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Year-round. Constitution Square Historic Site is a 3-acre (0.012 km 2) park and open-air museum in Danville, Kentucky. From 1937 to 2012, it was a part of the Kentucky state park system and operated by the Kentucky Department of Parks. When dedicated in 1942, it was known as John G. Weisiger Memorial State Park, honoring the brother of Emma ...
Warrenwood Manor. Warrenwood Manor is a historic property located in Danville, Kentucky, USA. The manor was built in 1856 by Samuel and John Fourche Warren, sons of the Revolutionary War veteran and legislator William Warren. [1] The Warren family moved several times before finally locating upon the present site.
There are 99 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county, including 3 that are National Historic Landmarks. This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted September 13, 2024.[2] Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap.
Danville is located in eastern Boyle County. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 15.9 square miles (41.2 km 2), of which 15.8 square miles (41.0 km 2) is land and 0.077 square miles (0.2 km 2), or 0.58%, is water. [ 23 ] Danville, Kentucky Water Tower viewed from the north.
Scott Pruitt: b. 1968: Oklahoma Attorney General: James E. Rogers Jr. 1947–2018: President and CEO of Duke Energy: Joe Rue: 1898–1984: Major League Baseball umpire Willis Russell: 1803–1852: Emancipated slave of Revolutionary War veteran Robert Craddock, founder of first school in Danville for African-American children: Alfred Ryors: 1812 ...
July 17, 1997. The Confederate Monument in Danville, originally located between Centre College and the First Presbyterian Church at the corner of Main and College Streets in Danville, Kentucky, was a monument dedicated to the Confederate States of America that is on the National Register of Historic Places. The monument was dedicated in 1910 by ...
March 31, 1986. East Main Street Historic District in Danville, Kentucky is a historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. [1] [2] The district includes part or all of an area originally called "Otter's Addition". The Reid House is one example of Queen Anne architecture in the district, which was ...
Waveland is the ancestral home of the Green family. It was built between 1797 and 1800 by Willis Green. The Green lore, as related around Danville, in the Southern Bluegrass region of Kentucky, begins with Willis and Sarah Reed Green, the parents of John Green and grandparents of Thomas Marshall Green, whose direct descendants include Adlai ...