Vernon Zurick
This interview of Vernon Zurick was conducted by Barbara Gigone and was filmed by Dana Echohawk on November 16, 2011. This interview was recorded for the Louisville Historical Museum in Louisville, Colorado. For more information about the Louisville Historical Museum’s Oral History Program or Louisville history, please visit the Louisville Historical Museum website at louisvilleco.gov/museum .
Vernon Zurick was born in Louisville, Colorado to an Italy-born mother and a Louisville-born, Czechoslovakian-heritage father. He speaks of his family mining history, including a few tragic accidents. He also reminisces about his talent and love of tap and ballroom dancing, his career in engineering, his memories of the World War II era including his service in the US Army Air Corps, and the array of nicknames belonging to Louisville locals. He demonstrates his dancing skills after the interview.
This interview is copyrighted by the City of Louisville, Colorado. The content of this copyrighted interview is to be used for personal use or for scholarly research or in a non-commercial, print format (example: in a book, magazine, or newspaper article) or in a non-commercial, non-print format (example, in an educational program, a documentary, an educational TV or radio program, or an educational Internet site) only.
The content of oral history interviews is personal, experiential, and interpretive because, by its nature, it relies on the memories, perceptions and opinions of individuals. While all reasonable attempts are made to avoid inaccuracy, interviews should not be understood as endorsements by the City of Louisville of statements of fact or opinion.
Winter in Downtown Louisville, KY, 1933
Check out this short clip of downtown Louisville, featuring the courthouse and city hall on Jefferson St., as well as footage of the Louisville streetcar system in action. This material was filmed by Judge Arthur E. Hopkins during the winter of 1933. Hopkins was a Louisville attorney and judge who had a passion for film and photography. Portions of his film collection, which resides at the Filson Historical Society (filsonhistorical.org), have been preserved through grants from the National Film Preservation Foundation (filmpreservation.org), and through generous donations by the public.
The Filson welcomes any comments you may have about the footage!
Moving Monuments: The History of Louisville Confederate Monument
What’s behind a monument? In Louisville, it was the time capsule buried beneath it.
Louisville’s Confederate Monument was erected to memorialize fallen Confederate soldiers in 1895. Beneath it, city leaders buried a time capsule, containing the remnants of the period including Jefferson Davis’ scarf and Robert E. Lee’s half-smoked cigar. In 2016, after decades of controversy, the monument was dismantled and relocated to Brandenburg Ky. The time capsule was unearthed and revealed what more than a century of progress could not change. To learn more, watch our video.
Written and Edited by Joey Thomas
Produced by Morgan Rigaud
Executive Produced by Eddie and Morgan Rigaud
Voice over by Ken Burroughs
Music & Sound by Joey Thomas
Louisville CO Homes For Sale
CALL 303-578-3503
Louisville CO Homes For Sale
Louisville CO Homes For Sale is a sector of the market that has received great growth in the past year. The amount of growth in this sector is enormous and hence it is one of the most sought after sectors in the industry. Talking about the united states real estate market let us put some light on the trends the Denver real estate market has been showing lately and let us also emphasize on the plus and the minus points on the Louisville CO Homes For Sale market.
In the year 2005 USA witnessed one of the biggest booms in the Louisville CO Homes For Sale sector and the experts then estimated that the country would suffer from housing crash in the near future. To the surprise of the experts this prediction didn't came true and for the benefit of the market the predicted housing crash didn't occurred.
But Louisville CO Homes For Sale have seen a change as far as growth is considered. In the first quarter of this current year 2007, the property rise was estimated around 0.1%. This was the estimate provided by the office of federal housing enterprise. But recently we got an article from cnn.com that claimed that the prices in the Louisville CO Homes For Sale area have fallen down by 2.5% since 2005.
