1985 MONTHLY PICTURE |
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(click on picture to see an enlarged view)
JANUARY - (Hunt's Boarding House - drawn by Susan M.
Shook - 12th grade) |
A familiar landmark in
Scottsville for may years was this home which stood on the corner of North Court and west
Cherry Streets where the Farmers National bank is now located. Built in the early
1900's, it was purchased from Rupert Huntsman and wife, Lena, by Mr. and Mrs. G.V. Hunt in
1921. Prior to this time, Mr. and Mrs. Hunt had been living on and cultivating a
farm just off the Franklin road where Lovelace Nursery is now located. "Aunt
Nellie" and "Uncle Vernon" as they are known affectionately, established a
boarding house in his home. According to all reports, Mrs. Hunt was a wonderful cook
and their home was called Hunt's Boarding House. In the days of the oil boom, many
of the workers in the oil fields are here and many of the businessmen and women looked
forward every day to the good country cooking and the homey atmosphere which Hunt's
Boarding House offered them. Tourists and visitors heeded the sign in the front yard
of the house which advertised "good home cooking". They began serving
meals for $.50. In time the price was raised to $.75 and before they discontinued
serving, it had to be raised to $1.00. They also rented rooms and, after they
discontinued serving meals in the early 1940's, they continued this practice. Mr.
Rupert huntsman, whose wife had to go out west for health reasons, continued to live with
the Hunts as did his son, Joseph, who is now living in California. Mr. and Mrs.
Hunt, having no children of their own, treated him as their son. On Nov. 1, 1958,
Mr. and Mrs. Hunt sold their house and lot to the Farmer's national Bank with the
condition stipulated that they were to have lifetime use of it. Mr. and Mrs. Hunt
continued to live there as long as they were able. In 1965 the boarding house had
been replaced by the structure which now houses the Farmer's National Bank. |
(click on picture to see an enlarged view)
FEBRUARY - (Yates' Log Home - drawn by Angela Gibbs - 12th
grade) |
Members of the Yates family
believe the house was built before 1850 by a Houchens family but this cannot be
documented. Because of the Allen County Court House fire in 1902, the date, 1893 is
the earliest record available. A.C. Oliver and wife, A. F. Oliver, sold the farm to
Charles J. Houchens and wife, Cora Jane, on August 2, 1893 for $1000.00. Mr.
Houchens sold the property to C.B. Whitney and wife, Sarah, on Aug. 4, 1905 for $1500.00
and on March 2, 1928, Mr. Whitney conveyed it to O.T. Yates and Bertha E. Yates for
$3000.00 There is no reference to buildings or improvements in the deeds of
transfer. The house was used as the principle farm residence form 1928 until 1946
and used as a tenant house from time to time until about 1965. The log section of
the house was 18 feet wide and 27 feet long and constructed of yellow poplar logs, except
for two chestnut logs in one end. It had a log partition which divided the log pen
into two rooms;one is 8.5 feet by 17 feet and the large one is 17 feet square. Their
fireplace was in the end of the large room and there was a narrow, steep stairway into the
upstairs area. The log section contained seven tiers of logs which make a one and a
half story structure. The house had an ell off the back that served as
kitchen-dining room. It was of "double boxed" construction which was a
common method used in the 1800's and early 1900's in the area. The log house was
moved to its present location, the intersection of Ky. 252 and Ky. 1533 near the Barren
River Dam in the Port Oliver community by O.T. Yates, Jr. in 1972, and has been used as an
antique-gift shop since that time. |
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MARCH - (The Tom and Curtis Pardue Home - drawn by Thomas
Livesay - 12th grade) |
The home of Tom and Amanda
Dossey Pardue was located on the banks of Puncheon Creek in a settlement called Godfrey,
about eight miles from Holland, Kentucky on Hwy 1333. The farm was purchased by Mr.
Pardue from the Ben Downing heirs. The two log rooms were remodeled into a spacious
two-story house with a room added to each side and a front porch in the center. The
old logs were overlaid with weather boarding as most of the early Allen County homes are.
