This is an alphabetical list of historic houses in the U.S. state of Kentucky.

List of historic houses in Kentucky

Listing includes date of the start of construction:

  • Abner Gaines House (Walton) – Federal-style house; built 1814
  • Allenhurst (Scott County) – Greek Revival style mansion designed by Thomas Lewinski; built 1850
  • Audubon (Scott County) – Greek Revival style house; built 1829
  • Ashland (Lexington) – Estate of American statesmen Henry Clay; built c. 1806
  • Beeches (Frankfort) – Federal-style house; built 1800
  • Ben Johnson House (Bardstown) – Home of Lieutenant Governor William Johnson and his son Ben Johnson; built 1851
  • Berry Mansion (Frankfort) – Colonial Revival style house; built 1900
  • Boxhill (Glenview) – Georgian Revival style mansion; built c. 1906
  • Branham House (Georgetown) – Part of South Broadway Neighborhood District; built 1795
  • Bullock-Clifton House (Louisville) – Federal-style farmhouse. Oldest surviving wood-frame structure in Jefferson County; built 1834
  • Carneal House (Covington) – Oldest house in the city. Constructed by Thomas D. Carneal, one of Covington's founders; built 1815
  • Catlett House/Beechmoor (Catlettsburg) – Home of Alexander and Horatio Catlett, founders of Catlettsburg; built 1812
  • Colson House (Middlesboro) – Oldest remaining house in Bell County; built 1800
  • Conrad-Caldwell House (Louisville) – Richardsonian-style mansion located within the St. James-Belgravia Historic District; built 1893
  • Dillon Asher Cabin (Clay County, Kentucky); built 1799
  • Croghan Mansion (Louisville) – Home of George Rogers Clark and his sister, Lucy Clark Croghan. Remains the only residence still in existence west of the Appalachian Mountains to have sheltered Louis and Clark; built c. 1790
  • D. W. Griffith House (La Grange) – Home of movie director D. W. Griffith; built 1905
  • Daniel Carter Beard Boyhood Home (Covington) – Home of Daniel Carter Beard, a founder of Boy Scouts of America; built 1821
  • Dinsmore Homestead (Boone County) – Greek Revival and Federal-style home; built 1841
  • Elijah Herndon House (California) – Federal-style home; built 1818
  • Elkwood (Georgetown) – built 1810
  • Farmington (Louisville) – Home of James Speed, 27th U.S. Attorney General. Based on plans by Thomas Jefferson; built 1815
  • Federal Hill (Bardstown) – Home of senator John Rowan. Served as Stephen Foster's inspiration for the song My Old Kentucky Home; built 1795
  • Fielding Bradford House (Scott County)
  • Foster Sanford House, aka Lady Burlington (Burlington, Kentucky) – Grand Federal Style with Greek Revival c. 1831
  • Francis M. Stafford House (Paintsville) – Home of John Stafford, a founder of Paintsville. Oldest surviving house in Johnson County; built 1843
  • Fryer House (Butler) – Home of pioneer Walter Fryer; built 1811
  • Glen Willis (Frankfort) – built 1815
  • Hausgen House (Anchorage) – Colonial Revival style house; built c. 1890
  • Hawkins House (Georgetown) – Has served as a ropewalk and a dormitory for the Georgetown Female Seminary. Became a residential home in 1858; built c. 1790
  • Hikes-Hunsinger House (Louisville) – Federal-style residence; built 1824
  • Hunt-Morgan House (Lexington) – Home of John Wesley Hunt, the first millionaire west of the Allegheny Mountains and John Hunt Morgan. Birthplace of Thomas Hunt Morgan, the only Kentuckian to be awarded a Nobel Prize; built 1814
  • Hurricane Hall (Fayette County) – built 1794
  • Jacob Eversole Cabin (Perry County) – built ca 1789–1804, the oldest remaining building in Eastern Kentucky
  • James M. Lloyd House (Mount Washington) – Italianate and Late Victorian style residence; built c. 1880
  • Jesse R. Zeigler House (Frankfort) – Only building designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in Kentucky; built 1910
  • John Andrew Miller House (Scott County) – Home of pioneer John Andrew Miller. Served as a community shelter from Native American attacks; built 1785
  • Johnston-Jacobs House (Georgetown) – Greek Revival style brick home; built 1795
  • John Tanner House (Petersburg) – Oldest surviving home in Boone County; built 1810
  • Julius Blackburn House (Scott County) – Home to American Revolutionary War veteran Julius Blackburn; built 1799
  • Kentucky Governor's Mansion (Frankfort) – Beaux-Arts style residence for the Governor of Kentucky; built 1912