Well, this thing is not so shocking as we can see that there is a growth in active listing since the year 2005, almost double the amount of active listings are being done right now in the current year. Earlier there used to be 37 days on market for a home but now the number has increased to 67 days on market, this is why we are witnessing a decline in the home prices in the Denver area and Louisville CO Homes For Sale Homes.
To an extent the customers need to understand the reasonability of this market even if the prices have fallen down the Louisville CO Homes For Sale market has become much more predictable that what tit was few years back. Thus the customers must now understand that they will hardly get the prize for there homes now which they were being offered few years back.
In terms of economics, we all know that if the supply increases the prizes will fall down to make the whole lot salable, this is what we are witnessing now says with so many houses on offer. Few years back the number of Louisville CO Homes For Sale were very few and hence the rates which the owners were getting were really touching the sky, but the situation have changed and this is what we must understand.
People are doing high active listing, some just do it to get a rate for their home and then they do not sell the home, still it counts in the supply because the property dealer will estimate the cost only if the user describes his or her home as a salable property. For a great deal you can depend on Louisville CO Homes For Sale
louisville co homes for sale,
louisville colorado homes for sale,
longmont co homes for sale,
lafayette colorado homes for sale,
superior colorado,
louisville homes for sale,
louisville co homes,
boulder colorado homes for sale,
boulder co homes for sale,
homes for sale louisville co,
hud homes for sale,
louisville colorado homes,
louisville colorado,
homes for sale boulder colorado,
louisville co,
homes for sale louisville colorado,
louisville houses for sale,
homes for sale in louisville co,
homes houses for sale,
homes sale louisville,
houses homes for sale,
find new homes for sale,
lafayette colorado,
map homes for sale,
finding homes for sale,
louisville home sales,
co homes for sale,
boulder co homes,
niwot colorado,
homes for sale in louisville colorado,
lafayette co homes for sale,
sale by owner,
louisville realtors,
boulder realtor,
boulder colorado homes,
4 sale by owner,
for sale by owner house,
for sale by owner listings,
just listed homes,
denver colorado houses for sale,
looking for homes for sale,
free homes for sale,
local homes for sale by owner,
search for houses,
louisville realtor,
louisville colorado realtor,
look for homes for sale,
houses and homes for sale,
homes in boulder colorado,
Louisville, Colorado First snow Aerial video
Louisville, Georgia
Video Software we use:
Ad-free videos.
You can support us by purchasing something through our Amazon-Url, thanks :)
Louisville is a city in Jefferson County, Georgia, United States.It was an early capital of Georgia and is the county seat of Jefferson County.It is located southwest of Augusta on the Ogeechee River, and its population was 2,712 at the 2000 census.Though the name is of French origin, it is pronounced Lewis-ville.
Louisville was laid out in 1786 as the prospective state capital.
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
About the author(s): Blastoids
License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC BY-SA 3.0)
License Url:
Author(s): Blastoids (
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision.
Article available under a Creative Commons license
Image source in video
Louisville Slugger Museum w/ Chase Crawford
Got the news that my bud Chase was stopping in town for the day, so we made plans to check out the Louisville Slugger Museum. We went on a tour showing us how each bat is made, tried our hand at the batting cage and even met Captain Jack Sparrow...wait what?
Chase's channel:
Twitter ►
Facebook ►
Instagram ►
Vine ►
Louisville City in Kentucky USA || Travel 4 All
Amazon.in Today's Deals: Great Savings. ☛
►To SUBSCRIBE NOW :-
Louisville, Kentucky's largest city, sits on the Ohio River along the Indiana border. Every May, its race course Churchill Downs hosts the Kentucky Derby, a renowned horse race whose long history is explored at the Kentucky Derby Museum. Baseball is celebrated at the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory, where Major League bats are produced and a giant baseball slugger marks the entrance.
Note. I Am Hereby Declare That All images Use To Make This Video is From Google Search google.com . I use Google Advanced Search To Collect Those images, Usage Rights: free to USE, SHARE or MODIFY. Music are taken from YouTube Audio Library.
