Pulaski County Courthouse – Somerset, Ky.

Pulaski County Courthouse, Somerset, Ky.

Pulaski County is named for Casimir Pulaski, a Polish soldier who saved George Washington’s life during the American Revolution. He is only one of seven people to have been honorarily given U.S. Citizenship. The Commonwealth of Kentucky has actually recognized a Casimir Pulaski day since the 1940s to honor the heritage of Polish Americans.

This judicial center is enormous. For the life of me, I can’t understand why Pulaski County needs a three story courthouse with two circuit courtrooms.
Anyway, I took this photo last week after the ice storm, and I nearly killed myself trying to get a better shot. The courthouse square is completely paved, and I made the mistaken attempt to walk on it. This shot was a compromise.

Rowan County Courthouse – Morehead, Ky.

Old Rowan County Courthouse, Morehead, Ky.

This one’s just kinda sad. What you see above is the beautiful former Rowan County Courthouse. It currently houses the Rowan County Arts Center. This building was built between 1896 and 1899. It is the only remaining 19th Century building left standing on Main Street in Morehead. It is the third courthouse to sit on this site.

What is shown above is the current Rowan County Courthouse, which looks like a gymnasium. When I first came to Rowan County for court, I couldn’t believe that this was the courthouse, and had to double-check before going in. There are no windows in the courtroom, and it feels like you’re going into a crypt when you enter. I wonder why they didn’t get a spiffy new judicial center?

Kentucky Capitol Ornament

Capitol Christmas Ornament
Kentucky Capitol Ornament

In June, Kentucky’s Capitol building in Frankfort celebrated its Centennial. I picked up the above Christmas ornament carved from Kentucky maple and cherry. A numbered piece, it was designed by K&M Crafts of Kentucky in Campbellsville – I’ve seen some of their other work and all of it is beautifully done.

The ornament now hangs on the tree. Merry Christmas!

Maker’s Mark Cookies

Maker's Mark Cookies
Maker’s Mark Cookies. Merry Christmas!

In our family, we don’t change the Christmas cookie lineup often – perhaps once a generation. This year, our Christmas cookies have a new star this year: gingerbread. Not boring gingerbread cookies, mind you. At the World Equestrian Games, my wife picked up a cookie cutter at the Maker’s Mark store shaped like a bottle of  Maker’s. Her immediate thought were gingerbread cookies.

And are they great. Sure, gingerbread cookies are, well, not the most exciting cookie in the world. Find a recipe you like and go with it. But first, go buy the cookie cutter from Maker’s online store or make the pilgrimage to Loretto. For the icing, we used:

2 cups powdered sugar
teaspoon Maker’s 46
2 tablespoons milk
Red food coloring
Mix the powdered sugar, vanilla, and milk together. Once dry add small amounts of milk and stir until the icing is runny enough to drizzle lightly from a spoon. Now add the food coloring, remember to do this a drop at a time as a little bit can make a dramatic difference.

It takes a lot of food coloring and we’ll continue to play with the recipe. (Please share suggestions!) Maybe work some Maker’s into the dough batter as well. But the icing… my God was it good!
Oh, and Merry Christmas!

NoD: Southern Lights

IMG_5351
Southern Lights Display at the Kentucky Horse Park, Lexington, Ky.

At Lexington’s Kentucky Horse Park, the winter lights of Southern Lights have been on display for several weeks. They are a popular area attraction – and a great holiday tradition!  It is an outdoor light display which you enjoy from your vehicle – it really is spectacular with the all the grand displays.

In addition to the light show, you can get out of your car (at the end) and go into the museum area where you will find a trade show, a fantastic model railroad display (my 2 year old was enthralled!) and a impressive dollhouse exhibit. Plus snacks and hot cocoa and a petting zoo, etc. A lot of fun; a great evening. It is open through the end of the year.

As a personal disappointment, another blogger (an equine health blog) has actually posted on Southern Lights using my pictures before I could. So I guess that means a hat tip goes to the Jurga Report?

Check out all the pictures from Southern Lights posted to my flickr account. And if you can’t make it out with all the hustle of Christmas 2010, add Southern Lights to your 2011 calendar? Have you been before? What is your favorite part?

NoD: St. Paul’s Episcopal Church

Newport, Ky.
The Red Doors of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
Newport, Ky.

Aside from the Cross, the most recognizable sign of a church (Episcopalian) is the red door – they are great for spotting from a block away. Also impressive is the number of Episcopal churches in Kentucky which are historical points of reference.

