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Green Family Farm Historic District: Difference between revisions

From History of Owensboro
Add all photos inline with relevant sections
Fix photo rotations, inline bridge/church photos, add mill gallery
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The Green family grist mill is a large three-story structure resting on a cut limestone block foundation immediately against the western bank of the Rough River. The mill retains a wooden undershot wheel with hand-carved wooden gears. Still in operation as late as the 1960s, all grinding equipment remains intact. The mill ground wheat on stone burrs, later steel rolls, and distributed flour under the brand names "Grayson Lily" and "Good Enough," serving seven counties across the region.
The Green family grist mill is a large three-story structure resting on a cut limestone block foundation immediately against the western bank of the Rough River. The mill retains a wooden undershot wheel with hand-carved wooden gears. Still in operation as late as the 1960s, all grinding equipment remains intact. The mill ground wheat on stone burrs, later steel rolls, and distributed flour under the brand names "Grayson Lily" and "Good Enough," serving seven counties across the region.


<div style="clear:both;"></div>
===Iron Bridge===
===Iron Bridge===
[[File:Falls of Rough iron bridge.jpg|thumb|right|The 1877 King Iron Bridge Company arch beam bridge spanning Rough River, c. 1977]]
[[File:Falls of Rough iron bridge.jpg|thumb|right|The 1877 King Iron Bridge Company arch beam bridge spanning Rough River, c. 1977]]
The district includes an 1877 arch beam iron bridge spanning the Rough River. Constructed by the King Iron Bridge Company of Cleveland, Ohio, the single-span bridge is 148 feet in length and rests on stone masonry abutments. It is one of very few arch beam bridges of its type remaining in Kentucky.
The district includes an 1877 arch beam iron bridge spanning the Rough River. Constructed by the King Iron Bridge Company of Cleveland, Ohio, the single-span bridge is 148 feet in length and rests on stone masonry abutments. It is one of very few arch beam bridges of its type remaining in Kentucky.


<div style="clear:both;"></div>
===Methodist Church===
===Methodist Church===
[[File:Falls of Rough Methodist Church.jpg|thumb|right|Falls of Rough Methodist Church, c. 1977]]
[[File:Falls of Rough Methodist Church.jpg|thumb|right|Falls of Rough Methodist Church, c. 1977]]
The Falls of Rough Methodist Church is a simple frame Gothic Revival structure on a stone foundation, featuring lancet windows and a gabled porch. Built at the instigation of Lafayette Green's wife Ella, the church served both the Green family and the broader community. Its Gothic pointed arches and pilaster-like corner boards are typical of modest rural church architecture of the mid-nineteenth century.
The Falls of Rough Methodist Church is a simple frame Gothic Revival structure on a stone foundation, featuring lancet windows and a gabled porch. Built at the instigation of Lafayette Green's wife Ella, the church served both the Green family and the broader community. Its Gothic pointed arches and pilaster-like corner boards are typical of modest rural church architecture of the mid-nineteenth century.


<div style="clear:both;"></div>
===Barns===
===Barns===
West of the residence stand several large wooden barns erected for housing livestock. These include a 24-stall mule barn and an auxiliary barn. At the southwestern end of the district stands a large barn with a structural interior of hewn logs with mortise and tenon pegged joints.
West of the residence stand several large wooden barns erected for housing livestock. These include a 24-stall mule barn and an auxiliary barn. At the southwestern end of the district stands a large barn with a structural interior of hewn logs with mortise and tenon pegged joints.
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*'''Criterion A''' -- For its association with the agricultural, commercial, and industrial history of rural Kentucky, representing the development of a self-sustaining community enterprise from the 1830s through the early twentieth century
*'''Criterion A''' -- For its association with the agricultural, commercial, and industrial history of rural Kentucky, representing the development of a self-sustaining community enterprise from the 1830s through the early twentieth century
*'''Criterion C''' -- As a collection of nineteenth-century vernacular commercial, residential, agricultural, and industrial buildings that retain a high degree of integrity of materials, design, and setting
*'''Criterion C''' -- As a collection of nineteenth-century vernacular commercial, residential, agricultural, and industrial buildings that retain a high degree of integrity of materials, design, and setting
==Additional Photographs==
<gallery widths="220" heights="165">
File:Falls of Rough mill exterior.jpg|Grist mill side view showing the sawmill foundation at left, c. 1977
File:Falls of Rough wool mill exterior.jpg|Wool-carding mill building, c. 1977
File:Falls of Rough mill interior.jpg|Interior of the mill showing original machinery, c. 1977
</gallery>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 04:07, 4 April 2026

Green Family Farm Historic District
Willis Green House, the visual center of the district, c. 1977
Location
AddressRoute 110
CityFalls of Rough
StateKentucky
Construction
Built1830 (Willis Green House); district developed 1830-1903
OwnerMrs. Mary O'Neill (at time of listing)
Current usePrivate residence and agricultural use
National Register of Historic Places
Reference #78001305
Listed1978
CriteriaCriteria A (history) and C (architecture)
Period1830-1903

The Green Family Farm Historic District (also known as the Falls of Rough Historic District) is a historic district located in Falls of Rough, Breckinridge and Grayson Counties, Kentucky. The district encompasses a remarkably intact rural community centered on the Green family's agricultural and commercial empire, which flourished from the 1830s through the early twentieth century. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

Description

The district includes a collection of nineteenth-century structures spread along Route 110 and the Rough River, including the Willis Green House, a commercial district, several mills, an iron bridge, wooden barns, a Methodist church, and ancillary farm buildings.

