Bowling Green in Warren County, Kentucky — The American South (East South Central)
St. Joseph's Historic District
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, September 24, 2011
1. St. Joseph's Historic District Marker
Inscription.
St. Joseph's Historic District. . , Railroad Workers' Neighborhood , Much of downtown Bowling Green west of Louisville and Nashville tracks owes its development to the railroad and to nearby industries. Most railroad workers stayed in downtown hotels prior to the mid-1880s when smaller and cheaper fame housing became available around St. Joseph Catholic Church. The houses they built in this neighborhood were typical of the popular styles of the period.
St. Joseph's Catholic Church , Many of the immigrant workers who lived in this area were Catholic. Although they cherished new opportunities, they clung to the traditions of the church. Reverend Joseph De Vries was sent to shepherd the Bowling Green mission in 1858. The congregation built a frame church which was replaced in 1862 by a larger masonry structure designed by Frank L. Kister, St. The church building was expanded in the late 1880's. Patterned after the cathedral at Cologne, Germany. St. Joseph's new church was dedicated in 1889. The St. Joseph Catholic School opened at this location in 1911 to provide education and religious training for children of parishioners.
The Portage Railroad Spurs Early Industries , The L&N offered Bowling Green important access to the country just prior to the Civil War, but the St. Joseph neighborhood had been exposed to rail service since 1837. A year earlier, the Bowling Green Portage Railway had been chartered by several Bowling Green businessmen. The Railway, which chiefly hauled freight, ran for one and one-half miles from the city wharf on the Barren River to downtown Bowling Green. When the L&N was completed in 1859, the railroad purchased this spur line. A number of important Bowling Green industries located along this early railway including a rock quarry, stone finishing plant, flour mill, a woolen mill, a planing mill, and a tool handle and furniture factory.
Railroad Workers' Neighborhood
Much of downtown Bowling Green west of Louisville & Nashville tracks owes its development to the railroad and to nearby industries. Most railroad workers stayed in downtown hotels prior to the mid-1880s when smaller and cheaper fame housing became available around St. Joseph Catholic Church. The houses they built in this neighborhood were typical of the popular styles of the period.
St. Joseph's Catholic Church Many of the immigrant workers who lived in this area were Catholic.
Although they cherished new opportunities, they clung to the traditions of the church. Reverend Joseph De Vries was sent to shepherd the Bowling Green mission in 1858. The congregation built a frame church which was replaced in 1862 by a larger masonry structure designed by Frank L. Kister, St. The church building was expanded in the late 1880's. Patterned after the cathedral at Cologne, Germany. St. Joseph's new church was dedicated in 1889. The St. Joseph Catholic School opened at this location in 1911 to provide education and religious training for children of parishioners.
The Portage Railroad Spurs Early Industries
The L&N offered Bowling Green important access to the country just prior to the Civil War, but the St. Joseph neighborhood had been exposed to rail service since 1837.
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A year earlier, the Bowling Green Portage Railway had been chartered by several Bowling Green businessmen. The Railway, which chiefly hauled freight, ran for one and one-half miles from the city wharf on the Barren River to downtown Bowling Green.
When the L&N was completed in 1859, the railroad purchased this spur line. A number of important Bowling Green industries located along this early railway including a rock quarry, stone finishing plant, flour mill, a woolen mill, a planing mill, and a tool handle and furniture factory.
Erected by Bowling Green Historic Preservation Board and Bowling Green Area Convention & Visitors Bureau.
Location. 37° 0.086′ N, 86° 26.829′ W. Marker is in Bowling Green, Kentucky, in Warren County. Marker is on Church Avenue. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 434 Church Avenue, Bowling Green KY 42101, United States of America. Touch for directions.
The Turner, Day Woolworth Axehandle Factory, above was just one of the industries employing neighborhood residents in the late 1800s.
Before the advent of supermarkets, residents relied on neighborhood grocery stores for fresh meats, produce, canned goods and staples.
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, September 24, 2011
5. Many of the railroad workers were immigrants from England, Ireland, Scotland and Germany
All photographs courtesy of the Kentucky Library and Museum WKU
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, September 24, 2011
6. St. Joseph's Catholic Church
Credits. This page was last revised on June 16, 2016. It was originally submitted on September 26, 2011, by Sandra Hughes Tidwell of Killen, Alabama, USA. This page has been viewed 528 times since then and 14 times this year. Photos:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. submitted on September 26, 2011, by Sandra Hughes Tidwell of Killen, Alabama, USA. • Bill Pfingsten was the editor who published this page.