This is where their 5 children grew into adulthood. They were: Martin Pardue,
Will F. Pardue (who served as county Judge of Allen County for 8 years), Beverly Pardue
(who was the father of Ray, Otis and Ernest Pardue), Johnnie Pardue and Dolly Pardue Bray.
Their father, Tom Pardue, was a respected farmer and storekeeper in the Godfrey
community. Mr. and Mrs. Pardue lived in this house until Mrs. Pardue's death in
September of 1932. Mr. Pardue then made his home with his son, Beverly, until his
death only two months later, November, 1932. In 1933, Curtis Pardue, grandson of Tom
and Amanda Pardue, and his wife, Lillie, purchased the farm. He and his wife lived
in this home until 1954 at which time they tore down the old house to make room for a new
brick home which stands on this site today. |
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APRIL - (Petroleum High School - drawn by Lee Holland
- 9th grade) |
The first year for Petroleum
High School began in August,1935. It grew out of a need to further the education of the
students living in the western and southern parts of Allen County. During the
depression years, many could not afford the tuition charged by Scottsville High School nor
could they furnish their own transportation. Under the leadership of Dr. A.O.
Miller, who lived in the community, and I.N. Marsh, Roy P. Hinton, W.B. Ogles (the latter
two being merchants) and others, secured a parcel of land with an old dwelling and barn on
it form the Anthony heirs. The property adjoined the railroad property there.
School began in the partially renovated dwelling while paper work on the new building was
being finalized. Jasper Cooper, a building contractor was hired to supervise the WPA
labor. In 1936 the new building consisting of 6 rooms was ready for occupancy.
Permanent basketball goals were erected and the court black-topped. In 19442, the
petroleum High School along with Mt. Zion High School, joined the already merged schools
91941) of Meador and Mt. Victory to complete the consolidation of Allen County High
School. The building which formerly housed the school is now being used as a shirt
factory. |
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MAY - (First United Methodist Church - drawn by Chris
Burris - 12th grade) |
The First United Methodist
Church of Scottsville is the result of the conference uniting the Methodist Church, South
and Methodist Episcopal Church in 1939, forming the Methodist Church, then the uniting of
the Methodist Church and the United Brethren in 1968, becoming the First United Methodist
Church. In the Spring of 1905 the Methodist Episcopal church circuit organized the
First Methodist Church of Scottsville. A building was erected on South Third Street
where the congregation worshipped for several years. The church and lot were later
sold and the proceeds applied to the grounds where a new church was built on the corner of
Second and Maple. This site is now occupied by the Church of Christ. In
the year 1880 a plot of ground was purchased on East Main Street from J.P. Perry. A
small frame building was erected in that same year and the Methodist Church, South became
a visible part of Scottsville. In 1920, under the leadership of Rev. H.H. Jones, a
new imposing edifice was constructed beside the white frame church. The following
year workmen dismantled the aging structure and rebuilt the old Methodist church, South on
the Bowling Green Road where it is still used by a congregation known as New Bethel
Methodist Church. in 11960 an educational annex was added to the building on East
Main Street, creating the church of the present. |
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JUNE - (W. T. Willoughby Home - drawn by Kenny Hunt - 12th
grade) |
W. T. (Tommy) and Elena Tabor
Willoughby purchased their farm from Jim Neal in July 1890. They moved into the
house located four miles north of Scottsville on the Halifax Road on Christmas Eve.
The original house contained two large rooms with a breezeway connecting a log
cellar-house to the main house. The breezeway was often used for summer dining.
As the family grew, so did the house. Rooms and porches were added so that
there were eight rooms plus a pantry, front hall, screened porches on two sides and a
column porch across the front. The four upstairs bedrooms were called the "boys
upstairs" and the "girls upstairs" with separate stairways for each.
