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The Filson's collections that remained after the sale were transferred to the Filson Vice President Rogers Clark Ballard Thruston library, located in the Columbia Building at Fourth and Main Streets in Louisville, and were housed there until 1929. Thruston and other Filson members recognized the need for a stand-alone building.
The Filson Historical Society, a historical society and research library housed in the Ferguson Mansion, a Beaux-Arts style mansion built in 1906 Fort Duffield , a Civil War fort Fort Knox , including the U.S. Bullion Depository and General George Patton Museum of Leadership ( Bullitt , Hardin and Meade Counties)
Public Library Paper: Supplement (1893) The Romance of the Origin of Louisville (1894) Old Year and New in the Coliseum at Rome (1856) John Filson, the First Historian of Kentucky (1884) The [Kentucky] Resolutions of 1798 and 1799 (1886) Thoughts Over the Grave of Rev. Thomas Smith (1852) An Historical Sketch of St. Paul's Church, Louisville ...
Main branch of Louisville Free Public Library: 9: Louisville Crescent Hill: Louisville: Nov 11, 1899 — 2762 Frankfort Ave. 10: Louisville Eastern: Louisville: Nov 11, 1899 — 600 Lampton St. 11: Louisville Highland Louisville: Nov 11, 1899 — 1000 Cherokee Rd. 12: Louisville Jefferson Louisville: Nov 11, 1899 —
Pages in category "Libraries in Louisville, Kentucky" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. ... Louisville Free Public Library, Crescent Hill ...
The Filson Historical Society; J. Finzer and Brothers Company; First Christian Church (Louisville, Kentucky) ... Louisville Free Public Library, Crescent Hill Branch;
Spalding Hall in Bardstown, which houses both the Bardstown Historical Museum and the Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History. Evan Williams Bourbon Experience, [1] located on Louisville's Whiskey Row, featuring bourbon history and tastings, and interprets Louisville's wharf history in the 1790s
The library carried with it a debt of $30,000, with $5,000 of fees due to attorneys from the lottery suit. Towne created a new society made up of citizens of Louisville to save the library. In 1877, the Library of Kentucky and all its assets, were handed over to Towne's Polytechnic Society of Kentucky.