LIST OF ATTRACTIONS AND EVENTS IN LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY

(Redirected from List of attractions and events in Louisville)
Statues of fancifully painted horses can currently be seen around Louisville. A part of the ''Gallopalooza'' art exhibition, these horses honor past winners of the Kentucky Derby.

This is a list of notable visitor attractions and annual events in the Louisville metropolitan area.

Contents
Annual festivals and other events
Distinctive locales
Historic properties
Museums, galleries and interpretive centers
Art
Regional history
U.S. and world history
Other subjects
Parks and other outdoor attractions
Shows and performing arts
Sports-related attractions and venues
External links

Annual festivals and other events



Abbey Road on the River [1], a salute to The Beatles with many bands, held in May

Adam Matthews Balloon Festival, held in September

Corn Island Storytelling Festival [2], held in September

Forecastle Festival [3], a co-mingling of music, art and activism, held in July

★ Highland Renaissance Festival [4] (Eminence), held in June

Humana Festival of New American Plays, held in the Spring

Jeffersontown Gaslight Festival [5] (Jeffersontown), held in September

★ Kentucky Art Car Weekend [6], held in August

Kentucky Bourbon Festival (Bardstown)

Kentucky Derby Festival, Kentucky's largest single annual event; includes Thunder Over Louisville, Great Steamboat Race, Pegasus Parade and the Marathon/miniMarathon, and is held for two weeks from late April through early May

Kentucky Shakespeare Festival, commonly called Shakespeare in the Park; held in the Summer

Kentucky State Fair, annual 10-day event held in August at the Kentucky Exposition Center, next to Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom; includes the World's Championship Horse Show [7]

★ Kentuckiana Pride Festival [8], series of events in June in support of LGBT pride and rights

Lebowski Fest

★ Louisville Zombie Attack, where hundreds of locals dressed as zombies walk down Bardstown Road to a set location, held August 29 at 8:29 p.m.

National Quartet Convention

North American International Livestock Exposition, held in November

★ Oktoberfest/Oktoberfeast Louisville, held in October

St. James Court Art Show, one of the top-ranked shows of its kind in the country; held the first weekend of October

★ St. Joseph Orphans Picnic, held the second Saturday in August

★ Starlight Strawberry Festival (Starlight, Indiana), held during Memorial Day weekend

WHAS Crusade for Children, fundraiser held over the first weekend in June

Distinctive locales


The Conrad-Caldwell House at St James Court and Magnolia Avenue in Old Louisville


Old Louisville, the third largest historic preservation district in the U.S., which features:


★ the highest number of buildings of Victorian architecture in a U.S. neighborhood


Louisville's Central Park


★ St. James Court, famous for the annual St. James Court Art Show.

The Highlands area, which features:


★ Distinctive shops, restaurants and nightlife along Bardstown Road and Baxter Avenue


Cherokee Triangle and Original Highlands historic neighborhoods

★ The West Main District of downtown, including "Museum Row" and featuring some of the oldest structures in the city

Corydon Historic District

Old Jeffersonville Historic District

★ Frankfort Avenue corridor, including the Clifton and Crescent Hill neighborhoods — another area with distinctive shops and restaurants

★ East Market, featuring a row of art galleries, prominently featured in the monthly "Gallery Hop" [9]

Historic properties


:''See also: History of Louisville, Kentucky''

Basilica of Saint Joseph Proto-Cathedral (Bardstown) — first Roman Catholic cathedral west of the Appalachian Mountains

Belle of Louisville, the oldest Mississippi-style steamboat in operation on the inland waterways of the U.S. (Built 1914-1915 in Pittsburgh for service in Memphis as the Idlewild, renamed Avalon in 1948, purchased by Jefferson County and renamed Belle of Louisville in 1962.)

★ The Brennan House [10]

Brown Hotel, where the Hot Brown was invented.

Colgate Clock (Clarksville, Indiana) is the second largest clock in the world.

Conrad-Caldwell House [11]

Culbertson Mansion State Historic Site (New Albany, Indiana) is most noted for its annual haunted house located in the mansion's carriage barn.

Farmington Historic Home, the Thomas Jefferson-designed home of the Speed family, visited by Abraham Lincoln.

The Filson Historical Society, a historical society and research library housed in the Ferguson Mansion, a Beaux-Arts style mansion built in 1906.

Fort Duffield, a Civil War fort.

Fort Knox, including the U.S. Bullion Depository and Patton Museum of Cavalry and Armor (Bullitt, Hardin and Meade Counties)

Fort Nelson Park, located in the same spot as the second on-shore fort in Kentucky.

Galt House, the famous hotel where Civil War generals planned campaigns, including William Tecumseh Sherman's Atlanta Campaign and March to the Sea.

Historic Locust Grove farm, home of George Rogers Clark and site of the homecoming of Lewis and Clark.

My Old Kentucky Home State Park (Bardstown), featuring the Federal Hill mansion (inspiration for Stephen Foster's ''My Old Kentucky Home'') and ''Stephen Foster - The Musical'' [12]

★ The Peterson-Dumesnil House [13]

Riverside, The Farnsley-Moremen Landing

Seelbach Hotel, the famous hotel written about by F. Scott Fitzgerald and frequently visited by Al Capone.

Spalding Hall (Bardstown)

Thomas Edison House

Union Station

United States Marine Hospital of Louisville

Vogue Theater, a movie theater in St. Matthews that closed in 1998, known for showing ''The Rocky Horror Picture Show'' for 25 years. Its sign is being refurbished as a historical landmark.

