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Louisville Anzeiger: Louisville 1849 [19] 1938 German-language Louisville Herald: Louisville 1869 [19] Merged with Louisville Post in 1925 to form Herald-Post: Louisville Herald-Post: Louisville 1925 1936 Louisville Times: Louisville 1884 [102] 1987 [103] The Sentinel: Radcliff: 1961 [104] 2022 [105] The Whitesville Independent Press: 1989 1991 ...
Nearly 140 years of hyperlocal coverage of the Louisville area ended this week with the closing of the Louisville Herald.
The Herald-Post was created in 1925 from the merging of the old Louisville Herald and Louisville Post newspapers. Louisville financier James Buckner Brown (1872–1940) [1] sought to operate the paper as a counter to the positions of the Bingham newspapers the Louisville Times and the Courier-Journal.
The barn is one of the three original Blackacre buildings. Built in 1790, the double-crib Appalachian barn was made out of large poplar boards harvested from the Blackacre property. Today the barn displays the pre-industrial farm tools that would have been used at Blackacre. The stone cottage is the second original 1790 building.
As family farms face historic headwinds, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs can bring stability to farms and nutrition to communities.
It’s Kentucky Derby Week, which means all eyes will be on Louisville leading up to Saturday’s Run for the Roses. But a Herald-Leader analysis of recent spending measures approved by the ...
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).
The Louisville Journal was an organ of the Whig Party and was founded and edited by George D. Prentice, a New Englander who initially came to Kentucky to write a biography of Henry Clay. [5] Prentice edited the Journal for more than 40 years. In 1844, another newspaper, the Louisville Morning Courier, was founded in Louisville by Walter Newman ...