Usuario: Bedford


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El portal de Bedford

El es un pingüino. Nacido en las tierras altas de Louisville hace cuatro décadas. El está solo; no hay otros como él. Siempre bueno, nunca malo. Durante décadas ha luchado contra las fuerzas de la estupidez, siendo la lectura su único refugio. No puede morir, a menos que te lleves sus pingüinos y con ellos su poder. Al final, sólo puede haber uno. Él es Bedford, el Falklander.

Portales destacados : Portal: Louisville , Portal: Kentucky , Portal: Indianápolis

Buenos artículos : Basil W. Duke , Big Four Bridge , Thomas Hines , Indiana en la Guerra Civil Estadounidense , Historia de la esclavitud en Indiana , Música de la Guerra Civil Estadounidense , Indianápolis en la Guerra Civil Estadounidense , Sitio Histórico Nacional Eisenhower , Antiguo Histórico de Jeffersonville Distrito , Bosque Estatal de Clark , Parque Histórico Nacional George Rogers Clark , Australia y la Guerra Civil Americana , Museo del Ferrocarril de Kentucky , Sitio Histórico Nacional Fort Scott , Vic Aldridgey el parque estatal My Old Kentucky Home .

" Cuando un verdadero genio aparece en el mundo, es posible que lo conozca por este signo, que los tontos están todos en confederación contra él " . ( Pensamientos sobre varios temas, moral y divertidos ) - Jonathan Swift


Su majestad, es un gran placer para mí otorgar estas joyas de la triple corona imperial a Bedford por sus contribuciones en las áreas de WP: DYK , WP: GA y WP: FC . Cirt ( charla ) 02:51, 15 de febrero de 2009 (UTC)
Coordinador del proyecto
Wikiproyecto de historia militar,
octubre de 2008 - marzo de 2009

Barnstars y premios

Este editor es un
editor senior II
y tiene derecho a mostrar esta estrella de editor de rodio
.
Por orden de los coordinadores del WikiProject de historia militar, se le otorga el WikiChevrons con hojas de roble en reconocimiento a la contribución sobresaliente que ha hecho a la organización del proyecto al ir más allá del llamado del deber al etiquetar, evaluar y clasificar un gran cantidad de artículos durante la campaña de evaluación de 2007. - R OGER  D Avies  hablar 11:55, el 29 de enero de 2008 (UTC)
  • The Original Barnstar
    Por todo su excelente trabajo al trabajar en artículos relacionados con Louisville, incluida la toma de fotos para usar en algunos de ellos. Su dedicación a este proyecto y a Wikipedia en general ha sido inspiradora. ¡Salud! ¡Stevie es el hombre! Charla • Trabajo 01:28, 16 de agosto de 2006 (UTC)

  • The Original Barnstar
    To Bedford, por su trabajo en los portales de Wikipedia . Louisville y Kentucky probablemente estén inspirando a los visitantes, así como a otros editores del portal. Gracias. Susanlesch ( charla ) 05:00, 13 de febrero de 2008 (UTC)

  • The Original Barnstar
    Usted evaluó más de 1000 artículos en la campaña de evaluación de la primavera de 2008 . ¡¡Maravilloso!! Solar -Poseidon 16:19, 6 de julio de 2008 (UTC)

  • The Bluegrass Barnstar
    Por todo el gran trabajo que ha hecho con los artículos de Louisville y Kentucky, y por un gran comienzo para Portal: Louisville , por la presente premio a una de las estrellas de cine más recientes de Wikipedia. ¡He aquí el Bluegrass Barnstar ! Disfrutar. :)

  • The Bluegrass Barnstar
    En honor a su arduo trabajo para que Portal: Louisville ascendiera al estado de Portal destacado, le otorgo el Bluegrass Barnstar. Su trabajo en Portal: Kentucky también es conocido y apreciado. Mantener el buen trabajo. Acdixon ( charla contribuciones recuento ) 15:03, 9 de febrero de 2008 (UTC)

  • The Bluegrass Barnstar
    Por sus valientes y exitosos esfuerzos para crear portales destacados de Portal: Louisville y Portal: Kentucky . ¡Gran trabajo! ¡Stevie es el hombre! Charla • Trabajo 18:32, 10 de marzo de 2008 (UTC)

  • Barnstar del colaborador incansable
    Por su excelente trabajo en 2000 artículos en Tag & Assess 2007 , por orden de los coordinadores, por la presente les presento este barnstar del colaborador incansable . - R OGER  D Avies  charla 15:30, el 19 de diciembre de 2007 (UTC)

  • El colaborador incansable Barnstar
    Otorgado a Bedford por su arduo trabajo continuo en WP: MILHIST y T: DYK . Blnguyen ( voto en la encuesta fotográfica ) 02:16, 28 de febrero de 2008 (UTC)

  • The Working Man's Barnstar
    Por su excelente trabajo en 3000 artículos en Tag & Assess 2007 , por orden de los coordinadores, por la presente les presento este Working Man's barnstar . - R OGER  D Avies  charla 15:30, el 19 de diciembre de 2007 (UTC)

  • The Barnstar of Diligence
    Por su excelente trabajo en 4000 artículos en Tag & Assess 2007 , por orden de los coordinadores, por la presente les presento este Barnstar of Diligence . - R OGER  D Avies  charla 15:30, el 19 de diciembre de 2007 (UTC)

  • The Epic Barnstar
    Por su notable trabajo en 5000 artículos en Tag & Assess 2007 , por orden de los coordinadores, por la presente les presento este Barnstar of Diligence . - R OGER  D Avies  charla 23:52, 1 de enero de 2008 (UTC)

  • Barnstar del fotógrafo
    Otorgado por el incansable esfuerzo de colocar imágenes en wikipedia. Probablemente la mitad de las imágenes de Wikiproject Louisville fueron tomadas por Bedford. Sigan con las buenas habilidades fotográficas. Jahnx ( charla ) 10:41, 5 de marzo de 2008 (UTC)

  • The Special Barnstar
    Por la presente le otorgo The Special Barnstar por sus grandes contribuciones a la primera mitad de la campaña de evaluación de la primavera de 2008 de WikiProject Biography. Sigue haciéndolo bien en la segunda mitad. :) Solar -Poseidon 22:17, 28 de abril de 2008 (UTC)

  • El Indiana Barnstar
    Por la presente le doy a usted, Bedford, el Indiana Barnstar por todas sus maravillosas contribuciones al WikiProject Indiana, y en particular por su ayuda en Indiana en la Guerra Civil Americana . ¡Buen trabajo! Charles Edward 18:55, 19 de junio de 2008 (UTC)

  • The Biography Barnstar
    Por sus valientes esfuerzos en la campaña Primavera 2008 de Biography WikiProject . ¡¡Muchas gracias!! Wildhartlivie ( charla ) 22:49, 6 de julio de 2008 (UTC)

  • The Resilient Barnstar
    Bueno, tienes al menos el apoyo de una persona :) Gracias por todo el trabajo que has hecho y por mantenerte firme frente a críticas increíblemente estúpidas. naerii 17:47, 28 de julio de 2008 (UTC)

  • El WikiProject Barnstar
    Para su ayuda con la mejora de las futuras unidades Milhist en el taller Tag & Assess 2008 , acepte este WikiProject Barnstar. - R OGER  D Avies  hablar 07:31 30 de agosto de 2008 (UTC)

