Tag Archive: Kentucky

Stone Fleur-de-lis Symbol of Lousiville Kentucky

Stone Fleur-de-lis Symbol of Lousiville Kentucky

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A stone fleur-de-lis as seen on the Second Street Bridge in Louisville, Kentucky. The fleur-de-lis, was originally a heraldry symbol of French and European nobility. It is also the adopted symbol of Louisville, the largest city in Kentucky, and other regions in the South heavily influenced during the colonial period by the Kingdom of France, such as Louisiana and in particular New Orleans. The city of Louisville was named in honor of King Louis XVI of France, for his assistance to the American colonists during the Revolutionary War.

Fleur-de-lis, is sometimes spelled fleur-de-lys. The meaning in English is lily flower, but the flower most associated with the fleur-de-lis is the Iris pseudacorus, or Iris florentina.

Foggy Morning Sunrise – Horse Country – Kentucky Bluegrass

Foggy Morning Sunrise - Horse Country - Kentucky Bluegrass

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A foggy morning sunrise near Lexington, Kentucky, the center of the Kentucky Bluegrass, and thoroughbred horse racing. Outside the city limits, large horse farms circle the city for miles. And in the mornings, especially during the spring and summer months, you may witness an otherworldly landscape and fog floats across fields of green lined with black fence, and through woodlands of oak, walnut, elm and maple.

Historic Boone Tunnel – Wilmore – Kentucky

Historic Boone Tunnel - Wilmore - Kentucky

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The Historic Boone Tunnel is located along the Lexington to Harrodsburg road in Jessamine County Kentucky. Built in the 1870’s it provided a route through the Kentucky Palisades. The tunnel was abandoned in 1953 after the bridge that accompanied it, collapsed into the Kentucky River. Today, Hwy 68 crosses a new bridge, and route that bypasses the cliff the tunnel passes through.