Author Archive: Ultimateplaces Photography

Hidden River Cave Entrance – Horse Cave, Kentucky

Hidden River Cave Entrance - Horse Cave, Kentucky

A view of the entrance to Hidden River Cave (previously known as Horse Cave), in Horse Cave, Kentucky.  Horse Cave, Kentucky has the unusual distinction of a city named after the cave that is literally right off main street in the center of the town. The origin of the Horse Cave name is unclear, but some speculate the cave was initially used by Indians or settlers to shelter and water horses and other animals. For a time the cave became the primary source of water and hydroelectric power for the town. However with time and an increasing population that was dumping its waste nearby, the cave’s water supply became polluted, and the tourism that had been building up around the cave vanished.  This led to a period of time when the cave lay empty and neglected. But ultimately, after the sources of pollution were eliminated the cave recovered. 

Today, the now renamed Hidden River Cave is a thriving tourist attraction along with the other caves (Mammoth Cave being the most well known) in the area. It also hosts the American Cave & Karst Center, a museum and education center about caves operated by the American Cave Conservation Association.

White Cloth Easter Cross – Aurora, Indiana

White Cloth Easter Cross - Aurora, Indiana

Around Easter time you will often find Christian crosses draped in a white cloth. This act symbolizes Jesus’ burial shroud, his crucifixion and resurrection. Typically the crosses are draped in this fashion from Eastern Sunday through Ascension Day in May. This particular cross was seen at a church in Aurora, Indiana.

Cincinnati Red Stockings Baseball Team – Ohio

Cincinnati Red Stockings Baseball Team - Ohio

The Cincinnati Red Stockings were America’s first all-professional baseball team, and the precursor to Major League Baseball’s Cincinnati Reds Team. They are best known for their period of play between 1866-1870.  During this time,   they helped to establish some of the uniform standards still in use today by professional players, and are responsible for the color red being associated so closely with Cincinnati. They are also linked to the naming of Boston’s own team the Red Sox, as that team formed out of the rapidly changing dynamics of baseball at that time, and a number of the players originally with Cincinnati moved to Boston to form a new team.