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Several in Louisville were located along Bardstown Road and were popular sources of entertainment in the Highlands for decades. Baxter (later called the Airway). 1055 Bardstown Road. [6] Housed The Brycc House in the late 1990s, now home to a Buffalo Wild Wings; The Cherokee. 1591 Bardstown Road. Now the site of Bombay International Grocery
The Humming Bird was a named train of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad (L&N). The train, inaugurated in 1946, originally ran from Cincinnati, Ohio, to New Orleans, Louisiana, via Louisville, Nashville, Birmingham, Montgomery and Mobile and later via a connection at Bowling Green, Kentucky, to Memphis, Tennessee.
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).
About 1,000 graves can reasonably fit on a single acre, Jennings explained. Yet, more than 130,000 people are believed to have been buried within the 29 acres once operated by Louisville Crematory ...
Louisville Metro Police arrested Richie Raymont Williams, 37, on Thursday in connection with the death of 29-year-old Montay Wade in the Baxter Avenue shooting. He faces charges of homicide and ...
National Products, a small factory at the corner of Breckinridge Street and Baxter Avenue, produces more disco balls than any other factory in the world. The stretch of Baxter Avenue between Highland Avenue and Broadway is known as one of Louisville's most popular destinations with its mix of bars, restaurants, galleries and shops.
900 Baxter Ave. Construction is still underway at the Myriad Hotel in Louisville's Original Highlands neighborhood. The hotel and Paseo restaurant are at the former disco ball factory site at 900 ...
Joseph Henry Bunce was born on December 15, 1823, in New York. [1] He was a steamboat captain until the mid-1860s, when he founded a wholesale grocery firm. Typical of Louisville steamboat captains, he lived with his family in the Portland district.