Category Archives: -Kentucky

Ready for Christmas on Halloween in Cynthiana, Kentucky

While on a road trip to Louisville, I took a short detour through Cynthiana, Kentucky. It was afternoon of Halloween. Most of the houses were decorated for Halloween, but not this one. They skipped directly to Christmas decorations. I was amused that the owners of this 1950s bungalow had already adorned their home with wreaths, manger, and a gingerbread house.

1893 Victorian House in Cynthiana, Kentucky

1860s Italianate House in Cynthiana, Kentucky

The Ouerbacker-Clement House of Louisville, Kentucky

The Ouerbacker-Clement House, located at 1633 West Jefferson Street in Louisville’s Russell neighborhood, is a historic mansion built in 1860 in the Richardsonian-Romanesque style. Originally owned by George Moore and later by steamboat captain Alexander Gilmore, the home was expanded in the 1890s by renowned architects Arthur Loomis and Charles Clarke.

Over the years, it housed local figures such as Samuel Ouerbacker, a coffee merchant, and Reverend George Clement and his son Rufus Clement, who later became the president of Atlanta University, now known as Clark Atlanta University.

Eventually the mansion served as a tax service office for 70 years until the city seized the property for unpaid taxes. The property languished until the city sold it for $1 in 2014. The company that purchased it restored and converted into six apartments.

Omega Psi Phi House in Louisville, Kentucky

The Italianate located on Chestnut Street is also known as the Doerhoefer-Hampton House. It was built in 1887 and placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The local chapter of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity purchased the home in 2019 and restored it. It now serves as their local headquarters and meeting space.

This image is from the 1979 nomination to the National Register of Historic Places.
This image is from the 1979 nomination to the National Register of Historic Places.

Caney Fork School-A Rosenwald School in Allen County, Kentucky

The Caney Fork School, also known as the Maynard Colored School, was completed in 1922. The one-teacher type school was constructed for $2,000. The Rosenwald Fund provided $500, and the local community funded the rest. The school was used until 1933, when the county consolidated all Black schools into one school.

Image from the Rosenwald Database at Fisk University