Historical Marker Search

You searched for Postal Code: 40422

Page 3 of 5 — Showing results 21 to 30 of 41
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2A9W_courthouse-a-hospital_Danville-KY.html
Boyle County's first courthouse erected here, 1842, destroyed by great fire of 1860. This building completed 1862. First occupied by Union forces as hospital after battle of Perryville, October 8, 1862. On 11th a Union force drove CSA from fair…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2A9V_poet-lawyer-and-soldier-theodore-o-hara_Danville-KY.html
(side 1) Poet, Lawyer and Soldier Theodore O'Hara was born in this city, Feb. 11, 1820. He read law with Judge Wm. Owsley. Newspaper work included editing Frankfort Yeoman and Louisville Times. He served in Mexican War, Cuban rebellion and Civil…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM29CU_capt-george-givens_Danville-KY.html
Homesite and grave 1 mile west. B., Orange Co., Va., 1740. D., 1825. 40 years service to his country. Lt. at Fort Pitt, Dunmore's War, 1774. Captain, Botetourt County militia, 1776. Northwest Campaign of George Rogers Clark, 1778. Came to Ky., 178…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/tmp-49842_old-crow-inn-john-crow_Danville-KY.html
Old Crow Inn The oldest existing stone house in Kentucky, built 1784, is part of this building. The house has been enlarged and Doric pillars added. Land purchased from John Crow by James Wright, 1781. Next owner, Colonel Joshua Barbee, who built…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/tmp-358ef_john-william-bate_Danville-KY.html
Side 1Original site of Bate High School, built 1912 and named in honor of its founder, John William Bate. Born a slave in Louisville, Bate received an AB from Berea College in 1881 and and AM in 1891. He moved to Danville to teach in 1881 and serv…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/tmp-46648_clarks-station_Danville-KY.html
Early pioneer settlement erected before 1779. Developed by George Clark, brother-in-law of William Whitley, whose party came to Ky. about 1775. Located on Clark's Run Creek, named for George Clark, it was one of the first stations built in the vic…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CPX_john-gill-weisiger-memorial-park_Danville-KY.html
ObverseJohn Gill Weisiger Memorial Park The land embraced within this park, bounded by Main Street, First Street, Walnut Street and alleyway, was conveyed to the commonwealth of Kentucky as a gift by Miss Emma Weisiger, and accepted by the Gove…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CI8_ephraim-mcdowell-house_Danville-KY.html
Obverse Home of Ephraim McDowell, the "father of modern surgery." Here on December 25, 1809, McDowell performed the first successful abdominal operation when he took a 22-pound ovarian cyst from Jane Todd Crawford of Green Co. With no anesthesi…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CI5_dr-ephraim-mcdowell-house_Danville-KY.html
McDowell House And Apothecary Shop The pioneering spirit of Dr. Ephraim McDowell-father of abdominal surgery and most prominent surgeon west of the Alleghenies in the early 19th century-is celebrated today at McDowell House. On Christmas Day…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CH6_first-usct-recruits-at-camp-nelson_Danville-KY.html
Obverse May 23, 1864, nearly 250 black men, most of them slaves, left Boyle Co. to march to Camp Nelson in Jessamine Co. to enlist in the Union army. On the way, some Danville citizens threw stones and shot pistols at the recruits. When they r…
PAGE 3 OF 5