the 1 1/2 years he worked in Louisville as a telegrapher for Western Union on Main St. This small brick duplex was built in the 1850s, and is one of the few remaining shotgun duplexes in the area. Many of Edison’s inventions, including cylinder and disc phonographs, incandescent bulbs and motion picture artifacts are on exhibit.

Located in the Butchertown Preservation District neighborhood, just east of downtown and just north of Main St.

Museum is open for guided tours Tuesday – Saturday from 10 am – 2 pm.
$5/adults; $4/seniors 60+; $3/students; children 5- free
729 E. Washington St.,
502-585-5247

www.historichomes.org/thomas-edison-house

advertisment

GALLERY

Conrad-Caldwell House Museum

Conrad-Caldwell House Museum

Conrad-Caldwell House Museum

Conrad-Caldwell House Museum

Finest example of Richardsonian Romanesque architecture in Louisville, built in 1893 on St. James Court in the Old Louisville neighborhood, which features the largest collection of Victorian homes in the U.S.

“Conrad’s Castle” featured all the latest innovations of its day, including interior plumbing and electric lighting. This massive Bedford, Indiana limestone home, is covered with gargoyles, archways, and elaborate stone designs. The interior features beautiful woodwork, parquet floors and magnificent stained glass windows, making it one of the most stunning homes in Old Louisville.

The museum’s interior is decorated in the Edwardian Age style, housing a massive collection of period items including many original pieces while showing-off the abundant lifestyles of the prominent businessmen and entrepreneurs who once lived in the neighborhood.

The only home in Old Louisville open for tours.

1.5 miles south of downtown Louisville.

Museum is open for tours.
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday & Sunday
1 & 3 PM
Saturday
11 AM, 1 & 3 PM
Twilight Tours
April – September every 3rd Thursday
5 PM & 7 PM
$10, seniors $7, students $5

www.conrad-caldwell.org

advertisment

GALLERY

Blackacre

Blackacre

Blackacre

Renaissance Revival style

Rural land has all but disappeared in Jefferson County, and with it, our only ties to the history of Kentucky’s earliest settlements.

The Blackacre State Nature Preserve and Historic Homestead preserves the precious traces to our past, that have been all but erased in Louisville’s expansion and development of our rural land.

This rural historic district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. The pattern of fields, woods, and streams at Blackacre remains much the same as it was well over 200 years ago.

In the 1790s, Moses Tyler built the double-crib Appalachia style barn that still stands today.
Moses deeded his homestead to his son Presley, and in 1844, Presley built the two-story brick house, now known as the “Presley Tyler 1844 Farmhouse”. The house was situated on the old Mann’s Lick Rd. that led to the prominent salt works in the area. By 1879 Tucker Station Rd., named for the nearby railroad stop, had replaced the original road.

The farm was sold in 1879, and again in 1885, and again, and again, and again in 1939, when William and Elsie Woodward bought it for a summer residence, had plumbing and electricity installed, and named the farm ‘Land O’Skye’. Their friends, Jefferson Circuit Court Judge Macauley and Emilie Smith, purchased the farm in 1950, and renamed it “Blackacre”.

In the face of the encroaching suburban development, the Smiths wanted to preserve their land in its idyllic state, so that future generations might see and learn about farm life. In 1979 they donated their 170 acre parcel to the Kentucky State Nature Preserves Commission, while creating “The Blackacre Conservancy”, for the purpose of “preserving the land for passive recreation and interpretive nature education”. It was Kentucky’s first state nature preserve.

The Smith family’s relationship to the Blackacre Conservancy continues today, several additional properties surrounding Blackacre’s original 170 acres have been purchased, to provide a buffer against development.

www.blackacreconservancy.org

advertisment

GALLERY

Filson Historical Society

Filson Historical Society

Filson Historical Society

The Filson Historical Society

The finest example of Parisian Beaux Arts architecture in Louisville, now the home of Kentucky’s oldest privately supported historical society, founded in 1884, collecting and preserving Kentucky and the Ohio Valley region’s significant stories.

Designed by William J. Dodd, who also designed the Seelbach Hotel, began in 1901 and was completed in 1905. The interior features the use of wood and damask paneling along with sculpted marble and bronze mantelpieces. The second floor features a set of Tiffany lamps in the form of dragonflies.

Around the turn of the century in Louisville, when the average mansion cost about ten thousand dollars this home was considered one of the most expensive, at about one hundred thousand dollars. Ferguson was able to build his lavish residence because he was a successful entrepreneur and the founder of the Kentucky Refining Company. Ferguson sold the mansion in 1924 to the Pearson Funeral Home. The Pearsons kept the mansion in its original condition, with the exception of the removal of the grand staircase. In 1984 The Filson Club purchased the mansion at auction along with some of its original furnishings and décor.

The attached Owsley Brown II History Center opened in the Fall 2016.

Due to campus expansion, as of summer 2016, the Ferguson Mansion is currently not open for tours.

Research hours remain 9 am – 5 pm, Monday – Friday.

www.filsonhistorical.org

advertisment

GALLERY