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Elks Athletic Club, also known as YWCA, in Louisville, Kentucky, is an eight-story building that was built in 1924. It was designed by Joseph & Joseph in Classical Revival style. It was sold and adapted into use as a hotel four years after it was built.
Early Commercial [1] 38: Elks Lodge No. 841: 1904 built 3250 Richmond Ave Staten Island, New York: old English architecture [1] 39: Elks Lodge No. 878: 1924 built 2014 NRHP-listed 82-10 Queens Boulevard Queens, New York: Italian Renaissance Revival architecture [1] 40: Elks Club (East Liverpool, Ohio) 1916 built 1985 NRHP-listed 139 W. Fifth St.
San Fernando CA Elks Lodge No. 1539 Actor Jack Elam: Ashland OR Lodge No. 944 Actor Rich Hall: Livingston MT Lodge No. 246 Comedian, writer, documentary maker, and musician Bill Hughes: Jazz trombonist and bandleader Al Jolson: New York Elks Lodge No. 1 Singer, actor, and vaudevillian: Martha MacCallum: Summit NJ Elks Lodge No. 1246
A new restaurant from one of the founders of West Sixth Brewery is coming to the booming Jefferson Street corridor.. On Thursday, the Urban County Planning Commission voted unanimously to approve ...
Kentucky Route 329 Bypass (KY 329 Bypass) is a 2.062-mile (3.318 km) [1] long bypass route of KY 329 around the northern edge of Crestwood. The western terminus of the route is at KY 329 roughly 0.5 miles (0.80 km) south of where KY 329 meets I-71. The bypass heads east as four-lane undivided Veterans Memorial Parkway, passing through fields.
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).
Pleasure Ridge Park (PRP) is a former census-designated place (CDP) in southwest Jefferson County, Kentucky, United States.The population was 26,212 at the 2010 census. In 2003, the area was annexed to the city of Louisville due to a merger between the city and Jefferson County's unincorporated communities.
Some development did occur in the area when the Louisville-Westport Pike (later renamed River Road) was built through it. Harrod's Tavern was an early stopping point for boats headed downstream, and the building lives on, heavily rebuilt, as the Captain's Quarters bar and restaurant. [1] The area is named for Harrods Creek, one of two local creeks.