Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
North American International Livestock Exposition (NAILE) is a livestock show held each November in Louisville, Kentucky and lasts for two weeks. It is billed as the "world's largest all-breed, purebred livestock exposition", with nine major livestock divisions with competitors from the 48 contiguous states.
This week, Miller returns to Louisville to perform multiple shows during the 51st North American International Livestock Exposition at the Kentucky Expo Center, 937 Phillps Lane. If you plan to ...
The World's Championship Horse Show, held at the Kentucky State Fairgrounds in Louisville, Kentucky, in Freedom Hall, is a large horse show that includes the American Saddlebred, Hackney pony, Dutch Harness Horse, and Standardbred breeds.
North American International Livestock Exposition, held in November; Spirit Ball, [21] a Victorian-inspired masquerade ball held annually the Saturday before Halloween at the Conrad-Caldwell House on St. James Court; St. James Court Art Show, one of the top-ranked shows of its kind in the country; held in Old Louisville the first weekend of October
The National Farm Machinery Show is an agricultural machinery exposition held annually in February indoors at the Kentucky Exposition Center in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. [1] [2] Attendance exceeds 300,000 people, with 800 exhibitors in display space of 1,200,000 square feet (110,000 m 2). [3] [4]
The 55th National Street Road Association's Annual Street Rod Nationals will be back in Louisville Aug. 1-4 at the Kentucky Exposition Center.. Louisville has hosted the group for 30 years. This ...
Expected to begin in 2025, renovations at the Kentucky Exposition Center are set to add new buildings to the Louisville facility on Phillips Lane. Kentucky Exposition Center unveils nearly $400M ...
The Southern Exposition was a five-year series of world's fairs held in Louisville, Kentucky, from 1883 to 1887 in what is now Louisville's Old Louisville neighborhood. The exposition, held for 100 days each year on 45 acres (180,000 m 2) immediately south of Central Park, which is now the St. James-Belgravia Historic District, was essentially an industrial and mercantile show.