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It was built beginning in 1930, to house the expanded offices of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Construction was completed on the U.S. Department of Agriculture Administration Building to the north of Independence Avenue in 1930, but Depression-era agriculture programs demanded far more office space than the main building could provide.
The John R. Barber House, near Springfield, Kentucky, was built in about 1904 or 1905.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. The listing included three contributing buildings and one contributing structure on 9 acres (3.6 ha).
The Walnut Street Historic District is a historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. [1]The 7 acres (2.8 ha) listed area included 36 contributing buildings.
East of Springfield off Kentucky Route 152 37°42′11″N 85°09′52″W / 37.703056°N 85.164444°W / 37.703056; -85.164444 ( Simms-Mattingly Springfield
US 25 / US 42 / US 127 / Main Street / Rose Avenue in Florence: Boone — — Formerly entered Kenton County: KY 1018: 2.2 [22] 3.5 US 42 / US 127 near Florence: KY 18 near Florence Boone — 1987 Some parts now KY 842 [23] KY 1019: 5.209 [12] 8.383 KY 10 near Lenoxburg: KY 8 at Foster: Bracken — — KY 1020: 18.315 [24] [25] 29.475 KY 61 ...
Springfield, noted by filmmakers as Hollywood South, is the site of Kentucky's first and only movie sound stage. The Springfield Bonded Film Complex came about as a part of the burgeoning film industry in Kentucky, ushered in by the state's film tax credit. This tax credit has the distinction as the most generous in the nation. [7]
The St. Catherine of Sienna Convent is a historic convent in Springfield, Kentucky. It was built in 1904-05 and added to the National Register in 1989. [1] It is a three-and-a-half-story brick with stone trim building with pedimented pavilions at center and ends. It was designed by architect Frank Brewer in Classical Revival style. A chapel was ...
The majority of the district's buildings were constructed during Springfield's population boom in the 1860s and its subsequent growth in the latter half of the 19th century. These buildings included hotels, drug stores, groceries, clothing stores, and dry goods stores; some of the stores built in this period are still in operation.