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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YSV_lincolns-ties-to-kentucky_Louisville-KY.html
1809 Abraham Lincoln born at Sinking Spring farm, in present-day Larue County, Kentucky.
1816 Lincoln family moved from Kentucky.
1841 Abraham Lincoln visited his friend Joshua Speed at Farmington, the Speed family plantation, in Louisv…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YRI_the-heigold-facade_Louisville-KY.html
The Heigold Facade
Christian Heigold, a German immigrant and stonecutter, came to Louisville sometime prior to 1850, and in 1857 he built his home at 264 Marion Street in an area known as the Point.
This was a period of unrest and attacks on Iri…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YR4_wolf-pen-corridor-wolf-pen-preservation-association-inc_Prospect-KY.html
Wolf Pen Corridor
Settled in the late 1700s and part of Jefferson County's third major settlement. Rich farmland & water traffic attracted a community of tradesmen, farmers, millers, and African Americans. This corridor includes Wolf Pen & Mint S…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YR3_the-kentucky-soldiers-home_Prospect-KY.html
The Kentucky Soldiers' Home
Located at Harrod's Creek, this was the only institution in Kentucky founded for Union Civil War veterans. It was proposed by the J. T. Boyle Post No. 109 of the Grand Army of the Republic. Chartered in 1890, it opened…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YR1_louisville-water-works_Louisville-KY.html
Louisville Water Works
Corner Stone
of
Engine House
Laid September 6, 1858
Water Supplied to the City
October 16, 1860
A. Harris, President
D.S. Benedict · J.S. Lithgow · B.J. Adams · William Inman
Directors
T.…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YR0_water-filtration-experiments_Louisville-KY.html
Water Filtration Experiments
On this site, 1895-1897, George Warren Fuller, now known as "the father of sanitary engineering," conducted the first scientific testing of water filtration. For a year, four companies tested filter devices to cl…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YG2_slavery-laws-in-old-kentucky-site-of-arterburn-brothers-slave-pens_Louisville-KY.html
Slavery Laws In Old KentuckyKy.'s 1792 Constitution continued legalized enslavement of blacks in the new state; 1800 tax lists show 40,000 slaves. U.S. banned African slave trade in 1808 but selling of men, women and children in South continued. B…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YG1_second-african-baptist-church_Louisville-KY.html
Side 1Second African Baptist Church, now Green Street Baptist Church, was formally organized here, Sept. 29, 1844. As was usual in the years of slavery, the founding members had the sponsorship of a protection committee, appointed by First Baptist…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YD0_first-louisville-slugger-bat_Louisville-KY.html
First Louisville Slugger Bat
Site of J.F. Hillerich carpentry shop, 1875-1901. In 1894, J.F.'s son, J.A. "Bud" Hillerich, attended a Louisville Eclipse major league baseball game. After star player Pete Browning broke his bat, Hillerich…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1XE3_george-rogers-clark-at-locust-grove-lewis-and-clark-in-kentucky-locust-grove-historical_Louisville-KY.html
George Rogers Clark At Locust Grove
George Rogers Clark moved to Locust Grove in 1809 following amputation of his right leg. He lived here with his sister Lucy and her husband William Croghan until Clark's death in 1818. Clark recognized by Va.…