Day 3 - Louisville, CO Build Day
Visit: for more information.
Homes of Living Hope strives to connect communities throughout the world by packaging resource abundance in the United States and distributing to places where access to such resources is scarce or non-existent. Homes of Living Hope has partnered with several charity organizations and groups throughout the world. In many cases, however, the lack of adequate infrastructure means their services go underutilized. Through our partnerships, Homes of Living Hope strives to establish immediate, effective and useful infrastructure to support the efforts of so many serving these impoverished communities.
Homes of Living Hope has partnered with Doctors Without Borders and Life in Abundance International to supply the medical facilities these groups need to see more patients daily, and provide more effective health screenings. Once installed, a Homes of Living Hope medical facility can serve approximately 200 patients per day per container.
Former NBA player, Louisville native Anthony Grundy killed in stabbing
Former NBA player and Louisville native Anthony Grundy was killed Thursday in a stabbing near downtown.
Subscribe to WLKY on YouTube now for more:
Get more Louisville news:
Like us:
Follow us:
Instagram:
Louisville looks to spruce up South End of city
Louisville city leaders say they want to breathe new life into the South End with a redevelopment plan.
Old Town Louisville
We consider Old Town Louisville the heart and soul of the City of Louisville due to it's small-town charm, it's quaint history, and it's fun, laid-back vibe. Old town Louisville entwines the nostalgic charm of the past and the present with historic buildings and homes, vibrant restaurants and businesses, a library, a museum, and the seasonal Louisville Downtown Street Faire. Once a busy coal mining town, Louisville has a rich heritage, and it's foundation is built on traditional values and a strong community. No wonder Family Circle magazine placed Louisville among the top ten Best Towns for Families in 2012, and Money Magazine ranked it as the #1 best place to live in the United States in it's July 2011 issue.
Louisville Kentucky Slugger Museum Hillerich & Bradsby Factory
For a laugh, read the computer generated transcript.
Concerns raised about Louisville Juvenile Dentention Center
Community members are getting ready to talk about concerns with the Louisville Juvenile Detention Center.
Subscribe to WLKY on YouTube for more:
Get more Louisville news:
Like us:
Follow us:
Google+:
Squire Boone Caverns | Louisville Life | KET
You’ve heard the stories of legendary pioneer Daniel Boone, but did you know his younger sibling Squire was also an accomplished frontiersman? Located 45 minutes west of Louisville in southern Indiana, is Squire Boone Caverns. Here visitors can tour caves that were unearthed by Squire, observe the activities of early settlers and learn of the accomplishments of this often overshadowed local explorer.
Learn more about KET's programs at
Visit KET's Facebook page:
Subscribe to the KET channel:
Jeffersontown police make historic heroin bust
Jeffersontown police make historic heroin bust Subscribe to WLKY on YouTube for more:
Get more Louisville news:
Like us:
Follow us:
Google+:
THE WORLD'S MOST HAUNTED PLACE! | Waverly Hills Sanatorium Paranormal Tour
(Louisville, Kentucky) Producing my first documentary at THE Waverly Hills Sanatorium!.....Don't miss what we're up to next, HIT SUBSCRIBE to keep up! Aerial Views and Ghost Hunting at Waverly Hills Sanatorium, known by many as One of The MOST HAUNTED PLACES ON EARTH. Waverly is known world wide to be FULL of History & Paranormal Activity...
The Waverly Hills Sanatorium is a closed sanatorium located in southwestern Louisville/Jefferson County, Kentucky. It opened in 1910 as a two-story hospital to accommodate 40 to 50 tuberculosis patients. In the early 1900s, Jefferson County was ravaged by an outbreak of tuberculosis (the White Plague) which prompted the construction of a new hospital. The hospital closed in 1961, due to the antibiotic drug streptomycin that lowered the need for such a hospital.