The Willoughbys reared twelve children to adulthood, namely: Ona, Lattice, Lola, Estes,
Clara, Mautie, Everett, Winnie, Jewell, Novice, Margaret Edna and Lewell. Following
in their father's footsteps, the girls all prepared for teaching. After the
parents' death so much family spirit remained that three of the children continued living
at the homeplace until their death. The farm still remains in the family, being
presently owned by Mautie and Ernest Reynolds. |
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JULY - (Walker's Chapel Methodist Church - drawn by Teresa
Harris - 11th grade) |
The William Walker family moved to an area
known as the "Big Woods" in 1848 and in 1850 a log church was built bearing the
name Walker's Chapel. William Walker deeded 150 acres of his land to Anderson Graves for
making boards for the roof. Rough benches with no backs were hewed out of logs. The floor
was made of logs split and laid side by side. As this was in the days of slavery, the
slaves helped hew the logs and bring them to the building site. William Walker died March
29,1879. Their graves are inside the rock wall at Walker's Chapel Church. In 1904 the
congregation built a new church, a tall weather-board church building, which served the
people for 46 years. The present brick church was built in 1949 on this site, with the
addition of Sunday School rooms in 1966. |
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AUGUST - (The Dodson -Smith Home - drawn by Julia
Powell - 11th grade) |
Records reveal that three families from South
Carolina came into this area in the early 1800's; the Hams who settled on Drakes Creek,
the Dodsons who built in the Trammel Creek area and the Smith family on Bays Fork Creek.
Charles Dodson, son of Dr. Dillingham Dodson (the first Allen County graduate from Harvard
University) and grandson of Charles Dodson, a Revolutionary War soldier, married Osthinia
Ham, daughter of William and Jenetta Williams Ham, and built this house of logs in October
of 1829. It consisted of two stories with a chimney located on each end and was located
near Butlersville on Trammel Creek. The porch was added about 1850 by the son of Charles
Dodson, Tillman, who was only seven years old when his father died. Tillman Dodson married
Helen Harmon and they became the parents of a daughter, Melissa Dodson who married Thomas
W. Smith. They had 3 sons, Ewing, Marshall and Ernest, all of whom were born in this
house. Ewing Smith married Helen Gillmore; Marshall Smith married Lillian William; and
Ernest Smith married Nellie Johnson. Ewing and Helen Smith had one child, James Williams,
who now lives in Lexington, Ky. He has one daughter, Diane, who lives in Gulfport, Miss.
Marshall and Ernest Smith had no children. In later years the house was enlarged and
remodeled; the logs were covered with weatherboarding. Nellie Smith, widow of Ernest
Smith, sold the farm to Jerry Ayers in August, 1971. It had remained in the Dodson-Smith,
sold the farm to Jerry Ayers in Aug. 1971. It had remained in the Dodson-Smith families
for a period of 142 years. It is now owned by Clovis T. Moore. |
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SEPTEMBER - (Mt. Victory High School - drawn by Stephen
Duke - 12th grade) |
Mt. Victory School, located at Trammel in
West Allen County, was founded in 1919. Through the persistent efforts of Dr. A.J. Dixon,
W.W. Bryant, E.L. Richards and others, the Beech Grove and White Oak Schools were combined
and became Mt. Victory. W.W. Bryant donated the land for the school building and grounds.
The school's first teachers were Mary Ellen Richards, Julia Gilliam Wheat and Jimmy
"Dock" Holland. Although established as a graded school, Mt. Victory became a
junior high school in 1922. Professor Albert Henry Hill was the first high school teacher.
