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Colorful Midway, Kentucky House
How’s this for a happy house?! The picket fence, the flowers, the colors. This place made me smile! The Arnett House in Midwway, Kentucky was constructed in 1872.
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Second Empire Home in New Albany
Sometimes I stand in front of a house and say, “how are you a house?”. This massive 5-bay French Second Empire home was built in 1845. It didn’t start as Second Empire, but was updated as such in 1885 when the mansard roof, top floor, and ornamental touches were added. Cast iron was used in
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Gorgeous Butchertown Shotgun House
I don’t even have words for this. Just . This house is part of a gorgeous row of houses in the Butchertown Historic District of Louisville
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Skinny Little Lexington Home
A skinny little Romanesque style house in Lexington, Kentucky. Built by Frank Hulett in 1910. It may look skinny, but it sprawls out in the back and features almost 4,000 square feet, a 3-story tower, and really cool side staircase. I forgot to get a picture of the staircase from the side, so I grabbed
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Sad Old Tennessee House
There was just something about this place. Poor guy.
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Columbia, Tennessee Cutie
This old house in Columbia caught my eye. It was recently for sale!
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1933 Tudor in Brownsboro Zorn
If you don’t have a windy front walk, are you even a Tudor? I love this 1933 cutie in the Brownsboro Zorn Neighborhood of Louisville!
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William Culbertson House
William Culbertson was once the richest man in Indiana. His 20,000 square foot home was built in 1867 for $120,000 which is about $2 million these days. The original mansard tin roof was imported from Scotland and inside you find hand-painted ceilings and walls and hand-carved staircases. After his death in 1899, his third wife
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“The Gables”
Possibly the most unique old house I’ve come across! Some call it “The Gables” and I’m sure you can see why. It’s located on the backroads in rural Tennessee.
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Beech Lawn Farm – Part 2
Beech Lawn Farm started as a small cabin in 1805, but they eventually needed something larger. They built the two-story Federal-style home you see here in 1808. Built with bricks made from the soil on the property, they were a brownish color later painted white. The original two-story part of the home has two stair










