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Kentucky: Franklin County – What to see?

State Capitol – The Kentucky State Capitol was built between 1905 and 1909 for a cost $1 million dollars. It is the state’s fourth permanent capitol building. Two burned down, and the third stands not far from the current capitol building. The Kentucky capitol holds all three branches of state government, including the legislature, the supreme court and the executive branch. It includes offices for the governor, lieutenant governor, the attorney general, and the secretary of state.

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The building was constructed in the Beaux-Arts style and features a number of French architectural elements. The designer Frank Mills Andrews was a distinguished and award-winning architect. The interior of the building includes a number of bronze statues – Abraham Lincoln (pictured), Henry Clay, Dr. Ephraim McDowell and Alben Barkley (a farmer vice president). Until recently Jefferson Davis, the only president of the Confederacy, was included among them. His statue was removed in 2020, and placed in Fairview, Kentucky, his birth place and the location of a monument built in his memory, in 1973.

Cove Spring Park – While only 240 acres, Cove Spring Park is a very interesting place. One might almost describe it as a small valley tucked away between steep forested hills. It has a number of short trails both in the valley and along the hillsides, as well as several waterfalls, a beautiful stream, and several historic structures. The perfect place to get outdoors, but also get away from the heat, on a hot summer day.

Cove Spring Park Water Fall - Frankfort, Kentucky

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Daniel Boone Grave Marker – Overlooking the Kentucky River, this grave marker is located in the Frankfort Cemetery. Daniel Boone is an icon of American folklore. A frontiersman and explorer he is known for the time he spent on the Kentucky frontier. Since his death in 1820, a bit of a controversy has developed about where he’s truly buried. Originally buried in Missouri, his body along with that of his wife Rebecca were disinterred in 1845, and moved to his now official burial site in Frankfort. However, some Boone historians in Missouri aren’t so sure. Various tests on the bones that were moved have been conducted, with inconclusive results to date.

Daniel Boone Grave Marker - Frankfort, Kentucky

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Buffalo Trace Distillery – As the producer of 90% of the world’s bourbon, Kentucky is well known for its brewing of this alcoholic beverage. In fact its a point of pride that there are nearly twice as many barrels of aging bourbon in the state, as there people. Buffalo Trace, Distillery is arguably the oldest brewer in the state, with its orgins dating back to 1775, and two brothers Hancock and Willis Lee. Buffalo Trace has gone by numerous names over the years, the most notable of which is George T. Stagg Distillery, which undoubtedly many current locals would remember. The current

The current distillery’s name is an interesting choice, as it refers to a trail that Indians and explorers alike discovered passing through southern Indiana. Its creators weren’t humans, but bison, no doubt numbering in the millions, that carved an impressive and durable pathway across the wilderness landscape of the American frontier.

Buffalo Trace – USFS Website

American Flag - Buffalo  Trace Distillery - Frankfort

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Frankfort Historic District – While many a historic downtown can be found in Kentucky, I have found Frankfort to be one of the more interesting and scenic, given its location among steeply forested hillsides. The City of Frankfort derives its name from Frank’s Ford, a historic crossing on the Kentucky River that was named after Stephen Frank, an early pioneer of the state that was killed in an indian skirmish in 1780. For quite a long time after its founding Frankfort was Kentucky’s second largest city after Lexington, and as previously noted it became the location of the state’s capitol upon statehood in 1792. The state’s third capitol building, built in 1830 is one of the 86 buildings that make up Frankfort’s downtown historic district.

Adjacent counties

Owen County (north)
Scott County (east)
Woodford County (southeast)
Anderson County (south)
Shelby County (west)
Henry County (northwest)

Victorian Homes of Old Louisville Historic District

Historic Old Louisville homes featuring Romanesque, Queen Anne, and Italiante architectural styles

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The Old Louisville historic district, located in Kentucky, boasts the largest concentration of Victorian-Style buildings (and homes with stained glass windows) in the United States. Those styles include the Romanesque, Queen Anne, and Italiante. The district covers 48 city blocks and is located south of Louisville main business district, and north of the city’s largest college campus, the University of Louisville. Construction in the area began in the 1870’s and while its called Old Louisville, its actually younger than other parts of the city, which itself dates to 1780. The most famous part of Old Louisville is focused around St. James Court and Belgravia Court, but the distinct buildings the area is known for extended across multiple streets, including 1st to 6th streets, and Mangnolia to Hill Street.

Romanesque buildings are often built with thick walls, round arches, sturdy piers, groin vaults, large towers, and decorative arcades.

Italiante homes tend to haev low-piched or flat roofs, a symmetrical retangural shape that is multiple stories high, wide, overhanging eaves with large brackets and cornices, square cupolas, and balustrated balconies

Queen Anne style homes are often have an asymmetrical front facade, with a large porch, and decorative wood trim. The roofs are steep with cross gables or large dormers. And the houses tend to feature a round or polygonal front corner tower with a conical roof.

Historic Old Louisville homes featuring Romanesque, Queen Anne, and Italiante architectural styles

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Historic Old Louisville homes featuring Romanesque, Queen Anne, and Italiante architectural styles

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Tell City Chair Co Office Building – Indiana

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The Tell City Chair Co, was a well known, high quality manufacturer of wooden chairs that existed for 146 years, from 1865, until 2011. In 1962, during the Kennedy administration, more than 400 chairs were ordered from the company by the White House, after an example of their chairs was seen at Saks Fifth Avenue, in New York.

Tell City, named after William Tell, and built by Swiss immigrants from Cincinnati, sits on the banks of the Ohio River on the border of Indiana and Kentucky. It was founded in 1858.