Monthly Archive: May 2024

Ohio Falls Bridge – Louisville – Kentucky

A view of the 14th Street Railroad Bridge, the McAlpine Locks and Dam, and the Falls of the Ohio, on the Ohio River. As seen with Clarksville, Indiana, with downtown Louisville, Kentucky seen in the distance.

The Fourteenth Street Bridge, also known as the Ohio Falls Bridge, was completed in 1870, by the Louisville Bridge Company. It was originally operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad, but is currently owned by the Louisville and Indiana Railroad. The drawbridge portion on the south side of the river, which allows barges to pass through the McAlpine Locks and Dam, was built in 1918, and operates as a vertical-lift span. The McAlpine Locks and Dam, were built to allow ships to navigate past the Falls of the Ohio, a series of rapids in the Ohio River that pose a serious obstacle to boat traffic in this section of the river.

Ohio Falls Bridge - Louisville - Kentucky

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Native American Wattle and Daub House – Cumberland Gap – Virginia

A replica of a traditional Native American wattle and daub house from the Southeastern United States near Cumberland Gap National Park, on the border of Virginia, Tennessee, and Kentucky.

The hut consists of a thatched roof hut, supported with a wooden posts in a circular configuration. The walls of the hut employ the wattle and daub construction technique. A woven lattice of wooden strips called “wattle” is combined with a plastering technique known as “daub” that is applied to the wooden lattice and includes a combination of wet soil, clay, sand, straw and animal dung. Wattle and daub is a construction technique that dates back more than 6,000 years, can be found in many places throughout the world, and remains in use today in different regions.

This particular hut has a single doorway with no windows, but an up roof that allows the smoke and heat from cooking fires to escape.

Native American Wattle and Daub House - Cumberland Gap - Virginia

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Historic Pioneer Kitchen – Homeplace Working Farm

A replica vintage kitchen in a log cabin home, with a cast iron wood burning cook stove, dishes, earthenware, and wooden cabinets and furniture. Located in rural Tennessee, in the Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area, the log home is part of the 1850s Homeplace Working Farm. The farm paints a portrait of pioneer farm life in rural western Tennessee and Kentucky, in the 1800’s.

Historic Pioneer Kitchen - Homeplace Working Farm

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