Traveler's Rest (Shelby City, Kentucky)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Traveler's_Rest_(Shelby_City,_Kentucky) an entity of type: Thing

Traveler's Rest in Lincoln County, Kentucky is the historic home place of Isaac Shelby, the first Governor of Kentucky. Shelby acquired the property as the first land settlement preemption deed in Kentucky as a reward for his surveying services. The original house was built in 1786 of limestone, three feet thick. It stood until a fire in 1905. On the same site, a brick two-story house was built by Shelby's descendants. Built in 1906 in the Georgian and Federal revival styles, it was accepted into the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1976 for its association with Shelby. Shelby's original brick slave's quarters still stand on the property. The Isaac Shelby Cemetery State Historic Site on the same property, where Shelby and his family are buried, is open to the public. The house rdf:langString
rdf:langString Traveler's Rest (Shelby City, Kentucky)
rdf:langString Traveler's Rest
rdf:langString Traveler's Rest
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xsd:float -84.78379058837891
xsd:integer 64251479
xsd:integer 1122334577
xsd:date 1976-05-03
rdf:langString Georgian, Federal Revival
rdf:langString Historical marker at entrance
rdf:langString Kentucky#USA
xsd:integer 76000914
xsd:string 37.564386 -84.783792
rdf:langString Traveler's Rest in Lincoln County, Kentucky is the historic home place of Isaac Shelby, the first Governor of Kentucky. Shelby acquired the property as the first land settlement preemption deed in Kentucky as a reward for his surveying services. The original house was built in 1786 of limestone, three feet thick. It stood until a fire in 1905. On the same site, a brick two-story house was built by Shelby's descendants. Built in 1906 in the Georgian and Federal revival styles, it was accepted into the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1976 for its association with Shelby. Shelby's original brick slave's quarters still stand on the property. The Isaac Shelby Cemetery State Historic Site on the same property, where Shelby and his family are buried, is open to the public. The house at Traveler's Rest is privately owned and is not open to the public.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2800
xsd:string 76000914
xsd:gYear 1906
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