Bashford Manor
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Bashford Manor is a neighborhood in Louisville, Kentucky, USA. Its boundaries are I-264 to the north, Bardstown Road to the east, Bashford Manor Lane to the south, and Newburg Road to the west. Originally a part of Thomas Byrd's 1,000 acre (4 kmĀ²) land grant from Virginia in 1787, James Bennett Wilder bought the land in 1870 and built a home he named Bashford Manor, after his family's home in England. He sold the property to George James Long in 1888, who turned it into a horse farm which produced three early Kentucky Derby winners: Azra, Manuel and Sir Huon.[1]
The home stayed in his family until it was sold in 1951. It was annexed by Louisville in 1953. Many residential developments began at this time, the first being Harold Miller's Bashford Manor gardens in 1952. Other subdivisions included Manorview and the largest single subidivision, Village Green. Apartment complexes were built during the 1960s, and commercial developments such as Watterson City in 1965. By the 1970s Watterson City was Louisville's largest suburban commercial center, and Bashford Manor Mall was built in the area.
The area went into a decline by the 1990s, with the mall and other businesses (such as a once thriving multiplex cinema) closing, although the situation improved in the 2000s when a Walmart and a Lowe's were built on the site of the old mall.[2]
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[edit] Bashford Manor Mall
Bashford Manor Mall, named for the surrounding neighborhood, was an enclosed mall which opened in 1973 and once had about 85 stores, but only one (a dry cleaner's) remained by late 2003, after years of decline. In 1999 the mall had been purchased by Rubloff Developments of Detroit, who began to renovate it in 2001 but did not finish, and eventually sold it for demolition in 2003.[3] An abandoned Dillard's store, not owned by the mall, remained standing.
The mall was briefly mentioned in national news stories when 12-year-old Ann Gotlib disappeared from the mall in June 1, 1983. She was never found and the case remained unsolved as of 2007.[4]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Smith, Scheri. "Art to be reminder of area's past", Courier-Journal, 2004-12-23.
- ^ Berzof, Ken. "Area home sales set to break record", Courier-Journal, 2004-11-13, p. 1D.
- ^ Smith, Scheri. "Wal-Mart eyes Bashford Manor", Courier-Journal, 2003-09-18.
- ^ "Remembering Ann Gotlib, 22 years later", Courier-Journal, 2005-05-24.
[edit] References
- "Bashford Manor". The Encyclopedia of Louisville (1). (2001).