Home Town Christmas is a photograph by Darren Fisher which was uploaded on July 26th, 2014.
Home Town Christmas
This is the beautiful old Court House that sits in the round about in Bardstown KY. I shot this image with a long exposure at sunset. I love all... more
Title
Home Town Christmas
Artist
Darren Fisher
Medium
Photograph - Photography/ Digital Art
Description
This is the beautiful old Court House that sits in the round about in Bardstown KY. I shot this image with a long exposure at sunset. I love all the Christmas lights and the colors. I added effects along with a texture to give it an aged painterly look. This image was also chosen to be on the first Bardstown Christmas ornament for 2014 which can be found at several of the stores in town. The ornaments have been hand painted.
The Bardstown Historic District, comprising the center of Bardstown, Kentucky, is a registered historic district on the National Register of Historic Places. Prominent architecture located within the district include the Cobblestone Path, Nelson County Jail, Old L & N Station, Old Talbott Tavern, and Spalding Hall, all individually on the National Register, and the historic old Nelson County Courthouse.[2]
The district consists of twenty-six blocks with a total of 279 properties. Over one third of the buildings in the district are Federal or Georgian architecture dating from the 1780s to 1850, reflecting Bardstown's status as one of the first towns in Kentucky, first settled in 1780 and formally established in 1788. Twenty-four of the blocks are in the initial grid pattern used to lay out the town's lots in 1797.[3]
The town was originally to be called Salem when it was first settled in 1780 by 33 people, on land given as 1,000-acre (4 km2) grant to John Owings and David Bard by Virginia governor Patrick Henry. Bard sent his brother William Bard to manage the holdings, and with William donating 2 acres (8,100 m2) for a courthouse, the town was renamed Bardstown. In 1789 alone 150 log houses were built in the district. In the antebellum area the district became a cultural center for nearby localities, especially for Catholics; Bardstown had the largest concentration of Catholics of any town in Kentucky for a time. Its decline began when the Louisville and Nashville Railroad decided to initially bypass Bardstown, not building a railroad fo
Uploaded
July 26th, 2014