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Newport is such a church. It’s ivy-covered stone clock-tower next to the courthouse square makes for a beautiful church. The congregation began in 1845 and construction began on this church building in 1871. It is worth noting that the Episcopal Church in Kentucky did not split during the Civil War as did other denominations; this was a principal cause for St. Paul’s continued growth. “By 1870…the political prejudices and antipathies engendered by that terrible catastrophe were largely removed; and Federalist and Confederates together knelt in brotherly love and good-will at the same altar.” [*] Services were first held here in 1873, but the building was not completed until 1888. The project was over budget at a cost of $33,000 rather than the expected $19,452. The church, however, has weathered many storms: an 1880 earthquake, the flooding of the Ohio River in 1884 and 1937, as well as tornadoes in 1915 and 1986.

Newport, Ky.
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
Newport, Ky.

But it is the people who attended St. Paul’s that complete its story (and cause it to have a historic marker, #1511):

For a century and a quarter, a St. Paul’s Episcopal Church has stood on this corner. Since 1871, the bell in the towering spire atop this native stone church has rung for services. Here worshipped Gen. James Taylor, War of 1812; Henry Stanbery, who defended President Andrew Johnson at his impeachment trial, 1868; Brent Spence, 37 yrs. in Congress, a lifetime member.

The church offers many social services for its urban community and continues to hold weekly services.

Contest Winner: Me

How Kentucky Became Southern: A Tale of Outlaws, Horse Thieves, Gamblers, and Breeders (Topics in Kentucky History)Yesterday, I learned that I won the grand prize of a twitter-contest: over $300 worth of books from the University Press of Kentucky (@kentuckypress). I’m obviously very excited because all of the books are Kentucky-centric. If you have a twitter account, follow @kentuckypress (and me… @kaintuckeean). Check out the University Press of Kentucky anytime… they have a terrific collection of works and often a pretty good deal! Anyway, I’m looking forward to learning more and sharing with you. I’m most excited about the book pictured to the left – How Kentucky Became Southern – is a book which I’ve wanted to pick up but haven’t yet had the chance. I’ll be sure to read it soon now! The other books won are:

NoD: World Peace Belll

World Peace Bell
World Peace Bell, Newport, Ky.

You’d think something called the World Peace Bell would be in New York, right? Near the U.N.? Perhaps in Europe – Switzerland would be a good spot. Nope and nope. [Well, OK. There are other peace bells, too.]

The World Peace Bell is located in Newport, Ky. Dedicated on 12-31-1999, it first rang when the 2000s began – it could be heard from a distance of 25 miles. The bell, a Verdin, was cast in France and sailed the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico to New Orleans before navigating the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers to reach its Kentucky home. The bell itself is 12 feet high, 12 feet in diameter and weighs 66,000 pounds! (With clapper and support, the total weight is nearly 90,000 lbs.) It rings at noon, daily.

Check out the other pics of the World Peace Bell from my flickr photostream.

Nominations to the National Register

I love the National Register for Historic Places… and I especially love the applications for National Register status. Each property listed on the Register completed a detailed application which is full of great information about the building/neighborhood/community.

Last week, the Kentucky Heritage Council met to review local applications for the National Register. Although inclusion in the register is no guarantee of protection, it does help protect the properties. Kentucky has done a good job in getting her landmarks onto the Register – only New York, Massachusetts and Ohio have more. Here are the five contenders with some notes directly from the respective applications:

Hawkins House, Henderson

Hart House, Henderson (Henderson Co.) – Built in 1892 as a domestic single family dwelling in the Queen Anne style for [J. Hawkins] Hart who began his political career in the City as a court clerk. While living in the house, he would become a county judge, a city commissioner, have a private legal practice, and own his own real estate and insurance business. After the house passed out of the Hart family, it belonged to a succession of middle- to upper-class citizens of the town, including prominent doctors and businessmen. It has remained a single family dwelling throughout. There is strong evidence that the house was designed by the popular mail order architect, George F. Barber, whose designs helped disseminate the Queen Anne style throughout the United States in the late-19th century.  The house exhibits numerous hallmarks of Barber design and is an excellent example of Queen Anne architecture in the city.  Its architectural significance is interpreted within the
historic context, “George F. Barber and Queen Anne Style in Henderson, Kentucky.” The house’s scale, ornamentation, and location give important cues to post-Civil War socioeconomic development in Henderson.   [PDF]

Jenkins School, Jenkins

Jenkins School, Jenkins (Letcher Co.) – The 2½-story masonry building opened in 1912 and located along Main Street in Jenkins consists the original 1912 building, a 1924 addition with four classrooms and gymnasium, and a 1936 addition with additional classrooms and funded by WPA.  Both additions maintain the school’s original Colonial Revival style. [It] is historically significant for its status as the largest and finest school to be produced as part of the efforts by Consolidated Coal Company to develop Jenkins, a coal camp, in the coal rich mountains of eastern Kentucky.  As coal companies looked to begin mining the coal found in the remote parts of eastern Kentucky, they could see the benefit of providing amenities to their workers.  This led some coal corporations to develop coal towns with one or more of the following amenities: churches, schools, stores, a bakery, butcher, entertainment venues, dormitories, bathhouses, a hospital, and hotels.   Jenkins was considered one of the crown jewels of coal towns — Consolidation Coal Company would bring politicians and visitors from all around the United States and abroad to see their accomplishments in this Letcher County settlement.  Jenkins’ outstanding school building signaled the quality of the town.  Many of its graduates went to college, and the school was expanded several times while under Company control. This school is one of the largest in the region built during the period and stands within one of the most fully developed coal camps in eastern Kentucky. Jenkins School is a significant contributor to the understanding of how the educational system developed during the time coal corporations were involved in developing settlements. [PDF]