  • La página principal Barnstar
    He visto un DYK cuatro por uno y un DYK cinco por uno, pero nunca un DYK seis por uno ... hasta ahora. Por sus contribuciones excepcionales en muchos artículos y por agregar un gancho verdaderamente único a ¿Sabía usted? , Por la presente le otorgo el Barnstar de la página principal (porque por alguna razón no puedo encontrar un Barnstar DYK) . El suyo se pliega ( t / a / c ) 22:12, 13 de febrero de 2009 (UTC)

Contribuciones

He comenzado las siguientes páginas:

Indiana

Condado de Clark

Jeff Township
  1. 8664.org
  2. Arctic Springs, Indiana
  3. Campamento Joe Holt
  4. Escuela secundaria superior de Clarksville
  5. Reloj Colgate (Indiana)
  6. Teatro de la cena de Derby
  7. Cataratas del parque estatal de Ohio
  8. Centro comercial Green Tree
  9. Casa Grisamore
  10. Henry French House
  11. Museo Howard Steamboat
  12. Jeffboat
  13. Hospital General de Jefferson
  14. Depósito de intendencia de Jeffersonville
  15. Antiguo sitio de Clarksville
  16. Viejo distrito histórico de Jeffersonville
  17. Port Fulton, Indiana
  18. Centro comercial River Falls
  19. Confitería de Schimpff
  20. Casa de carga de Spring Street
Resto de Clark
  1. Granja Abbott-Holloway
  2. Casa de Benjamin Ferguson
  3. Belén, Indiana
  4. Escuela Normal Borden
  5. Granja Bottorff-McCulloch
  6. Escuela secundaria de Charlestown (Indiana)
  7. Parque estatal de Charlestown
  8. Aeropuerto Regional de Clark
  9. Bosque estatal de Clark
  10. Catorce Mile Creek
  11. Planta de municiones del ejército de Indiana
  12. John Work House and Mill Site
  13. Sitio histórico estatal Pigeon Roost
  14. Rose Island (parque de atracciones)
  15. Springville, Indiana
  16. Casa de Thomas Downs
  17. Casa Watson

Condado de Floyd

  1. Centro Carnegie de Arte e Historia
  2. Distrito histórico Cedar Bough Place
  3. Distrito histórico de DePauw Avenue
  4. Culbertson, William
  5. Culbertson Mansion State Historic Site
  6. Division Street School
  7. East Spring Street Historic District
  8. Mansion Row Historic District
  9. New Albanian Brewing Company
  10. New Albany Downtown Historic District
  11. Old Pike Inn
  12. Robert E. Lee (steamboat)
  13. Scribner House
  14. Shelby Place Historic District
  15. Sweet Gum Stable
  16. Tumbleweed Southwest Grill
  17. Woodbine
  18. Yenowine-Nichols-Collins House‎

State Parks:

  1. Chain O' Lakes State Park
  2. Clifty Falls State Park
  3. Fort Harrison State Park
  4. Harmonie State Park
  5. Lincoln State Park
  6. Muscatatuck County Park
  7. O'Bannon Woods State Park
  8. Ouabache State Park
  9. Shades State Park
  10. Shakamak State Park
  11. Tippecanoe River State Park
  12. Versailles State Park
  13. Whitewater Memorial State Park
  • Template:Indianastateparks

Indianapolis

  1. Battle of Pogue's Run
  2. Camp Morton
  3. Jacob Piatt Dunn
  4. History of the Irish in Indianapolis
  5. Indiana Central Canal
  6. Indiana State Library and Historical Building‎
  7. Indiana World War Memorial Plaza
  8. Indianapolis Fire Department
  9. Indianapolis in the American Civil War
  10. James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home
  11. Lieber, Richard
  12. List of attractions and events in Indianapolis
  13. Lockerbie Square Historic District
  14. Military Park (Indianapolis)
  15. North Irvington Gardens Historic District
  16. Pogue's Run
  17. Francis A. Shoup
  18. Union Station (Indianapolis)
  19. Washington Park Historic District (Indianapolis)
  20. White River Park State Games
  • Portal:Indianapolis

Miscellaneous Indiana

  1. Beck's Mill
  2. Bell Ford Bridge
  3. Corydon Historic District
  4. Crawford-Gilpin House
  5. DeForest Skinner House
  6. Dr. Nelson Wilson House‎
  7. Friendship, Indiana
  8. Grand Lodge of Indiana‎
  9. Hardy Lake
  10. History of slavery in Indiana
  11. Huddleston Farmhouse
  12. Indiana's 9th congressional district
  13. Indiana in the American Civil War
  14. Indiana in the War of 1812
  15. Indiana Rangers
  16. Indiana Register of Historic Sites and Structures
  17. Interstate 65 in Indiana
  18. John Hay Center
  19. Kintner House Hotel
  20. Kintner-McGrain House
  21. Kintner-Withers House
  22. Lusk Home and Mill Site
  23. Madison Historic District
  24. Morgan-Monroe State Forest‎
  25. Muscatatuck National Wildlife Refuge
  26. Muscatatuck River
  27. New Harmony's Atheneum
  28. New Harmony Historic District
  29. Newburgh Raid
  30. Parke County Covered Bridges
  31. Paul Dresser Birthplace‎
  32. Potts Creek Rockshelter Archeological Site
  33. Pryor Brock Farmstead
  34. Rochester Downtown Historic District
  35. Salem Downtown Historic District
  36. Schofield House
  37. Scott County Home
  38. Scottish Rite Cathedral (Indianapolis, Indiana)
  39. Scottsburg Courthouse Square Historic District
  40. Scottsburg Depot
  41. Southern Indiana Railroad Freighthouse
  42. Stream Cliff Farm
  43. Swan's Landing Archeological Site
  44. Terminal Arcade‎
  45. Tippecanoe Twp. District No. 3 Schoolhouse and Cemetery
  46. Versailles School and Tyson Auditorium
  47. Vigo, Francis
  48. Yellowwood State Forest
  • Template:Indiana in the Civil War
  • Template:Indiana in the War of 1812
  • Template:Parkecountycoveredbridges

Kentucky

Louisville

  1. 32nd Indiana Monument
  2. American Civil War fortifications in Louisville
  3. Benjamin Anderson (soldier)
  4. Confederate Martyrs Monument in Jeffersontown
  5. Eleven Jones Cave
  6. Great Steamboat Race
  7. Historic Firehouses of Louisville
  8. History of the French in Louisville
  9. History of the Germans in Louisville
  10. History of the Irish in Louisville
  11. John B. Castleman Monument
  12. Tom Jurich
  13. Kentucky Irish American
  14. Little Loomhouse
  15. Louisville and Nashville Railroad Office Building
  16. Louisville Legion
  17. Louisville Metro Hall
  18. Louisville Stoneware
  19. Louisville Water Tower
  20. Lynn's Paradise Cafe
  21. Mann's Lick
  22. Masonic Widows and Orphans Home
  23. Nicola Marschall
  24. Mary Millicent Miller
  25. Mayor Andrew Broaddus
  26. Media of Louisville, Kentucky
  27. Naval Ordnance Station Louisville
  28. Old Bank of Louisville‎
  29. St. James-Belgravia Historic District
  30. St. Paul's German Evangelical Church
  31. Senning's Park
  32. Southern Bivouac
  33. Richard Taylor (colonel)
  34. Thorntons Inc.‎
  35. Union Monument in Louisville
  36. United States Marine Hospital of Louisville
  37. Von Allmen Dairy Farm House
  • Portal:Louisville
  • Template:Louisville
  • Template:Louisville ancestry
  • Template:Louisvillemalls

