A woman wearing a long dress and hat, stands next to a monument that may have something to do with the Daughters of the American Revolution. A building on a city street is visible in the background. Title supplied by cataloger.
Jean Thomas, wearing a long dress and hat, stands next to a monument that may have something to do with the Daughters of the American Revolution. Title supplied by cataloger.
A dark image of a woman, wearing a suit and wide-brimmed hat with bow, touching a monument in a graveyard. They may be members of Jean Thomas' family, the Bells. Title supplied by cataloger.
Confederate Soldiers' Monument located on Third Street, Louisville, Kentucky, erected in 1895. Monument reads: "Our Confederate Dead, 1851-1885." Handwritten on bottom of mounted print: "3rd & Brandeis. Was carved in Florence, Italy. Unveiled June 28 1895 cost $12,000 and funds were raised by Louisville Womens Club. Monument assn. requiring nearly 13 yrs. to raise the sum. A photo of judge R.H. Thompson served as a model. He lived at 1203 So. Brook which at that time was 2 doors south of Jacob St. He also was judge of Louisville police court." This monument was relocated to Brandenburg, Kentucky in 2016.
Confederate Soldiers' Monument located on Third Street, Louisville, Kentucky, erected in 1895. Monument reads: "Our Confederate Dead, 1851-1885." Handwritten on bottom of mounted print: "3rd & Brandeis. Was carved in Florence, Italy. Unveiled June 28 1895 cost $12,000 and funds were raised by Louisville Womens Club. Monument assn. requiring nearly 13 yrs. to raise the sum. A photo of judge R.H. Thompson served as a model. He lived at 1203 So. Brook which at that time was 2 doors south of Jacob St. He also was judge of Louisville police court." This monument was relocated to Brandenburg, Kentucky in 2016.
Belknap Bridge, a stone bridge built in memory of Lilly Buckner Belknap, wife of General Morris B. Belknap and daughter of Kentucky Governor General Simon B. Buckner, crosses Beargrass Creek in Cherokee Park in Louisville, Kentucky. Title supplied by cataloger.
South side of 300 block of Library Place. The First Unitarian Church is at the southeast corner of 4th Street and Library Place. A statue of Benjamin Statue is in the grassy median.
700 block South 4th Street at York and Library Place looking north. A statute of Abraham Lincoln is on the east side in front of the library. Car dealerships are on the west side of the road before the Warren Memorial Presbyterian Church. The Brown Hotel is in the distance on the east. Cars are parked on either side of the street.
Monument to Zachary Taylor, twelfth President of the United States, who died in office in 1850. The monument was dedicated on September 20, 1883, in the Zachary Taylor National Cemetery on Brownsboro Road, Louisville, Kentucky. The base bears a quote, "I have endeavored to do my duty. I am ready to die. My only regret is for the friends I leave behind me" as well as the interlocking letters Z and T; "Maj. Genl. Zachary Taylor 12th President of the United States Born Nov. 24 1784 Died July 9 1850" and "Palo Alto, Resacca, De La Palma, Monterey, Beuna [sic] Vista" [his victories in the Mexican-American War]. The cemetery was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.