Tag Archive: louisville

Historic Bowman Field – Louisville – Kentucky

Historic Bowman Field - Louisville - Kentucky

Bowman Field was established in 1919, as Kentucky’s first commercial airport. It remains the oldest civilian airport in the state and is the oldest continually operating commercial airfield in North America. It was founded by Abram H. Bowman an aviation enthusiast. The land upon which Bowman Field is built, was owned prior to World War I, by German Baron Klaus von Zedtwitz but seized by the U.S. government during the war, under the Alien Property Act.

Notable events at the aiport during its long history, include the landing of Charles Lindbergh and the Spirit of St. Louis in 1927, and the use of the hangers, and airfield as the base of Pussy Galore’s Flying Circus for the James Bond film Goldfinger in 1963

The airport terminal, the center piece of Bowman Field (and the Bowman Field Historic District), was built in 1929, and is an example of Art Deco architecture, and more specifically the aerodynamic Streamline Moderne style.

Historic St James Catholic Church – Louisville – Kentucky

Historic St James Catholic Church - Louisville - Kentucky

The entrance to the historic St James Catholic Church, in Louisville, Kentucky. The Church was built in 1912 by the famous local architect James J. Gaffney. The Church is located in the Deer Park Neighborhood of the Highlands District.

The Highlands are an elevated area above the Ohio River floodplain, that was among the last places near downtown Louisville to be urbanized, because of the difficult terrain. It is centered around Bardstown Road, Cave Hill Cemetery, and several urban parks, and golf courses.

The Church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982

Historic Farnsley-Moremen House – Louisville – Kentucky

Historic Farnsley-Moremen House - Louisville - Kentucky

The historic Farnsley-Moremen House, located south of Louisville, Kentucky is part of a 300 acre park known as Riverside, the Farnsley-Moremen Landing on the banks of the Ohio River. The house is named after the two families that owned the house over its history, starting first with Gabriel Farnsley, in 1837, and later the Moremen Family which owned the property from 1862 to 1988.