War of Northern Aggression (KY)

  1. Battle of Dutton's Hill Monument
  2. Battle of Tebb's Bend Monument
  3. Ben Johnson House
  4. Beriah Magoffin Monument
  5. Bourbon County Confederate Monument
  6. James Carson Breckinridge
  7. Camp Beauregard Memorial in Water Valley
  8. Camp Nelson Civil War Heritage Park
  9. Captain Andrew Offutt Monument
  10. Civil War Museum (Bardstown)
  11. Colonel Robert A. Smith Monument
  12. Colored Soldiers Monument in Frankfort
  13. Confederate Mass Grave Monument in Somerset
  14. Confederate Memorial Fountain in Hopkinsville
  15. Confederate Memorial Gates in Mayfield
  16. Confederate Memorial Gateway in Hickman‎
  17. Confederate Memorial in Fulton‎
  18. Confederate Memorial in Mayfield
  19. Confederate Memorial in Nicholasville
  20. Confederate Monument at Crab Orchard
  21. Confederate Monument in Augusta
  22. Confederate Monument in Cynthiana
  23. Confederate Monument in Danville
  24. Confederate Monument in Georgetown
  25. Confederate Monument in Glasgow
  26. Confederate Monument in Harrodsburg
  27. Confederate Monument in Owensboro
  28. Confederate Monument in Owingsville
  29. Confederate Monument in Paducah
  30. Confederate Monument in Perryville‎
  31. Confederate Monument in Russellville
  32. Confederate Monument in Versailles
  33. Confederate Monument of Bardstown
  34. Confederate Monument of Bowling Green
  35. Confederate Monument of Morganfield
  36. Confederate Monument of Mt. Sterling
  37. Confederate Soldiers Martyrs Monument in Eminence
  38. Confederate Soldier Monument in Caldwell
  39. Confederate Soldier Monument in Lexington
  40. Confederate-Union Veterans' Monument in Morgantown
  41. Fort DeWolf
  42. Fort Duffield
  43. GAR Monument in Covington
  44. General Felix K. Zollicoffer Monument
  45. Hines, Thomas
  46. Hines House
  47. John C. Breckinridge Memorial
  48. John Hunt Morgan Memorial
  49. Ladies' Confederate Memorial
  50. Latham Confederate Monument
  51. Lexington in the American Civil War
  52. List of Civil War Monuments of Kentucky MPS
  53. Lloyd Tilghman House
  54. Lloyd Tilghman Memorial
  55. Martyrs Monument in Midway
  56. New Haven Battlefield Site
  57. Pewee Valley Confederate Cemetery‎
  58. Thompson and Powell Martyrs Monument
  59. Union Monument in Perryville‎
  60. Union Monument in Vanceburg
  61. Unknown Confederate Dead Monument in Perryville‎
  62. Unknown Confederate Soldier Monument in Horse Cave
  63. Veteran's Monument in Covington‎
  64. William F. Perry Monument
  65. William Forst House

Nelson County

  1. Bardstown Historic District
  2. Cobblestone Path
  3. Coxs Creek, Kentucky
  4. Frankfort and Cincinnati Model 55 Rail Car‎
  5. Kentucky State Route 509
  6. L & N Steam Locomotive No. 152
  7. Louisville and Nashville Combine Car Number 665
  8. Mt. Broderick Pullman Car
  9. My Old Kentucky Home State Park
  10. Nelson County Jail‎
  11. New Sherwood Hotel
  12. Old L & N Station
  13. Old Talbott Tavern
  14. Rooster Run
  15. Spalding Hall
  16. Wickland

Others

  1. Abraham Lincoln Statue
  2. Bivouac of the Dead
  3. Bullitt's Lick
  4. Cherokee State Park (Kentucky)
  5. Cleveland House
  6. D. W. Griffith House
  7. Daniel Carter Beard Boyhood Home
  8. Doe Run Inn
  9. Downtown Greensburg Historic District (Kentucky)
  10. Frankfort and Cincinnati Railroad
  11. Ellsworth, George
  12. Grand Lodge of Kentucky
  13. Great Saltpetre Cave
  14. Hopkinsville Commercial Historic District
  15. Hopkinsville L & N Railroad Depot
  16. The Hunters of Kentucky‎
  17. Ice House on Little Muddy Creek
  18. Kentucky in the War of 1812
  19. Knob Creek Farm
  20. Licking Riverside Historic District
  21. List of Kentucky state parks
  22. Livermore Bridge
  23. Louisville and Nashville Railroad Station
  24. Masonic University‎
  25. Midway Historic District
  26. Mordecai Lincoln House
  27. Nancy Lincoln Inn
  28. Paducah Freight House
  29. Riverside Drive Historic District
  30. Rob Morris Home
  31. Rowan County War
  32. Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665
  33. Russellville Historic District
  34. Union County Courthouse
  35. Union Station (Owensboro)
  36. U.S. Route 31E in Kentucky
  37. Wickland (Shelbyville)
  38. Wooldridge Monuments
  39. Wooldridge-Rose House
  • Portal:Kentucky
  • Template:Kentucky in the War of 1812

War of Northern Aggression

  1. Alabama Confederate Soldiers Home
  2. Australia and the American Civil War
  3. Bahamas in the American Civil War
  4. Beefsteak Raid
  5. Cherokee in the American Civil War
  6. Christmas in the American Civil War
  7. Friend to Friend Masonic Memorial
  8. Ghosts of the American Civil War
  9. Idaho in the American Civil War‎
  10. Jim Limber‎
  11. Montana in the American Civil War‎
  12. Music of the American Civil War‎
  13. Nebraska in the American Civil War
  14. Nevada during the War of Secession
  15. Oklahoma in the American Civil War
  16. Persimmon regiment
  17. Prussia in the American Civil War
  18. Salt in the American Civil War
  19. Sex in the American Civil War‎
  20. St. Augustine in the American Civil War‎
  • Template:ACW Barnstar
  • Template:ACW Barnstar 2
  • Template:ACW Barnstar 3
  • Template:ACW Barnstar 4
  • Template:Foreign countries in the American Civil War
  • Template:Union states in the American Civil War

Miscellaneous

  1. 10th Edition (Magic: The Gathering)
  2. Alara Reborn
  3. Andrew Johnson National Cemetery
  4. The Bold Canadian
  5. Chee Kufta
  6. Crenshaw, my actual 100th article
  7. Guardians of the Galaxy
  8. Hayes, Alfred
  9. History of slavery in Alaska
  10. International Temple
  11. Marianna Fault
  12. Edición Masters
  13. Marea matinal
  14. Inundación del río Ohio de 1937
  15. Sitio de Owl's Bend
  16. Ferrocarril Queen and Crescent
  17. Shadowmoor
  18. Fragmentos de Alara
  19. Sligh, un idiota lo borró; volverá algún día.
  20. El gran oso raíz
  21. La brujería del tiro con arco
  22. Espiral de tiempo
  23. Verdadero20
  24. Mechas y más
  25. Zendikar
  26. George Julian Zolnay
  • Portal: Cincinnati
  • Portal: masonería
  • Plantilla: Georgia Barnstar
  • Plantilla: Grandes Logias en los Estados Unidos
  • Plantilla: Guerra de 1812

Y han tenido una gran influencia en las siguientes páginas.

