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Women's Civil War Museum: Opened in 1999, it is the only museum that looks into the role of women during the American Civil War. It is in the historic (c1840) Wright Talbott House. Hal Moore Military Museum: Honors those who came from the middle of the United States who fought for freedom from the first Revolutionary War to Operation Desert Storm.
The exhibits at Bardstown Historical Museum include Native American and American Civil War clothing, weapons and artifacts, items from St. Joseph Preparatory School, Stephen Foster memorabilia, an exhibit about Trappist monks, and other local historic cultural items, documents and photographs. [1]
The Civil War Museum in Bardstown is the fourth-largest Civil War museum in the United States. [21] Other notable sites include: Bardstown Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Bardstown Historical Museum. Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey, which celebrates Bardstown's history in the production of whiskey.
Civil War Museum (Bardstown) N. Nelson County High School (Kentucky) O. Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History; T. Thomas Nelson High School This page was last edited ...
The Bardstown Historic District, comprising the center of Bardstown, Kentucky, is a registered historic district on the National Register of Historic Places.Prominent architecture located within the district include the Cobblestone Path, Nelson County Jail, Old L & N Station, Old Talbott Tavern, and Spalding Hall, all individually on the National Register, and the historic old Nelson County ...
The Cobblestone Path is a historic pathway along the east side of the Bardstown Historic District of Bardstown, Kentucky, passing by eight acres of land. [2] Once longer, due to various construction it now remains between Flaget Avenue and Broadway, directly across from the Bardstown Civil War Museum. Because it was always considered part of ...
The Confederate Monument of Bardstown, in Bardstown, Kentucky [2] was erected in 1903 in the Bardstown St. Joseph's Cemetery to honor the sacrifice of 67 Confederate States Army soldiers, who died during the American Civil War. Some 17 of the soldiers are still unknown.
The college was closed during the American Civil War and the building briefly served as a hospital for Union soldiers. [2] It served as St. Joseph's Preparatory School from about 1911 until 1968. [2] The building houses the Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History and the Bardstown Historical Museum.