The wrecking ball in action

 

The Old Post Office and Customs House

Louisville's most monumental building had stood vacant for a decade when it was demolished in 1942-3 for a cost of $100.  No use could be found for it after it had been decommissioned in 1933.  It was considered to be nothing more than a pigeon roost.  It's 4,500 tons of steel, copper, brass bronze and lead were given for the war effort.

The Post office in the 1920s
In prouder days

 

Louisville After the Bombings?

Introduction
       

   

The Thumbnail Images

Acknowledgements

The Old Post Office
Demolition 1942-3

The Post Office in the 1920s
The demolished interior
The interior about 1900
Lincoln Park
Site of River City Mall-(4th Street, 1920s)

The 2nd Presbyterian Church
In ruins, 1956

2nd and Broadway
St. X College

The James C Ford Mansion
The Ford Mansion in winter
Enlargement

Inside the Ford Mansion
An Empty Lot

 

The Warren Memorial Church
Demolition, 1958
The Warren Memorial in 1923
Norton Hall
The Bus Station

The National Theater
In ruins, 1952
In better days
Show Time

 

The Masonic Temple
In ruins, 1956

The Rialto
Demolition, 1969

The Rialto during the 1920s

The Columbia Building
Demolition 1966

Columbia Building ca. 1900
Columbia Building ca. 1920

 

The Washington Building
Demolition 1973
In 1907
Cornice Detail

Clear-cutting the city
Wholesale demolition, 1974
The Tyler Block, 1974
Tyler Block, 1931
A Foreign City
Convention Center

Conclusion

 

ALL HOPE IS NOT LOST
After nearly complete destruction in February 1945 at the end of World War II, see what
can
be done to rebuild a historic city center. 
Click here to see absolutely amazing photos of the ongoing reconstruction of Dresden

(...reconstruction begun in 2002, and what has Louisville done in that time??)

 
Dresden 1980s                <<nearly same view>>               Dresden 2000s

(By the way, although begun as a public project to restore a world heritage site,
the reconstruction of Dresden has now gotten far enough along that the real estate values have skyrocketed.
Remaining un-reconstructed parcels are going for around $6000 per square yard just for the right to rebuild
historically faithful reproductions of former buildings ...including a palace...on the site.  check this out)

 

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