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Page 10 text:
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Loneson1e's Legend visualize the panic in the Book Store if Dad decided to pay us our allowances in rawhide? In 1789, the first brick house was built in Louisville, and in 1801, the first newspaper, The Farmer's Li- brary , made its appearance. Believe me, it couldn't be compared with the Sentinel that my tribe puts out now- adays. However, in 1830, George D. Prentice came here from New England and established the Louisville This memorial was erected at Hodgensville, Kentucky to com- memorate Lincoln's birthplace. Journal which flourished until 1868 when it was merged with Henry Watterson's Courier. Under the virulent edi- torial pen of Marsh Henryi' this newspaper gained in stature pen of Marsh Henryi' this newspaper gained in of the most outstanding daily publications in the coun- try. That mammoth four lane concrete highway to the north of my fortress was named The Watterson Express- At Sixth and Broadway this modem building houses Louisville's largest newspapers The Courier Journal and The Louisville Times as well as the studios of WHAS television and Radio WHAS. way in honor of the same man. Imagine this! At the turn of the century in 1800, Louisville counted a total population of eight hundred persons. That was 62 fewer than my Bedskin tribe num- bered when Seneca first opened its doors in 1957. How- ever, those few were progressive. In 1308, the year before that great man Abraham Lincoln was born in our state, the people of Louisville erected the first the- atre in the city. It couldn't be compared to our neigh- boring Cineme 1 Xa 2 but it did indicate that the citi- zens were interested in the Fine Arts. Those same folks were just as excited over the steamboat, Orleans, which was the first to ply the waters of the Ohio to our city. We still enjoy the sternwheelers, and we Redskins have the breakfast following the annual Senior Prom on the Belle of Louisville which is beautifully pictured on the end-sheets of this volume of our yearbook, ARROW '67. Before we leave the river 1 should tell you that in 1825 the Louisville and Portland Canal Company was 6 The Watterson Expressway snakes its east-west pathway across Jefferson County.
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Page 9 text:
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Page 11 text:
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Cinema 1 81 2, Bardstown Road, Louisville incorporated and plans to build a canal around the falls were made and fulfilled. The canal was opened to navi- gation in 1830. After that step the city turned its atten- tion to becoming a big industrial center. In 1840, the Louisville Lighting Company illuminated the city with gas lamps. The crime rate dropped overnight and new industries were immediately attracted to the area. On July 9, 1850, President Zachary Taylor died in n antique gas lamp in a modern setting. Stauffer's Motel, Broadway t Second Street. . . continued . . Washington, DC. The General known as old Rough and Ready was buried in Louisville in the Zachary Taylor Memorial Cemetery on Brownsboro Road. He is the man credited with ending the Indian Yvars, but I don,t hold that against him. After all I've been a Kentuckian so long that it wouldn't be patriotic of me to do so. It makes me swell with pride to think that one of the Presidents of these United States is near. The Law Department of the University of Louisville From the top of a tall monument Zachary Taylor's statue majestically views part of the land he made safe for Americans. 7
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