Willis Green House

Ornate Victorian ironwork entrance porch of the Willis Green House, c. 1977

The Willis Green House serves as the visual center of the Falls of Rough complex. Originally constructed in 1830 of local lumber and brick by Willis Green II, the house was extensively altered in 1879 when it was raised to two full stories. The front facade features an ornate Victorian ironwork porch with elaborate decorative arched trim. The house retains Federal-period details including elliptical fanlights over the main entrance and original reeded door surrounds with bull's eye corner blocks. The central passage and stairhall retain a Greek key motif inlaid in light and dark woods.

Commercial District

The Cheap Cash Store, Falls of Rough, built 1880, c. 1977

The commercial district consists of three small frame buildings along Route 110. The most architecturally notable is the "Cheap Cash Store," constructed in 1880. This two-story frame building features a returning cornice supported by stylized brackets, Doric fluted pilasters flanking the entrance, and decorative panels beneath the first-story windows. The store interior retains its original elaborate stock shelving with fluted trim and semicircular raised arched units. A former bank building (later used as a post office) stands nearby, a simple frame structure with a false front.

Grist Mill

Green family grist mill on the Rough River, c. 1977

The Green family grist mill is a large three-story structure resting on a cut limestone block foundation immediately against the western bank of the Rough River. The mill retains a wooden undershot wheel with hand-carved wooden gears. Still in operation as late as the 1960s, all grinding equipment remains intact. The mill ground wheat on stone burrs, later steel rolls, and distributed flour under the brand names "Grayson Lily" and "Good Enough," serving seven counties across the region.

Iron Bridge

The 1877 King Iron Bridge Company arch beam bridge spanning Rough River, c. 1977

The district includes an 1877 arch beam iron bridge spanning the Rough River. Constructed by the King Iron Bridge Company of Cleveland, Ohio, the single-span bridge is 148 feet in length and rests on stone masonry abutments. It is one of very few arch beam bridges of its type remaining in Kentucky.

Methodist Church

Falls of Rough Methodist Church, c. 1977

The Falls of Rough Methodist Church is a simple frame Gothic Revival structure on a stone foundation, featuring lancet windows and a gabled porch. Built at the instigation of Lafayette Green's wife Ella, the church served both the Green family and the broader community. Its Gothic pointed arches and pilaster-like corner boards are typical of modest rural church architecture of the mid-nineteenth century.

Barns

West of the residence stand several large wooden barns erected for housing livestock. These include a 24-stall mule barn and an auxiliary barn. At the southwestern end of the district stands a large barn with a structural interior of hewn logs with mortise and tenon pegged joints.

History

The Falls of Rough community traces its origins to Judge Sebastian, who acquired waterfall sites on the Rough River in the early nineteenth century and built a grist mill, sawmill, and general store. In 1830, Willis Green II, a lawyer from Hardinsburg, acquired 200 acres from the Sebastian heirs including the waterfalls, the town, mills, and store, and immediately began constructing the brick house that became the family seat. During the 1830s he added a sawmill and grist mills on the south side of the river.

The most dramatic expansion came under Lafayette Green (1848-1915), son of Willis Green II. Lafayette rebuilt and expanded the grist mill after an 1855 flood, constructed a three-story woolen mill, erected the Cheap Cash Store in 1880, and improved the residence to two full stories. He became one of the largest individual landowners in the county, raising cattle and Shetland ponies sold nationwide. A local newspaper in 1903 described him as "probably the largest individual taxpayer and property owner in this section of Kentucky."

In 1890, Lafayette was instrumental in extending a four-and-a-half-mile spur of the Louisville, Henderson and St. Louis Railroad into Falls of Rough, connecting the community to regional markets. The railroad was later taken over by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which discontinued service in 1939.

From 1905 to 1908 a small bank operated in the community; the post office was later located in the bank building. The sawmill, once the largest in western Kentucky, was sold and dismantled in 1941. Lafayette's four children, Willis, Preston, Robert, and Jennie, never married, and the property remained undivided under family management through much of the twentieth century.

George Washington is believed to have owned approximately 5,000 acres in the Rough River country during the 1780s, part of which constitutes the southwestern section of the present Green farm, though he likely never visited the land.

Significance

The Green Family Farm Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places under Criteria A and C:

  • Criterion A -- For its association with the agricultural, commercial, and industrial history of rural Kentucky, representing the development of a self-sustaining community enterprise from the 1830s through the early twentieth century
  • Criterion C -- As a collection of nineteenth-century vernacular commercial, residential, agricultural, and industrial buildings that retain a high degree of integrity of materials, design, and setting

Additional Photographs

References

  • Morrissey, Jim. "Falls of Rough: Oasis of the Past." Courier-Journal Magazine, October 27, 1963.
  • McKinney, R.H. "Falls of Rough, Kentucky." The Leitchfield Gazette, November 1903 (reprint April 5, 1973).
  • St. Clair, Burl. "Rough River Country." The Leitchfield Gazette, April 5, 1973.
  • Westerfield, Thomas W. "Lafayette Green." Kentucky Genealogy and Biography. Owensboro: Genealogical Reference Co., 1970.
  • National Register of Historic Places Nomination: Green Family Farm Historic District (78001305). Kentucky Heritage Council, 1977.