McBride’s Landing, Harrods Creek

McBride’s Harrods Creek Landing, Harrods Creek (Jefferson Co.) – [The property] consists of 30 acres of land along the Ohio River and a series of maritime resources. The vessels include four permanently moored barges, one floating dry dock, one crane and one marine railway. The Landing is located at mile point 596 on the left (south) bank of the Ohio River. The Landing is strategically placed near the mouth of Harrods Creek and above the McAlpine Lock and Dam, a location with a still pool and stable water levels. The nominated property is located at 5913 River Road in Harrods Creek, Kentucky,  and contains the Leo Birch McBride House, circa 1933, and the George W. McBride House and Barn, circa 1950-1954. There are five contributing buildings, seven contributing structures and one contributing site. [PDF]

Miller Co., Louisville

Miller Paper Company Buildings, Louisville (Jefferson Co.) – The two buildings are at 118 East Main (4 stories high) and at 122 East Main (2 stories).  Brick structures flank the nominated property on either side.  The main facades, in limestone and marble, exhibit a High Deco style.  Both lots have been in use since the nineteenth century; the buildings are being interpreted as having primary identity and significance dating to the 1940s, when a major renovation project was undertaken. The property sits within an area which was once known as “Whiskey Row” in Louisville.  In the two-block stretch of Main Street from Second Street to Brook Street, 20 different buildings are identified on the 1892 Sanborn Map as purveyors of Wholesale Liquors. The Miller Paper Buildings are architecturally significant; their value is evaluated within the context “Art Deco and Moderne Architecture in Louisville, Kentucky.”  The building embodies the distinctive characteristics of the Art Deco architectural style. Louisville’s Art Deco design context shows more instances of nonresidential application of the style than residential.  Within the two style categories, Art Deco often emphasized the vertical where Moderne emphasized the horizontal.  Many of the examples of the styles in Louisville are found on buildings of industrial and warehouse use, such as this property. As these commercial buildings grew larger in Louisville during the middle of the 20th century, designers were confronted with the challenge of retaining the style’s vocabulary with balance.  The nominated properties provide a pleasing combination of detailing and formal balance.  They provide a valuable example to the collective span of the local application of both style trends. [PDF]

Most Blessed Sacrament
School, Louisville

Most Blessed Sacrament School, Louisville (Jefferson Co.) – Located at 1128 Berry Boulevard in the Oakdale neighborhood of Louisville, Kentucky. The building, begun in 1937 and completed in 1938, was designed by Louisville architect Walter Wagner. The main façade features a central entrance bay with inset paired wooden doors. The five-bay symmetrical façade is topped by a limestone nameplate and cross.  The building is decorated with a nod toward Collegiate Gothic, with its corbelled cornice at the roofline, limestone pilasters, and limestone belt-course. A two-story brick convent – a residence for the Nuns who served as teachers – was added to the building in 1952.With Louisville being one of Kentucky’s few cities with a sizable Roman Catholic population, Most Blessed Sacrament is being interpreted for its role in Louisville’s Social History. Most Blessed Sacrament School played a significant role: it served as one of the network of parish schools providing a Christian religious education alternative for Catholic families, as a tangible response to the mandate from the Vatican, through the American Bishops, and finally through the Louisville Diocese, to provide religious education in each parish. This mandate for Catholic education made Louisville’s system of parochial schools a widespread touchstone in many 20th century Louisvillians’ social and educational experience. [PDF]

Hattip to PageOne Kentucky!

UK’s Collage

2010 Christmas Collage
Holiday Collage at Singletary Center, Lexington, Ky.

I’ll be posting about some local holiday traditions. Last weekend, the wife and I attended UK’s Collage performance at the Singletary Center for the Fine Arts. We attend (almost) every year and love the show! It features a 200-voice strong men’s and women’s choir plus the Lexington Singers Children’s Choir. Both the men’s and women’s a cappela groups perform – individually and together. Handbells, a steel band, bluegrass and more… some of the best of the university and the community are brought together for Collage. To get a taste for the performance, check out this video featuring the performance of the Nigerian Christmas carol Betelhemu – an audience favorite! It is too late this year, but put Collage on your Christmas calendar for 2011!