Indiana

  • Vic Aldridge
  • Greg Ballard (alcalde)
  • Puente de los Cuatro Grandes
  • Jesse D. Bright
  • Buffalo Trace (camino)
  • Caesars Indiana
  • Clarksville, Indiana
  • Devil's Backbone (formación rocosa)
  • Conservatorio Garfield Park y jardines hundidos
  • Parque histórico nacional George Rogers Clark
  • Harrison Spring
  • Bosque Nacional Hoosier
  • Sociedad Histórica de Indiana
  • Museo de Historia Médica de Indiana
  • Jeffersonville, Indiana
  • Mansión Lanier
  • Casa del ataúd de Levi
  • Lista de parques estatales de Indiana
  • Jardines de Lockefield
  • Michigan Road
  • Lambdin P. Milligan
  • Puente Milton-Madison
  • Museo y lugar de nacimiento de Riley
  • Parque estatal Spring Mill
  • Pastel de azucar
  • Iglesia del reloj de la ciudad

Kentucky

  • Basil W. Duke
  • Casa de Hampton-Preston
  • John Milton Elliott
  • Parque Kenlake State Resort
  • Festival del Borbón de Kentucky
  • Museo del Ferrocarril de Kentucky
  • Cementerio de Lexington
  • Monumento Confederado de Louisville
  • Theodore O'Hara
  • Depósito del ferrocarril Stanford L&N
  • Parque estatal Taylorsville Lake
  • Iglesia Episcopal de la Trinidad (Covington, Kentucky)
  • Casa Zachary Taylor
  • Cementerio Nacional Zachary Taylor

Probabilidades y finales

  • Sitio histórico nacional Andrew Johnson
  • Jersey de recompensa
  • Mansión Burt-Stark
  • Cheonhado
  • Confederados en el ático
  • Sitio histórico nacional de Eisenhower
  • Eugene V.Debs Inicio
  • Primera Iglesia Bautista (Columbia, Carolina del Sur)
  • Sitio histórico nacional de Fort Scott
  • Parque estatal Jenny Wiley
  • Pequeña casa blanca
  • Natchez (barco)
  • Carta de difamación de Reid
  • Cuna de costillas
  • Parque estatal Sailor's Creek Battlefield
  • Distrito histórico de la ciudad de Virginia
  • Distrito histórico de Warm Springs
  • Sitio histórico nacional William Howard Taft
  • Portal: Guerra de 1812