Waverly Hills Sanatorium

★ Whitehall House & Gardens

Whitney Young Birthplace and Museum

Museums, galleries and interpretive centers


Main articles: Museums of Louisville, Kentucky

''This list may contain repeats from other sections so that a complete list of Louisville area museums can be shown in one spot.''
Art

A giant baseball bat adorns the outside of Louisville Slugger Museum in downtown Louisville.


Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft

Louisville Glassworks

Speed Art Museum
Regional history

:''See also: History of Louisville, Kentucky and History of Kentucky''


Bullitt County History Museum [14] (Shepherdsville)

Carnegie Center for Art and History (New Albany, Indiana)

Corydon Capitol State Historic Site (Corydon, Indiana)

Falls of the Ohio State Park interpretive center, a museum covering the natural history related to findings in the nearby exposed Devonian fossil beds as well as the human history of the Louisville area.

The Filson Historical Society — features a museum and extensive historical collections

Historic Locust Grove Visitors Center, which includes a museum

★ Historic Middletown Museum [15]

Howard Steamboat Museum (Jeffersonville, Indiana)

Jeffersontown Historical Museum [16]

Jim Beam Outpost [17] (Clermont)

Kentucky Derby Museum [18]

Kentucky Railway Museum (New Haven)

Louisville Slugger Museum

My Old Kentucky Home State Park (Bardstown)

Oldham County History Center [19] (La Grange)

Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey (Bardstown)

Portland Museum [20]

Riverside, The Farnsley-Moremen Landing Visitors Center, which includes a museum

Thomas Edison House

Whitney Young Birthplace and Museum
More regional historical collections can be found at the Louisville Free Public Library and the University of Louisville.
U.S. and world history



Callahan Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind

Civil War Museum (Bardstown), including the Civil War Museum of the Western Theater, Pioneer Village, Women's Civil War Museum, War Memorial of Mid America and the Wildlife Museum

Frazier International History Museum — features war weaponry and related historical artifacts, especially focusing on British and U.S. conflicts

★ Joseph A. Callaway Archaeological Museum at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

John Hay Center

National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution — features a historical museum and a genealogical collection

Patton Museum of Cavalry and Armor (Fort Knox)
Other subjects


Louisville Museum Plaza (future)

Louisville Science Center — hands-on science museum featuring an IMAX theater

Muhammad Ali Center

Thomas Merton Center

Parks and other outdoor attractions


:''See also: City of Parks and List of parks in Louisville, Kentucky''
The Louisville Waterfront Park exhibits rolling hills, spacious lawns and walking paths on Louisville's waterfront in the downtown area

Louisville is home to many spacious city parks, several designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, as well as forested areas, trails and other outdoor attractions; distinctive examples include:

Beargrass Creek State Nature Preserve [21]

Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest (Bullitt County)

Blackacre State Nature Preserve

★ Bridges to the Past [22] (Radcliff)

Cave Hill Cemetery

Central Park

Cherokee Park

E. P. "Tom" Sawyer State Park

Falls of the Ohio National Wildlife Conservation Area (Clarksville, Indiana), which includes Falls of the Ohio State Park and features the oldest exposed Devonian fossil beds in the United States

★ Huber Orchard and Winery [23] (Starlight, Indiana)

Iroquois Park — features a locally popular amphitheater with shows produced by Music Theatre Louisville

Jefferson Memorial Forest, in southwest Louisville, the largest municipal urban forest in the United States

Levee Bike Trail

Louisville Waterfront Park — features annual Thunder Over Louisville fireworks and air show during the Kentucky Derby Festival

Louisville Zoo

Otter Creek Park (Brandenburg)

Patriots Peace Memorial

Riverfront Plaza/Belvedere, adjacent to Downtown Louisville and Louisville's wharf

Riverwalk Trail

Seneca Park

Shawnee Park

Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom

Squire Boone Caverns (Mauckport, Indiana)

★ Tioga Falls Hiking Trail [24] (Radcliff)

Zachary Taylor National Cemetery

Shows and performing arts


:''See also: Performing arts in Louisville, Kentucky, Theatres of Louisville and Theater in Kentucky''

''This list may contain repeats from other sections so that a complete list of Louisville area shows and performing arts venues and events can be shown in one spot.''

Actors Theatre, producing the Humana Festival of New American Plays, amongst many other productions

Caesars Indiana (Elizabeth, Indiana)

Derby Dinner Playhouse (Clarksville, Indiana)

Fourth Street Live!, a downtown entertainment and shopping complex

★ Gheens Science Hall and Rauch Planetarium (University of Louisville) [25]

IMAX theaters at the Louisville Science Center and Showcase Stonybrook Cinemas

The Kentucky Center

Kentucky Shakespeare Festival

The Kentucky Theater

The Louisville Palace

Music Theatre Louisville — productions at the Iroquois Amphitheater

Sports-related attractions and venues


:''See also: Sports in Louisville, Kentucky''


Churchill Downs thoroughbred racetrack and the Kentucky Derby Museum

Freedom Hall

Louisville Extreme Park

Louisville Slugger Field, baseball stadium that is home to the Louisville Bats

Louisville Slugger Museum

Muhammad Ali Center

Papa John's Cardinal Stadium

Valhalla Golf Club, designed by professional golfer Jack Nicklaus

External links



Greater Louisville Convention and Visitors Bureau

LouisvilleHotBytes restaurant reviews

Louisville Olmsted Parks Conservancy

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