Before and after views of Frederick's Bar and Package store at 27th Street and Bank Street. It is a two-story building on the corner. In the before, it has white siding and an advertisement for Old Thompson painted on the side wall. In the after...
100 block of south 4th Street on the west side. Row of multi-story brick buildings with storefronts for Lincoln Bank and Trust Company and Chancellor Cigar.
500 block of south 4th Street on the east side looking south at a row of businesses, including Lerner Stores Corporation, Hollywood Shops, a shoe store, and ""The Fourth Street Bank.""
600 block of south 4th Street on the west side. Hotel Berkeley, a cafeteria, Liberty Insurance Bank, Rudolph Wurlitzer Company, T.P. Taylor and Company, and other businesses line the block.
608 South 4th Street, the Francis Building, on the west side. Fourth Street entrance of the Francis Building and storefronts for a cigar company and the National Bank of Kentucky.
Southwest corner of 4th Street and Chestnut Street. Multi-story brick building with a Southern Optical Company and National Bank of Kentucky on the ground floor. A sign attached to the side of the building on the south 4th Street side reads B.F....
Southwest corner of 4th Street and Chestnut Street with the National Bank of Kentucky and the Southern Optical Company on the ground floor of a multi-story brick building, known as the Francis Building.
Northeast corner of 4th Street and Guthrie Street. Multi-story stone building with stores and offices at street level, including Gordon's Millinery and The Bankers Bond or The Fourth Street Bank.
Streets; Buildings; Stores & shops; Hotels; Financial facilities; Street railroads
4th Street and Main Street looking south. Multi-story brick buildings on either side of 4th Street, including a hotel, Western Union, and Lincoln Bank and Trust Company in the distance. Streetcar tracks run down Main Street.
Streets; Buildings; Stores & shops; Hotels; Financial facilities; Street railroads
Southwest corner of Main Street and 4th Street looking south. Multi-story brick buildings on either side of 4th Street, including a hotel, Western Union, and Lincoln Bank and Trust Company in the distance. Streetcar tracks run down both streets....
Northwest corner of 4th Street and Market Street looking north. Lincoln Bank and Trust Company in a multi-story stone building with arched windows. A painted sign for Meffert Office Equipment is on a nearby building.
Northeast corner of 4th Street and Walnut Street, now Muhammad Ali Boulevard. Starks Building with Union Central Bank and a railroad ticket office on the ground floor. Offices are on the higher levels.
African Americans; African American business enterprises; African American Business people; Drugstores; Pharmacists; African American pharmacists; Urban renewal; Service stations; Standard Oil Company; Civil rights
Oral history interview with Frank Moorman, Sr., conducted on August 17, 1978 by Kenneth Chumbley. Mr. Moorman was a businessman in Louisville's Walnut Street area. Mr. Moorman discusses his parents and grandparents, and his early life in Owensboro,...
We formulate an integro-difference model to predict the growth and spatial
spread of a perennial plant population with an age-structured seed bank. We allow
the seeds in the bank to be of any age, producing an infinite system of equations.
The...
Ferries; Steamboats; Ship trials; Boat & ship industry; Howard Ship Yards and Dock Company
A. BALDWIN, a center wheel ferry with steel catamaran hulls (127 ft. x 58.9 ft. x 7.5 ft.), was built at Howard in 1905. Owned by Union Ferry Co., A. BALDWIN operated in the New Orleans area carrying up to thirty-five automobiles and 231...
Portrait of A. Glen Brown of Louisville, Kentucky, wearing glasses, a suit and tie. Photograph has been painted on to crop his image. Typed on back of image: President Federal Land Bank. Stamped on back: October 25, 1930.
Portrait of A. Glen Brown of Louisville, Kentucky, president of the Federal Land Bank, wearing glasses, a jacket and tie. Stamped on back of image: April 19, 1935.
Stern wheelers; Steamboats; Launchings; Boat & ship industry; Howard Ship Yards and Dock Company
A.D. ALLEN, a stern-wheel packet with wood hull (125 ft. x 23 ft. x 3.5 ft.), was built at Howard in 1901. She operated on the Arkansas River initially and, after being sold to U.S. Engineers in 1910, on the upper White River. A.D. ALLEN was...