y tener estas más de 200 contribuciones DYK

Indiana DYK

  • ... que en el caso Ex parte Milligan , las condenas de William A. Bowles , Harrison H. Dodd y Lambdin P. Milligan (en la foto) fueron descartadas? 5 de mayo de 2009
  • ... que la mitad de los pioneros que se establecieron en el noroeste de Indiana utilizaron Michigan Road ? 18 de febrero de 2009
  • ... ese Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial (en la foto) marca el lugar donde vivió Abraham Lincoln en Indiana , y donde murió su hermana y su madre biológica ? 12 de febrero de 2009
  • ... que el puente Milton-Madison , que lleva la ruta 421 de los Estados Unidos a través del río Ohio , se considera estructuralmente pobre e incapaz de manejar el tráfico de camiones moderno? 6 de febrero de 2009
  • ... que los Indiana Rangers inspiraron la creación de los Texas Rangers más famosos ? 26 de enero de 2009
  • ... que para defender Indiana durante la Guerra de 1812 , el gobernador Harrison (en la foto) tuvo que reclutar milicias de Kentucky ya que los de Indiana no se unirían al ejército? 23 de enero de 2009
  • ... que a diferencia de la mayoría de las casas históricas, el lugar de nacimiento de Paul Dresser (en la foto) en Terre Haute, Indiana , EE . UU. , refleja el mobiliario de una familia de clase trabajadora, no la de las personas acomodadas? 17 de enero de 2009
  • ... ese pastel de crema de azúcar se considera que se convertirá en el pastel oficial del estado de Indiana , EE. UU.? 13 de enero de 2009
  • ... que la estación de energía que alimenta el terminal de Arcade 's Interurbans 1907-1940 tuvo una de 999 años de arrendamiento ? 6 de enero de 2009
  • ... que Abbott-Holloway Farm tiene dos de los únicos cuatro edificios anteriores a 1840 en Bethlehem, Indiana , que no fueron destruidos por un incendio o un tornado? 28 de diciembre de 2008
  • ... que dos tercios de los pioneros que llegaron a Indiana desde Louisville utilizaron Buffalo Trace para asentar el estado? 8 de septiembre de 2008
  • ... that the Bell Ford Bridge was the last Post Truss covered bridge to still stand, collapsing in January 2006? August 29, 2008
  • ... that the Grand Lodge of Indiana was started at the Schofield House of Madison, Indiana's historic district on January 13, 1818? July 31, 2008
  • ... that Stream Cliff Farm is the oldest herb farm in Indiana? July 29, 2008
  • ... that the Crawford-Gilpin House is alleged to have once changed owners due to being lost as a wager in a poker game? July 26, 2008
  • ... that the residents of Tippecanoe, Indiana in 1860 built a new school right next to a preexisting cemetery? July 22, 2008
  • ... that an Indianapolis architect was sent to Château de Malmaison to replicate a copy of it in Indianapolis' Washington Park neighborhood? July 18, 2008
  • ... that the base of the main memorial (pictured) at George Rogers Clark National Historical Park, designed by Frederic Charles Hirons, has a dirt floor? July 17, 2008
  • ... that an owner of the DeForest Skinner House was once the youngest railroad director in the United States? July 16, 2008
  • ... that Harold's Steer-In in Indianapolis' North Irvington Gardens Historic District was the site of a 2005 MasterCard commercial featuring quarterback Peyton Manning? July 16, 2008
  • ... that the Dr. Nelson Wilson House is unusual for having Eastlake stickwork done in brick instead of wood? July 10, 2008
  • ... that construction of the courthouse (pictured) of the Rochester Downtown Historic District may have spurred nearby buildings to have faux stones cemented upon them? July 10, 2008
  • ... that the first fire department in Indianapolis was established seventeen months after the first fire in the city? July 8, 2008
  • ... that Pryor Brock Farmstead is the best representation of a farmstead, with Italianate buildings, around Zionsville, Indiana? July 6, 2008
  • ... that Vic Aldridge, nicknamed the "Hoosier Schoolmaster", had the worst seventh game start for a pitcher in World Series history? July 5, 2008
  • ... that despite holding "front-porch" speeches at his house (pictured) during his presidential campaign in 1888, Benjamin Harrison's home would not have a front porch until 1896? June 21, 2008
  • ... that five thousand people went to Eugene V. Debs' home to attend his funeral sermon in 1926? June 19, 2008
  • ... that Indiana's Morgan-Monroe State Forest features gold panning? June 8, 2008
  • ... that large sandstone boulders rest atop trees in Yellowwood State Forest (example pictured) and no one knows how they got there? June 6, 2008
  • ... that Hardy Lake is Indiana's smallest reservoir at 741 acres of surface area? June 5, 2008
  • ... that the state of Indiana in 1972 set aside 6,000 acres (2,400 ha) of Hoosier National Forest just for the purpose of reintroducing wild turkey to the Hoosier state? May 31, 2008
  • ... that Indiana's Muscatatuck State Park was the first Indiana state park to need no additional financial assistance, even through it never charged admission? May 27, 2008
  • ... that the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service paid for the establishment of Muscatatuck National Wildlife Refuge, along the Muscatatuck River, by selling waterfowl stamps? May 22, 2008
  • ... that a Confederate scouting party entered Indiana in June 1863 dressed as an Union army patrol searching for deserters? May 22, 2008
  • ... that Indiana's state parks were initially designed to preserve their natural state, but gradually began to include recreational activities? May 20, 2008
  • ... that DePauw Avenue Historic District, New Albany, Indiana, was once the summer estate of the man who owned two thirds of the plate glass business of the United States? May 14, 2008
  • ... that 37 people were killed during construction of the Big Four Bridge (pictured) connecting Louisville, Kentucky to Jeffersonville, Indiana across the Ohio River?
  • ...that two US Presidents, Thomas Jefferson and William Henry Harrison, are responsible for the layout of the Old Jeffersonville Historic District? April 23, 2008
  • ...that Shelby Place Historic District was begun due to the woodworking industries that revitalized New Albany, Indiana? April 10, 2008
  • ...that New Albany, Indiana's Cedar Bough Place is the only "private street" in a city near Louisville, Kentucky? April 9, 2008
  • ....that attractions at Indianapolis, Indiana's White City Amusement Park included baby incubators and a Mount Vesuvius reenactment?
  • ...that 150 Irish from Indianapolis participated in the Fenian raids, an attempt to invade Canada from Buffalo, New York in 1866? March 17, 2008
  • ...that the Indiana state constitution specifically states that Indianapolis' Military Park can never be sold? March 12, 2008
  • ...that it took 38 years to build the Indiana World War Memorial (pictured), which deteriorated during its building?
  • ...that the Murat Centre is the only Shrine temple with a French name, and is the largest Shrine temple in North America?
  • ...that the Zouave Guards of Indianapolis volunteered to fight before the American Civil War broke out, but their leader Francis A. Shoup (pictured) switched sides and joined the Confederates before the war began?March 6, 2008
  • ...that a blue line marks where Pogue's Run once ran through downtown Indianapolis? February 29, 2008
  • ...that the Indiana Medical History Museum is the oldest surviving pathology laboratory in the U.S.? February 28, 2008
  • ...that Indiana's White River Park were the first state games to feature regional qualifiers instead of tryouts? February 27, 2008
  • ...that the Battle of Pogue's Run was done to prevent Democrats from rising against the American Civil War in Indiana? February 25, 2008
  • ...that four Indiana counties gave land to create Whitewater Memorial State Park as a memorial to fallen American soldiers of World War II? February 24, 2008
  • ...that Clark State Forest was Indiana's largest Civilian Conservation Corps cantonment? February 23, 2008
  • ...that Caesars Indiana's The Glory of Rome is the largest riverboat in North America, and the largest riverboat casino in the world?
  • ...that the only New Deal housing project with spacious, wide-open areas was Lockefield Gardens? February 7, 2008
  • ...that visitors to James Whitcomb Riley's boyhood home inspired Riley to write many of his poems, including Little Orphant Annie? February 6, 2008
  • ...that the construction of the James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home was paid for by the owner's contract to supply hardtack to Union troops in the American Civil War? February 5, 2008
  • ...that famed Hoosier poet James Whitcomb Riley would regularly supply the children of the Lockerbie Square with candy on his walks? February 4, 2008
  • ...that Indiana state governor Frank O'Bannon stayed at Fort Harrison State Park while the governor's mansion was being made handicapped-accessible? February 3, 2008
  • ...that residents of Indianapolis came to the aid of Confederate prisoners of war at Camp Morton, providing food, clothing, and nursing? February 2, 2008
  • ...that Jacob Piatt Dunn in 1886 wrote the first scholarly history concerning the Indian Wars? February 2, 2008
  • ...that Indianapolis' Garfield Park Conservatory was the first glass and welded-aluminum conservatory in the United States? February 2, 2008
  • ...that the Indiana Historical Society is the oldest state historical society west of the Allegheny Mountains? January 31, 2008
  • ...that Adam R. Johnson's Newburgh Raid, using two stovepipes, charred wood, a broken wagon, and only 27 men, resulted in the first capture of a northern town in the American Civil War? January 26, 2008
  • ...that no commercial boat has beaten the steamboat Robert E. Lee's 1870 speed record between New Orleans and St. Louis of 90 hours and 14 minutes to this day? January 12, 2008
  • ...that during the American Civil War, Indiana, a Northern state, saw one township secede from the Union? January 9, 2008
  • ...that Indianapolis's Scottish Rite Cathedral is the largest building dedicated to Freemasonry in the United States, and features many measurements in multiples of 33? January 6, 2008
  • ...that New Harmony's Atheneum is named after the ancient Greek temple to the goddess Athena, the Athenaion? December 30, 2007
  • ...that only eight of the planned 296 miles of the Indiana Central Canal were built, due to Indiana being bankrupted by the Panic of 1837? December 14, 2007
  • ...that the establishment of Camp Joe Holt, the first significant act to keep Kentucky from fully seceding to the Confederate States of America, had to be done in Indiana? November 18, 2007
  • ...that despite having only $300,000 to the incumbent's $4 million in campaign funds, Greg Ballard won the 2007 mayoral election in Indianapolis, one of the biggest electoral upsets in Indiana history?November 13, 2007
  • ...that Parke County, Indiana bills itself as the Covered Bridge Capital of the World because it has more covered bridges than any other county in the United States? September 16, 2007
  • ...that slavery existed in Indiana as late as 1840, even though Indiana was always a free state above the Mason-Dixon line, and slavery had been outlawed in the region due to the Northwest Ordinance in 1787? June 5, 2007
  • ...that German-born Richard Lieber, the founder of Indiana state parks, started the trend of American state parks having inns and charging fees for using the parks, so that citizens would appreciate them more? May 20, 2007
  • ...that the Kintner-Withers House's Cedar Farm is the only antebellum plantation in the state of Indiana? November 5, 2006.
  • ...that in 1996 Andy Campbell, a ranger serving as Tunnel Mill Scout Reservation's caretaker, was shot to death by a wandering drunk who trespassed onto the property, the first such incident in the history of Scouting? September 5, 2006