Waverly Hills has been popularized on the television show Ghost Hunters as being one of the most haunted hospitals in the eastern United States. The sanatorium was featured on ABC/FOX Family Channel's Scariest Places On Earth, VH1's Celebrity Paranormal Project, Syfy's Ghost Hunters, Zone Reality's Creepy, the British show Most Haunted, Paranormal Challenge and Ghost Adventures on Travel Channel. Also popularizing Waverly Hills was the film Spooked: The Ghosts of Waverly Hills Sanatorium, released in 2006, which purports to document paranormal sightings at the site
Plans have been developed to convert the sanatorium into a hotel and conference center.
HISTORY:
The land that is today known as Waverly Hill was purchased by Major Thomas H. Hays in 1883 as the Hays' family home. Since the new home was far away from any existing schools, Mr. Hays decided to open a local school for his daughters to attend. He started a one-room schoolhouse on Pages Lane and hired Lizzie Lee Harris as the teacher. Due to Miss Harris' fondness for Walter Scott's Waverley novels, she named the schoolhouse Waverly School. Major Hays liked the peaceful-sounding name, so he named his property Waverley Hill. The Board of Tuberculosis Hospital kept the name when they bought the land and opened the sanatorium. It is not known exactly when the spelling changed to exclude the second e and became Waverly Hills. However the spelling fluctuated between both spellings many times over the years.
EXPLORATION:
One of the legends told of Waverly Hills involves a man in a white coat who has been seen walking in the kitchen and the smell of cooking food that sometimes wafts through the room. During their initial visit, they found the kitchen was a disaster, a ruin of broken windows, fallen plaster, broken tables and chairs and puddles of water and debris that resulted from a leaking roof. The cafeteria had not fared much better. It was also in ruins and the team quickly retreated. Before they could do so though, several of them reported the sounds of footsteps, a door swinging shut and the smell of fresh baked bread in the air. A quick search revealed that no one else was in the building and there was certainly no one cooking anything in the kitchen. They could come up with no logical explanation for what had occurred.
Ghost researchers are always drawn to the fifth floor of the former hospital. The fifth floor consisted of two nurses’ stations, a pantry, a linen room, medicine room and two medium-sized rooms on both sides of the two nurses’ stations. One of these, Room 502, is the subject of many rumors and legends and just about every curiosity-seeker that had broken into Waverly Hills over the years wanted to see it. This is where, according to the stories, people have jumped to their deaths, have seen shapes moving in the windows and have heard disembodied voices that order trespassers to “get out”.
There is a lot of speculation as to what went on in this part of the hospital but what is believed is that mentally insane tuberculosis patients were housed on the fifth floor. This kept them far away from the rest of the patients in the hospital but still in an area where they could benefit from the fresh air and sunshine. This floor is actually centered in the middle of the hospital and the two wards, extending out from the nurses’ station, is glassed in on all sides and opens out onto a patio-type roof. The patients were isolated on either side of the nurses’ stations and they had to go to a half door at each station to get their food and medicine and to use the restroom, which was located adjacent to the station.
#waverlyhills #haunted #ghosts
New historical marker signifies first Louisville Slugger made
The spot where the first Louisville Slugger bat was made more than 100 years ago now has a historical marker.
Subscribe to WLKY on YouTube for more:
Get more Louisville news:
Like us:
Follow us:
Google+:
FBI Louisville seeks public assistance in identifying public corruption
FBI Louisville seeks public assistance in identifying public corruption Subscribe to WLKY on YouTube for more:
Get more Louisville news:
Like us:
Follow us:
Google+:
In The Beginning – Louisville, KY - Attractions
Louisville, Kentucky is the primary city associated with In The Beginning. Check out the links to the attractions for more information to this city.
Kentucky Derby Museum
Louisville Zoo
Muhammad Ali Center
Louisville Kentucky Visitor Bureau
Louisville
In The Beginning Videos:
Music: Bach – Eight short Preludes and Fugues #1 in C Major by Chris Breemer