– Click on the image to enlarge or purchase – Hillsboro Covered Bridge Hillsboro covered bridge in Fleming County, Kentucky, which is sometimes referred to as Grange City bridge, is a multiple kingpost design. Built sometime between 1865 and 1870, it is 86 feet in length and crosses the Fox Creek. In the 1930s, the wood shingle roof and horizontal wood...
Learn More– Click on the image to enlarge or purchase – Tipton-Haynes Historic Site Advertised as “Tennessee’s most historic site”, the Tipton-Haynes Historic Site is located just outside Johnson City in north east Tennessee. The site relays the story of Tennessee’s history from early settlement days through Reconstruction after the Civil War era. An ancient...
Learn More– Click on the image to enlarge or purchase – Bennetts Mill Covered Bridge Bennetts Mill Covered Bridge, which crosses Tygarts Creek several miles south of the creek’s junction with the Ohio River in the north-east corner of Kentucky. It was built in 1854 near the town of South Shore in Greenup County. It is one of 13 covered bridges still standing...
Learn More– Click on the image to enlarge or purchase – Levi Jackson Wilderness Road State Park Levi Jackson Wilderness Road State Park is a park located just south of London, Kentucky in Laurel County. The park encompasses 896 acres, and includes a section of the Wilderness Road that early settlers used to reach Kentucky. The park is named for Levi Jackson, an early...
Learn More– Click on the image to enlarge or purchase – Elizabethton Covered Bridge The Elizabethton Covered Bridge is located in downtown Elizabethton, the county seat of Carter county, Tennessee and spans the Doe River. The information below comes from the Tennessee Department of Transport web-site on Tennessee Covered Bridges (Link since taken down but you can...
Learn More– Click on the image to enlarge or purchase – Harshaw Chapel and Cemetery Harshaw Chapel and Cemetery is located at the junction of Church and Central Streets in Murphy, North Carolina. It was built in 1869 by Joshua Harshaw, who was a prominent slaveholder in the area. It is in the Greek Revival style and was designed by James Warner Cooper. No longer...
Learn More