Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of properties and historic districts in Kentucky that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. There are listings in all of Kentucky's 120 counties . The locations of National Register properties and districts (at least for all showing latitude and longitude coordinates below), may be seen in an online map by ...
In 1904, the Kentucky General Assembly chose Frankfort (rather than Lexington or Louisville) as the location for the state capital and appropriated $1 million for the construction of a permanent state capitol building, to be located in southern Frankfort.
Carlisle, Kentucky: 1795 Residence Last Kentucky cabin of Daniel Boone: Richard Masterson House: Carrollton, Kentucky: ca. 1795 Residence Early Methodist services were held in house as well. Oldest two story brick building in state. [3] White Hall: Richmond, Kentucky: 1799 Residence Home of Green Clay and Cassius Marcellus Clay: Bates Log House ...
The building was originally built in 1917 and used as a tobacco warehouse, but it’s been renovated to house the College of Design at the University of Kentucky.
Jacob Eversole Cabin (Perry County) – built ca 1789–1804, the oldest remaining building in Eastern Kentucky [3] James M. Lloyd House (Mount Washington) – Italianate and Late Victorian style residence; built c. 1880; Jesse R. Zeigler House – Only building designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in Kentucky; built 1910
The Protestant Church of Reims, built in 1921–1923 over designs by Charles Letrosne, is an example of flamboyant neo-Gothic architecture. The Hôtel de Ville, erected in the 17th century and enlarged in the 19th, features a pediment with an equestrian statue of Louis XIII (reigned 1610 to 1643). [7]
Bloom was built in 1896, making the large brick school 127 years old. Approximately 550 students attend the three-story school. Its walls are lined with red lockers below student art.
Built in 1850, the State Arsenal contains the Kentucky Military History Museum, [8] which illustrates military history using personal stories and artifacts; the first location of the State Arsenal [9] burnt down in 1836. It is a fortress-like building that overlooks downtown Frankfort.