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History
of Jeffersontown
In
the late 1770's, the Kentucky ridge on which Jeffersontown would be
built was still the forest home of deer, elk, wildcats, and bears.
Buffalo lumbered along ancient forest trails on their way to salt
licks. Indians also hunted here.
But
by the late 1790's, this area rang with the sounds of settlers whose
wagons rumbled over rutted dirt roads as they moved eastward from
Louisville toward their newly claimed land. This movement
created a natural crossroads on the ridge and early entrepreneurs
soon set up shop.
In
1794, Abraham Bruner saw the potential for a town, purchased a
ridge, and divided a 40-acre tract into streets and lots. On
May 3rd 1797, the Jefferson County Court officially established the
Town of Jefferson, now Jeffersontown, although most of its
inhabitants called it Brunerstown.
Jeffersontown
developed into a friendly village where dusty streets and stone
sidewalks gave entry into the shops and well-kept homes of
prosperous merchants. George Doup's brewery was located where
he could take advantage of the town's spring-fed pond. In Adam
Hoke's tobacco shop, his six daughters rolled fine cigars. Mr.
Baringer wove cloth, and Fred Stucky was the town's skilled tailor.
There were stonecutters, wheelwrights, a saddler, and other
craftsmen whose quality wares supplied the surrounding countryside
and even some stores in Louisville.
Change
came slowly. But in the late 1800s the Louisville and
Taylorsville Pike, a broken rock road, replaced the former dirt road
through town. The Southern Railroad built a depot, and in 1903
the Electric Railway, or Interurban, established a route from
Louisville to Jeffersontown's public square.
In
the 1950s, Taylorsville Road was widened and General Electric's
Appliance Park was opened, bringing new residents to the area.
In the following decade, the interchange at I-64 and Hurstbourne
Lane put downtown Louisville within easy reach. The Bluegrass
Industrial Park was constructed, and in 1972 a 700-acre dairy farm
became a planned community of homes, apartments, stores, and
offices.
By
the time the town celebrated its bicentennial in 1997, more than
25,000 people lived in Jeffersontown, and over 33,000 worked in the
Bluegrass Industrial Park, making Jeffersontown the third largest
employer in the state and the second largest city in Jefferson
County.
From
Jeffersontown, Kentucky-The First 200 Years
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