In 1935, it became a four year high school and graduated its first class in 1936. In 1941
Mt. Victory High School, along with others, was consolidated into what became known as
Allen County High School located on West Cherry Street in Scottsville. Mt. Victory grade
school remained at Trammel until the 1950's, when it, too, became a victim of
consolidation. The building was soon vandalized. It was later sold, dismantled and built
into a home in that community. The home burned a short time later. Although the building
may not have been the most costly or beautiful, the alumni of Mt. Victory share an
unequalled enthusiasm for their Alma Mater and hold a reunion every year. |
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OCTOBER - (The Osborne Homeplace - drawn by Wayne Calvert -
12th grade) |
Ruben Bolivar Osborne II owned a 300 acre
farm in Warren County, Ky. near Rocky Springs Church where his father had settled at the
time Daniel Boone came into Kentucky. This farm was all upland and he longed to own a farm
with good bottom land. He found just such a tract of 300 acres in Allen Co., Ky. After
locating this farm he made a proposition to his four sons, William, Ewing, Ruben III and
Andrew Douglas, who were still at home. He told them that if they would come with him to
Allen Co. and stay with him until the farm was paid for, he would purchase the farm and
would see that each one had a home. I 1891 he sold his farm in Warren Co. and purchased
the 300 acres on Barren River in Allen County from Lovel Morehead. In 1895 William and
Ewing bought another farm known as the Leath farm. This land adjoined the original farm.
In 1898 Ruben Bolivar Osborne II and his sons had the farm paid for, so they then bought
out the other heirs, George, Newman, Elizabeth, Ann, Meriam, and sis. Osborne who had
remained in Warren County. He then divided the 300 acres into three equal parts and gave
each of the three married sons, William, Ewing, and Ruben III, the land which he had
promised. Douglas, who was not married and still at home, had no land. At that time they
purchased a farm just across Barren River in Warren County, built Douglas a house and
deeded the farm to him. Early records show that the home on the 300 acre tract was built
by the Jewell family in the 1860's and at that time this part of Allen Co. was known as
the "Jewell Bend." This is the house the Ruben Bolivar Osborne II family moved
into when they came to Allen County. When the farm was divided, William Dunn Osborne was
given the 100 acre tract with the homestead on it. He later moved into the house. The
home, located in the Meador community off Hwy 101 on the Osborne Bend Road, has been
remodeled four times and today is a modern country home, but throughout the years has
retained the original design. Stephen Eual Holder, who is a great-great-grandson of Ruben
Bolivar Osborne II, now owns the farm and lives in the house. |
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NOVEMBER - (The Judge Pardue-Hannah Ryan Home - drawn by
Christopher Calvert- 12th grade) |
Hannah Ryan's home located at 207 North Court
street dates back before the Civil War as shown in the following excerpt from the pen
sketch of Miss Sallie Edmonds as she described Scottsville as it was before the Civil War:
"North of Scottsville you find a real historic place. Here lived on e Mr. Griggs. In
the year of 1833 we had a meteoric shower which aroused the entire population. Thinking
the Judgement Day was being ushered in and knowing that they had failed to prepare for it,
they sought Mr. Griggs to pray for them. The home was later purchased by T. L. Atwood. In
Nov., 1881, O.S. Bryant purchased the home, enlarged and so completely changes the home
that it has little resemblance to its former self." County Judge W.F. Pardue
purchased the home on Aug. 25, 1926. In August, 1949 Mrs. Annie Crow Ayers and Edith Crow
(sisters of T.W. Crow, Sr.) bought the house from Judge Pardue. It is now the home of
Hannah Crow Ryan, grandniece of the sisters. |
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DECEMBER - (Mt. Zion Baptist Church - drawn by Carrie
Wright - 11th grade) |
Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church is located
about one mile form Holland, Ky. on Hwy 99. H.s. Evans from Indian Creek Church, H.W. Jent
from Spring Creek, and J.P. Durham from Hopewell Church constituted Mt. Zion Church at the
home of Asa Jent on December 8, 1888, with 18 members. J.P. Durham was the first pastor.
The Church met in a small, white frame building until the present building was constructed
in 1946, most of the work being done by the members using timber donated by members of the
Church. The Church has experienced many great revivals, one being in 1938, when the pastor
F. W. Lambert baptized forty converts. Mr. Zion has been a Light House in the community
for nearly a century. |