Kentucky DYKs

  • ... that the Union Monument in Vanceburg, Kentucky, is the only monument south of the Mason–Dixon line that honors Union soldiers that is not in a cemetery? May 19, 2009
  • ... that the 2007 dedication of the 1872-built Confederate Monument in Crab Orchard, Kentucky, included Kentucky governor Ernie Fletcher and the United States Army? May 18, 2009
  • ... that the Kentucky Railway Museum (pictured), next door to an historic hotel, features the official state locomotive of Kentucky, a "Jim Crow" car, a four-star hotel on rails, and the only gas-powered motor rail car in the southeastern United States? February 13, 2009
  • ... that Abraham Lincoln's "earliest recollection" was of his boyhood home Knob Creek Farm (pictured)? February 13, 2009
  • ... that during the Frankfort and Cincinnati Railroad's last week of passenger service, the superintendent transported the train's passengers in his own private vehicle? February 13, 2009
  • ... that Lincoln Homestead State Park contains the house in which Abraham Lincoln's father Thomas proposed to his mother Nancy? February 12, 2009
  • ... that Hodgenville, Kentucky's Abraham Lincoln Statue (pictured) was built to celebrate the centennial of Lincoln's birth a few miles away? February 12, 2009
  • ... that Mordecai Lincoln House in Washington County is the only home of a member of Abraham Lincoln's family that still stands in Kentucky? February 12, 2009
  • ... that the Nancy Lincoln Inn was once deemed an "unacceptable adjacent commercialization" to the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace N.H.S.? February 11, 2009
  • ... that the old stone jail in Bardstown, Kentucky, an active prison from 1819 to 1987, is the last stone jail in operation in Kentucky? February 5, 2009
  • ... that in 1785, men between 16 and 50, who were not ministers, were required to help build Bardstown, Kentucky's Cobblestone Path or be subject to a fine? February 3, 2009
  • ... that Bardstown, Kentucky's Wickland, namesake of Shelbyville, Kentucky's Wickland, was the home of three different U.S. state governors? February 2, 2009
  • ... that the Old L & N Station in Bardstown, Kentucky, was the state's only dry stone railroad station? February 1, 2009
  • ... that The Hunters of Kentucky, which commemorated the Battle of New Orleans, was used as Andrew Jackson's 1828 campaign song? January 30, 2009
  • ... that Kentucky's Great Saltpetre Cave, which produced saltpetre for the War of 1812, was later used to film part of the 1997 Steven Seagal film Fire Down Below? January 25, 2009
  • ... that during the Battle of New Haven, the fort the Confederate howitzer aimed at was not damaged, but the town's only hotel and bar were? January 21, 2009
  • ... that Kentucky's Cherokee State Park, now part of Kenlake State Resort Park, was the first blacks-only state park in the Southern United States? January 20, 2009
  • ... that the post office in Coxs Creek, Kentucky, had to be moved because it created many accidents along U.S. 31E? January 19, 2009
  • ... that the Confederate Monument (pictured) in Murray, Kentucky, is the only Civil War Monument in Kentucky to prominently feature Robert E. Lee? November 20, 2008
  • ... that the Confederate Monument in Owensboro, Kentucky was sculpted by a Hungarian? November 18, 2008
  • ... that the first railroad depot in Stanford, Kentucky, was built due to a compromise between Union general Ambrose Burnside and the Louisville and Nashville Railroad? November 17, 2008
  • ... that the Confederate Memorial in Nicholasville, Kentucky, took sixteen years to fund, and was originally a statue of a Union soldier? November 17, 2008
  • ... that the Confederate Memorial in Fulton, Kentucky is the only one in the state with a statue atop an arch? November 12, 2008
  • ... that in November 1864, Camp Nelson′s Union soldiers forced 400 ex-slaves outside its shelter, resulting in 102 exposure deaths? November 11, 2008
  • ... that the Confederate Memorial Gateway in Hickman, Kentucky took ten years and US$10,000 to build? November 10, 2008
  • ... that the Union Station in Owensboro, Kentucky was once turned into a discothèque and a pizza parlor? November 10, 2008
  • ... that memorials to the Confederacy in Mayfield, Kentucky include a fountain and a series of cemetery gates? November 9, 2008
  • ... that Kentucky's Paducah Freight House was bigger than required because it was originally intended to service a larger rail network?

