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Pulaski County, Kentucky: 1805 Residence Pulaski 1805 log house is one of oldest extant log houses in Pulaski County [5] Ashland: Lexington, Kentucky: 1811 Residence Home of Kentucky politician Henry Clay: Cane Springs Primitive Baptist Church: College Hill, Kentucky: ca. 1812–13 Church Built during the Great Awakening, oldest church building ...
Christ Church Cathedral is the seat of the Episcopal Diocese of Lexington and is located at 166 Market Street, Lexington, Kentucky. Founded in 1796, Christ Church Cathedral is the oldest Episcopal church in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. [1] Renovations over the years have sought to preserve the original structure, and it remains relatively ...
St. Anthony's Catholic Church (Louisville, Kentucky) St. Augustine Catholic Church (Grayson Springs, Kentucky) St. Boniface's Catholic Church (Louisville, Kentucky) St. Catherine of Sienna Convent; St. Dominic's Catholic Church; St. Elizabeth of Hungary Roman Catholic Church; St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church (Paducah, Kentucky)
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 ...
Members of the Woodland Christian Church are meeting in a smaller room on the lower levels of the building in Lexington, Ky., Friday, December 16, 2022.
The church was the site of a large frontier Christian revival in 1801 hosted by the local Presbyterian congregation that met in the building, with nearly 10,000 people attending. According to the museum "[i]n 1804, a small group of Presbyterian ministers from Kentucky and Ohio... penned and signed a document, "The Last Will and Testament of the ...
This is a complete list of National Historic Landmarks in Kentucky. [1] There are 33 such landmarks in Kentucky; one landmark has had its designation withdrawn. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap
The only person of color buried in the OEBG, is Rev. London Ferrill, a former enslaved man who came to Kentucky in 1811 after the death of his enslaver. In 1821, he was ordained by the Elkhorn Baptist Association. Rev. Ferrell ministered to the black population of Lexington at the First African Church, now the First African Baptist Church.