Monthly Archive: May 2024

McHargues Mill – Levi Jackson Wilderness Road Park

A reproduction of McHargue’s Mill in Levi Jackson Wilderness Road Park, located in London, Kentucky. The reproduction was built by the Civilian Conservation Corp in 1939 on the banks of the Little Laurel River.

The historic Wilderness Road (and Boone Trace), pioneered by Daniel Boone were the main southern routes used by settlers moving west through the American frontier, from Virginia to Kentucky beginning in 1775. The early route was steep and difficult to traverse, making it only accessible on foot and by horseback, but eventually the trail was improved and extended to reach Louisville, Kentucky on the Ohio River. The route is sometimes called the Cumberland Route because it traversed the Cumberland Gap in the Appalachian Mountains.

The park is named after Levi Jackson, a prominent settler, whose family moved to Kentucky from Tennessee in 1825. The land on which the park is built was farmed and owned by Levi Jackson and his descendants until 1931, when the land was donated to the state of Kentucky.

A number of buildings in the park, including the mill were built during the Great Depression, by the Civilian Conservation Corps, and funding from the National Park Service.

McHargues Mill - Levi Jackson Wilderness Road Park

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Spring House – My Old Kentucky Home – Bardstown

A view of the historic log cabin spring house at the site of the My Old Kentucky Home State Park. A stairway ascends to the center piece of the state park, the Federal Hill Mansion once owned by United States Senator John Rowan in 1795. The park derives its name from a musical ballad written by Stephen Foster, a song that was also made the state song of Kentucky in 1928. Some have suggested that Foster was inspired by Harriet Beecher Stowe’s anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The state of Kentucky purchased the Federal Hill property in 1923, designating it an important historic site. The state park is located in Bardstown, Kentucky.

Spring House - My Old Kentucky Home - Bardstown

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Louisville Cardinals Baseball Stadium – Kentucky

The Jim Patterson Stadium is the home field of the Louisville Cardinals College Baseball Team, located in Louisville, Kentucky. The stadium was constructed in 2005 on a former brownfield site. In the background, giant versions of the Louisville Slugger baseball bats are on display, highlighting a partnership between the famous bat maker and the university athletic program.

The stadium has hosted both the NCAA Super Regionals, and NCAA Division I Baseball Championships.

Louisville Cardinals Baseball Stadium - Kentucky