November 9, 2008

  • ... that a riot at Paducah, Kentucky's Woolfolk Home led to Ulysses S. Grant's promotion above his superior officer, Brigadier General Charles Ferguson Smith? November 8, 2008
  • ... that Paducah, Kentucky's Lloyd Tilghman Memorial honors a Marylander, and was built by an English immigrant from Boston? November 8, 2008
  • ... that Camp Beauregard, an American Civil War camp in western Kentucky, was abandoned in less than six months due to over 1,000 cases of typhoid and pneumonia? November 7, 2008
  • ... that the Wooldridge Monuments have been dubbed "The Strange Procession Which Never Moves"? November 7, 2008
  • ... that the Colonel Robert A. Smith Monument, which honors Smith and the 10th Mississippi Infantry, is believed to be the second-biggest single-stone monument in the United States? November 4, 2008
  • ... that the William Forst House was the site where the Confederate government of Kentucky was founded, commemorated nearby with the Confederate Monument in Russellville? November 1, 2008
  • ... that among Lexington, Kentucky's contributions to the American Civil War were residents U.S. First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln and Confederate leaders John C. Breckinridge and John Hunt Morgan? October 30, 2008
  • ... that the Russellville Historic District in Kentucky, U.S. is the site of the first documented bank robbery of Jesse James? October 29, 2008
  • ... that visitors to the Old Talbott Tavern in Bardstown, Kentucky's historic district included King Louis-Philippe of France and Queen Marie of Romania? September 6, 2008
  • ... that horseshoeing was among the courses taught at the Masonic University? September 5, 2008
  • ... that D. W. Griffith bought a house for his mother that had been used as a funeral home? August 13, 2008
  • ... that Rob Morris's first home in La Grange, Kentucky was burned to the ground, and his books had to be saved by the Union army? August 12, 2008
  • ... that Kentucky judge John Milton Elliott was murdered by a fellow judge after adjudicating in a case involving the latter's sister? August 10, 2008
  • ... that magazines like the Southern Bivouac and the Southern Historical Society Papers helped to spread the belief of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy?
  • ... that Confederate spy Thomas Hines (pictured, left) had to escape Detroit by ferryboat due to being confused with assassin John Wilkes Booth (pictured, right)? August 8, 2008
  • ... that after switching sides multiple times during the American Civil War, Benjamin Anderson committed suicide, saying he "would prefer being dead than disgraced"?
  • ... that although on private property, the Unknown Confederate Dead Monument (pictured) outside Perryville, Kentucky was built by the federal government sixty-six years after the battle? August 4, 2008
  • ... that the Confederate Monument in Perryville was built by the government of Kentucky to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Battle of Perryville, and 5,000–10,000 people attended its dedication?
  • ... that the Union Monument in Perryville is one of only seven monuments in Kentucky dedicated to Union soldiers, and it took an act of Congress to build it? August 2, 2008
  • ... that singer Elvis Presley (pictured) is said to have made an impromptu performance at Colonial Gardens in Louisville's Senning's Park, while visiting his nearby grandparents? July 28, 2008
  • ... that the Masonic Widows and Orphans Home, founded by the Grand Lodge of Kentucky, is the oldest Masonic Home foundation in North America? July 26, 2008
  • ... that Riverside Drive Historic District in Covington, Kentucky marks where the first white settlers in the Cincinnati area lived? July 5, 2008
  • ... that the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Office Building in Louisville, Kentucky is one of the largest commercial Beaux Arts buildings still in existence?
  • ... that Jenny Wiley State Resort Park is named after a woman who escaped from Cherokees, after her three-month-old child was killed by tomahawk? June 18, 2008
  • ... that less than an acre remains of the original 400-acre (160 ha) property of the Zachary Taylor House, built by Richard Taylor? June 18, 2008
  • ... that the United States owns all of Zachary Taylor National Cemetery, except where Zachary Taylor and his family are actually buried? June 17, 2008
  • ... that Taylorsville Lake State Park is the most heavily stocked lake in Kentucky? June 15, 2008
  • ... that the Latham Confederate Monument of Hopkinsville, Kentucky was supposed to honor both Confederate and Union soldiers? June 14, 2008
  • ... that the L & N Railroad depot in Hopkinsville, Kentucky's commercial district was a popular stop on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad due to the fact that one could legally purchase alcohol there? June 14, 2008
  • ... that Hopkinsville, Kentucky's tribute to Confederate veterans was a public drinking fountain? June 12, 2008
  • ... that 13 separate churches served the German population of Louisville in the 19th century? June 11, 2008
  • ... that the oldest firehouse still standing in Louisville, Kentucky was once a church? May 30, 2008
  • ... that the Captain Andrew Offutt Monument barely mentioning Sherman's March to the Sea makes it only one of two Civil War related monuments in Kentucky to stress strong Union sentiment? May 28, 2008
  • ... that among the ways the citizens of Danville, Kentucky memorialized Confederate forces locally included givng up their own grave plots? May 27, 2008
  • ... that the Colored Soldiers Monument in Frankfort, Kentucky is the only one dedicated to Black Union soldiers in Kentucky, and only one of four in the United States? May 22, 2008
  • ... that Kentucky's Livermore Bridge starts and ends in McLean County, but passes over two rivers and Ohio County to reach its destination? May 20, 2008
  • ... that the oldest courthouse west of the Allegheny Mountains is in the historic district of Greensburg, Kentucky? May 19, 2008
  • ... that Jimmy Doolittle commanded a 22 plane demonstration celebrating the opening of Henderson, Kentucky's Audubon Memorial Bridge in 1932? May 18, 2008
  • ... that Kentucky's Union County largely supported the Confederacy in the Civil War and built a monument to its Confederate dead afterwards? May 18, 2008
  • ... that the 1911 Confederate Dedication Day ceremony key speakers at the Battle of Tebb's Bend Monument were former Union officers? May 17, 2008
  • ... that the Confederate-Union Veterans' Monument in Morgantown, Kentucky was built due to the feelings of reconciliation following the Spanish-American War? May 17, 2008
  • ... that Union general Stephen G. Burbridge spent many years trying to remove the letters CSA from the Thompson and Powell Martyrs Monument (pictured)? May 16, 2008
  • ... that Ulysses S. Grant sent his family to live in the Licking Riverside neighborhood of Covington, Kentucky in 1862? May 13, 2008
  • ... that Theodore O'Hara's Bivouac of the Dead, popularized in American Civil War memorials, was actually written for fallen Kentucky soldiers in Latin America a decade before the War? May 10, 2008
  • ... that the portrait bust of the Beriah Magoffin Monument in Harrodsburg, Kentucky was built in Neoclassical style, a style more commonly used a century before the monument was constructed?
  • ... that Daniel Carter Beard's boyhood home was a nurses' dormitory when it became a National Historic Landmark? May 8, 2008
  • ... that the first public library in Covington, Kentucky was built by its Trinity Episcopal Church?
  • ... that the G.A.R. Monument in Covington, Kentucky is the only American Civil War monument in the Bluegrass state shaped like a sarcophagus? May 3, 2008
  • ... that the Veteran's Monument in Covington in Kentucky is the state's only Civil War platform memorial and also the only one referring to that conflict as the "War Between the States"? May 3, 2008
  • ...that the first refuge from malaria that residents of Memphis, Tennessee had in 1878 was Bowling Green's Louisville and Nashville Railroad Station? April 30, 2008
  • ...that the Confederate Monument of Glasgow, Kentucky honors Confederate soldiers of Glasgow and Barren County, Kentucky, who won more Southern Cross of Honors than those from any other Kentucky county? April 27, 2008
  • ...that the Bourbon County Confederate Monument (pictured) is unique for being shaped like a thirty-foot (nine-meter) chimney? March 29, 2008
  • ...that the French once had an outpost called La Belle, where Louisville now stands? March 28, 2008
  • ...that the Confederate Monument in Cynthiana, Kentucky was the first monument to the Confederate States of America in Kentucky, and long believed to be the first one anywhere? March 28, 2008
  • ...that three-foot tall stone slabs were placed every five miles to mark the boundary between Kentucky and Tennessee? March 23, 2008
  • ...that when built in 1868, Louisville's Fourteenth Street Bridge was the longest iron bridge in the United States? March 22, 2008
  • ...that the influx of Irish to Louisville (example of Irish-built housing pictured) led to the diminishing of slaves in Louisville by 1860? March 17, 2008
  • ...that the Kentucky Irish American counted among its subscribers Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman? March 17, 2008
  • ...that Basil W. Duke became the chief consul and lobbyist for the L&N Railroad after the American Civil War, even though he led many efforts in destroying their property during the war? February 27, 2007
  • ...that the hiring of Tom Jurich by the University of Louisville was dubbed "the most significant day in the recent history of college sports in Kentucky"? February 27, 2007
  • ...that eighteen fallen Confederate soldiers were moved when the Confederate Monument in Georgetown was dedicated? February 16, 2008
  • ...that the oldest black church in Kentucky is the Second Christian Church in Midway, Kentucky's historic district? February 16, 2008
  • ...that most of the American Civil War events in Midway, Kentucky, including that which the Martyrs Monument in Midway commemorates, involved the stealing of horses?
  • ...that Louisville's Union Station was reported to be the largest such facility in the southern United States? February 11, 2008
  • ...that the United States Navy's Naval Ordnance Station in Louisville, Kentucky was chosen due to being so far inland as to prevent enemy airstrikes? January 30, 2008
  • ...that Bullitt's Lick was the first industry and supplier of salt in what is now the Commonwealth of Kentucky? January 28, 2008
  • ...that the Pewee Valley Confederate Memorial 7is the only American Civil War obelisk monument in Kentucky to be made of zinc? January 27, 2008
  • ...that the hollow log pipes of the 1787 Mann's Lick salt furnace allegedly still existed in the 1940s? January 26, 2007
  • ...that over 10,000 people attended the 1876 dedication of the Confederate Monument in Bowling Green, Kentucky? January 25, 2008
  • ...that the Unknown Confederate Soldier Monument in Hart County, Kentucky is unique for being built with geodes, and for honoring a Louisiana soldier who died accidentally by his own rifle?January 25, 2008
  • ...that the story of Stephen Foster visiting what is now My Old Kentucky Home State Park may have started in order to raise the sale value of the property? January 21, 2008
  • ...that Queen Elizabeth II was given a Louisville Stoneware musical box at the 2007 Kentucky Derby? January 21, 2008
  • ...that none of Louisville's fortifications for the American Civil War were ever used, as Louisville was never endangered while they existed? January 21, 2008
  • ..that the St. James-Belgravia Historic District of Louisville, Kentucky, the site of the 1883-87 Southern Exposition, has buildings modeled after London's Belgravia? January 20, 2008
  • ...that the statue of King Louis XVI built in 1829, currently at the Metro Hall in Louisville, Kentucky, was endangered by the Second French Revolution in 1830?
  • ...that the traditional song Happy Birthday to You was first sung at the Little Loomhouse of Louisville, Kentucky? January 15, 2008
  • ...that Louisville's Eleven Jones Cave is the only known location for the Louisville cave beetle, Pseudanophthalmus troglodytes? January 15, 2008
  • ...that the Ladies' Confederate Memorial in Lexington, Kentucky was described by Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper as "the most perfect thing of its kind in the South"? January 11, 2008
  • ...that only 10% of the monuments to the American Civil War in Kentucky were dedicated to Union forces, even through the state produced 90,000 Union troops compared to 35,000 for the Confederacy? January 8, 2008
  • ...that the Rowan County War resulted in 20 deaths, talk of dissolving Rowan County, Kentucky, and the founding of what would become Morehead State University? December 27, 2007
  • ...that American Civil War leader William Tecumseh Sherman said, "No single body of men can claim more honor for the grand result than the officers and men of the Louisville Legion"? December 20, 2007
  • ...that John Hunt Morgan's beloved mare, Black Bess, was portrayed as a stallion in the John Hunt Morgan Memorial, as its sculptor, Pompeo Coppini, believed "No hero should bestride a mare!"? September 1, 2007
  • ...that the Prussian Nicola Marschall was the designer of the Confederate States of America's first flag, the Stars & Bars? August 29, 2007
  • ...that the United States Marine Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky is considered the best remaining antebellum hospital in the US? May 30, 2007
  • ...that the Louisville Water Tower is the oldest ornamental water tower in the world? May 13, 2007
  • ...that the 32nd Indiana Monument at Cave Hill Cemetery is the oldest surviving monument of the American Civil War? May 11, 2007.
  • ...that the average speed of the contestants in the Great Steamboat Race, held each year before the Kentucky Derby, is only 7 miles per hour? May 2, 2007.