  • Landward House (Louisville) – Brick Italianate mansion; built 1871
  • Liberty Hall (Frankfort) – Home to many notable Americans including John Brown and Margaret Wise Brown; built 1796
  • Lincliff (Glenview) – Georgian Revival mansion; built 1911
  • Lloyd Tilghman House (Paducah) – Home of Lloyd Tilghman; built 1852
  • Longview Farm House (Adairville) – A Italianate and Greek Revival style home; built 1851
  • Martin Castle (Fayette County) – European-inspired castle built by Rex and Caroline Martin. Currently serves as a hotel; built 1969
  • Mary Todd Lincoln House (Lexington) – Home of former first lady, Mary Todd Lincoln; built c. 1803
  • Mayo Mansion (Ashland) – A Beaux-Arts architecture mansion built in 1917 by Alice Jane Mayo
  • Mayo Mansion (Paintsville) – Home of John C. C. Mayo; built 1905
  • McClure-Shelby House (Jessamine County) – Greek Revival and Federal style residence; built 1840
  • McConnell House (Greenup County) – Federal, Georgian and Greek Revival style residence; built in 1834
  • Milliken Memorial Community House (Elkton) – First privately donated community house in the United States; built 1928
  • Millspring (Georgetown) – Home of Elijah Craig, founder of Georgetown; built 1789
  • Moses Tyler Stone Cottage (Louisville) – Home of Moses Tyler; built 1795
  • Old Governor's Mansion (Frankfort) – Currently serves as the official residence of the Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky. Serves as the oldest executive residence still in use in the United States; built 1796
  • Orlando Brown House (Frankfort) – Greek Revival style home designed by Gideon Shryock, designer of the Kentucky State Capitol; built 1835
  • Payne-Desha House (Georgetown) – Home of Robert Payne, a war hero from the Battle of the Thames; built 1814
  • Peterson-Dumesnil House (Louisville) – Victorian-Italianate mansion; built c. 1869
  • Pope Villa (Lexington) – Home of former John Pope, designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, architect of the U.S. Capitol Building; built 1811
  • Presley Tyler Farm House (Louisville) – Georgian-Federalist Style House; built c. 1844
  • Farnsley-Moremen House (Louisville) – Brick I-house with a two-story Greek Revival portico; built 1837
  • Riverview at Hobson Grove (Bowling Green) – Italianate-style mansion; built c. 1850s
  • Rob Morris Home (La Grange) – Home of Rob Morris, the second and last poet laureate of Freemasonry and the founder of the Order of the Eastern Star.
  • Ronald-Brennan House (Louisville) – Italianate-style townhouse; built 1868
  • Rose Hill (Louisville) – Antebellum-style residence; built 1852
  • Samuel May House (Prestonsburg) – Home of former state senator and representative, Samuel May, built 1816
  • Shropshire House (Georgetown) – Home of Confederate governor of Kentucky, George W. Johnson; built 1814
  • Thomas Edison House (Louisville) – Home of Thomas Edison from 1866 to 1867; built c. 1850s
  • Thomas Huey Farm (Big Bone) – Gothic Revival style home; built 1865
  • Ward Hall (Georgetown) – Home of Junius and Matilda Viley Ward, built circa 1857
  • Waveland (Danville) – Home of Willis Green, built 1797
  • White Hall (Richmond) – Home of Cassius Marcellus Clay, cousin of Henry Clay; built 1799
  • Wickland (Bardstown) – Home of two governors of Kentucky and one Governor of Louisiana; built 1813
  • Wickland (Shelbyville) – Classical Revival mansion; built 1901
  • Whitney Young Birthplace and Museum (Shelby County) – Birthplace of Whitney Young, an American civil rights leader; built 1921
  • William Forst House (Russellville) – Site at which the Confederate government of Kentucky was formed; built 1820
  • William Hickman House (Winchester, Kentucky) – Federal-style home; built 1814
  • Wooldridge-Rose House (Pewee Valley) – Colonial Revival style residence; built 1905
  • Zachary Taylor House (Louisville) – Boyhood home of 12th President, Zachary Taylor; built 1790

See also

  • List of National Historic Landmarks in Kentucky
  • List of Registered Historic Places in Kentucky
  • Oldest buildings in the United States

References

External links

  • The Castle Post
  • Liberty Hall National Historic Site
  • Ashland: The Henry Clay Estate
  • Historic Locust Grove
  • Riverside, Farnsley-Moremen Landing

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