Elsewhere

  • ... that a persimmon regiment was a nickname for three Union army regiments that had an unusual fondness for eating persimmons?September 17, 2009
  • ... that six Prussians served as generals for the Union army in the American Civil War? April 25, 2009
  • ... that 42 Australians became crewmembers of Confederate ship CSS Shenandoah (pictured) when the vessel was docked outside Melbourne? February 23, 2009
  • ... that the recently announced Marianna Fault in Arkansas was discovered due to the stretches of fine sand in otherwise fertile soil? February 6, 2009
  • ... that although composed in late 1812, the popular Canadian War of 1812 song The Bold Canadian was not published until 1907, and not fully until 1927? January 30, 2009
  • ... that a bounty jumper, Adam Worth (pictured), became the inspiration for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional villain Professor Moriarty? January 11, 2009
  • ... that chee kufta is an Armenian raw meat dish similar to steak tartare? January 10, 2009
  • ... that secessionists in St. Augustine, Florida, captured the town's fort (pictured) three days before Florida actually seceded from the United States? January 9, 2009
  • ... that American Civil War soldiers celebrated Christmas by using salt pork and hardtack as ornaments on Christmas trees? December 24, 2008
  • ...that George Julian Zolnay (pictured), the so-called "sculptor of the Confederacy," was actually Hungarian and did not move to the United States until decades after the Confederacy had ceased to exist? November 19, 2008
  • ... that among the ghost sightings involving the American Civil War are a ghost reenacting one of his defeats in a battle that took place 415 miles (668 km) away? October 31, 2008
  • ... that The Witchery of Archery, written by Maurice Thompson in 1878, was the first book about hunting with a bow ever published? October 31, 2008
  • ... that only three novels catering to soldiers' sexual proclivities during the American Civil War are known to still exist? October 25, 2008
  • ... that the American Civil War saw buglers (infantry band pictured) required to learn forty-nine separate calls for infantry alone? October 21, 2008
  • ... that salt workers in the Confederate States of America were immune from being drafted? October 20, 2008
  • ... that the Alabama Confederate Soldiers Home was the only home for Confederate veterans in Alabama? October 18, 2008
  • ... that over 3,000 Nebraskans participated in the American Civil War, though only 35 were killed in action? October 16, 2008
  • ... that due to the American Civil War, the Bahamas saw imports increase by a factor of 23, and exports increase by a factor of 29.6? August 18, 2008
  • ... that Union Army officials offered US$5,000 for the scalp of Confederate Cherokee William Holland Thomas? August 17, 2008
  • ... that Abraham Lincoln called the Beefsteak Raid "the slickest piece of cattle-stealing" he ever heard of? August 16, 2008
  • ... that the last Confederate general to surrender, Stand Watie, did so in Oklahoma? August 16, 2008
  • ... that the last living veteran of the Civil War in Idaho died in 1952? August 15, 2008
  • ... that Union general John A. Logan seized a Confederate general's house as his headquarters in Columbia, South Carolina in 1865? August 15, 2008
  • ... that Charles Dickens once wrote that in Civil War-era Montana, a town was to be named after Varina Davis, the first lady of the Confederate States of America? August 14, 2008
  • ... that the Cheonhado is a type of circular world map developed in Korea during the 17th century that displays both real and fictional places? August 1, 2008
  • ... that after a gift of candles they sent was mentioned on the Rush Limbaugh Show, sales at Wicks n' More increased fivefold? August 1, 2008
  • ... that the Friend to Friend Masonic Memorial depicts the historical event of an Union officer aiding a Confederate officer at the Battle of Gettysburg, due to both being Freemasons? July 25, 2008
  • ... that Confederate president Jefferson Davis had a young mulatto ward named Jim Limber‎? June 26, 2008
  • ... that Andrew Johnson National Cemetery, part of Andrew Johnson National Historic Site, was bequeathed to the public by Andrew Johnson's daughter? June 20, 2008
  • ... that Virginia City was the prototype for future urban/industrial boomtowns? June 18, 2008
  • ... that Edward, Prince of Wales stayed at Perry Belmont's House in Washington D.C. at the behest of President Woodrow Wilson? June 13, 2008
  • ... that the only time a Confederate flag was displayed in Nevada during the American Civil War was over a saloon? June 10, 2008
  • ... that some Aleutian natives were still enslaved in Alaska as late as 1903? June 3, 2008
  • ... that by the time Fort Scott was completed, it was already obsolete? May 31, 2008
  • ... that Eisenhower's home cost more than six times to renovate than it did to purchase, due to union labor and Mamie Eisenhower's whims?
  • ... that soldiers from Fort Benning patrolled the woods around the Little White House during World War II?
  • ... that prehistoric people used the same 89 °F (32 °C) warm springs that Franklin Delano Roosevelt would use in the 20th century? May 28, 2008
  • ... that after writing Confederates in the Attic, Tony Horwitz was sued for calling Alberta Martin's husband a deserter in the book? May 14, 2008
  • ... that the 27th U.S. President William Howard Taft's boyhood home almost became a funeral parlor?
  • ...that Sailor's Creek Battlefield State Park's Hillsman House still has bloodstains on its floor dating to its use as a hospital after the Battle of Sayler's Creek in April 1865?
  • ...that the South Carolina secessionists had to relocate from their original meeting site at Columbia's First Baptist Church, due to a smallpox outbreak?
  • ... que Jefferson Davis concedió la Guerra Civil Estadounidense en la Mansión Burt-Stark ? 28 de febrero de 2008
  • ... que el capitán del barco de vapor Natchez aumentaría la velocidad de su barco poniendo tocino y grasa de cerdo en sus motores y dándoles whisky a sus hombres ? 13 de enero de 2008

Negrita = "¿Sabías que?" artículo destacado

Cajas de usuario

Personal

Wikicéntrico

Intereses

Probabilidades y finales

Resoluciones de Wikipedia de 2009

Resoluciones de Wikipedia para 2009:

  • Tener como lista destacada:
    • Lista de monumentos de la Guerra Civil de Kentucky
  • Llegar a buen estado:
    • Andrew Johnson NHS
    • Distrito histórico de Bardstown
    • Cherokee en la Guerra Civil Americana
    • Navidad en la Guerra Civil Americana
    • Fort Scott NHSchequeY
    • George Julian Zolnay
    • George Rogers Clark NHP chequeY
    • Lexington en la Guerra Civil Americana
    • Louisville en la Guerra Civil Americana
    • Parque Estatal My Old Kentucky Home
    • Sexo en la Guerra Civil Estadounidense
    • William Howard Taft NHS
    • Vic AldridgechequeY
  • Tenga la mitad de todos los buenos artículos relacionados con Louisville y la Guerra de Agresión del Norte.
  • Cree artículos para cada NRHP en el centro de Louisville y Bardstown.
Obtenido de " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Bedford&oldid=761950475 "