Blackacre Nature Preserve and Historic Homestead
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2018) |
Tyler Settlement Rural Historic District | |
NRHP reference No. | 86001045[1] |
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Added to NRHP | May 1, 1986 |
Blackacre State Nature Preserve is a 271-acre (110 ha) nature preserve and historic homestead in Louisville, Kentucky. The preserve features rolling fields, streams, forests, and a homestead dating back to the 18th century. For visitors, the preserve features several farm animals including horses, goats, and cows, hiking trails, and a visitor's center in the 1844-built Presley Tyler home. Since 1981, it has been used by the Jefferson County Public Schools as the site of a continuing environmental education program. About 10,000 students visit the outdoor classroom each year.
The preserve was created in 1979 when the land was given to the Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves by Judge Macauley and Mrs. Emilie Smith creating the first nature preserve in the Commonwealth's system. The Blackacre Conservancy, founded in 1983, operates the historic homestead and conducts cultural and historical programs while the Office retains ownership of the preserve and manages its natural resources.
Blackacre is part of the old Moses Tyler farm, several original farm buildings remain, including the 1844 Presley Tyler home, an Appalachian-style barn and a reconstructed stone spring house. The entire 600-acre (240 ha) settlement has been named a national historic rural settlement. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Tyler Settlement Rural Historic District in 1986.[1][2]
The name Blackacre is used as a generic name in legal contexts, particularly in law school and on bar exams, to refer to a parcel of land. The Smith family gave the land the name Blackacre; previously it was known as Land O'Skye.
History
Blackacre was first settled by the Tyler Family, who arrived in Louisville in 1780. Edward Tyler II purchased a Treasury Warrant allowing him to lay claim to a parcel of land. Moses Tyler was transferred, a portion of that, the 220 acres (89 ha) that now compromise the majority of Blackacre. Later the land was given to Moses's son, Presley. Moses Tyler had already built a barn, a stone cottage and
Slavery
Born into a fourth-generation tobacco planting family, Edward Tyler II sold slaves in both Maryland and Kentucky.[3] At one point in 1851, Tyler's grandson Robert Tyler Jr., kept 41 slaves on the property.[citation needed] The slave population increased during the Civil War; by 1865, there were seventeen slaves on the property, including ten younger than age 17.[4]
Buildings
The barn is one of the three original Blackacre buildings. Built in 1790, the double-crib Appalachian barn was made out of large poplar boards harvested from the Blackacre property. Today the barn displays the pre-industrial farm tools that would have been used at Blackacre.
The stone cottage is the second original 1790 building.
The springhouse is the last of the original buildings. Springhouses acted as a refrigeration unit. Perishable food that could not be salted or smoked would be stored. A second floor of the spring was built to allow residents to cool off on hot days. The spring that lies next to the springhouse is man-made.
The farmhouse was built in 1844. Architecturally, it displays the influence of Greek-revival design. The farmhouse now holds the Blackacre's Visitors' Center.
Gallery
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18th Century Spring house show during the wintertime
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19th Century Presley Tyler Farmhouse and Historic Homestead
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Redbuds
See also
- List of attractions and events in the Louisville metropolitan area
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Jefferson County, Kentucky
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ Douglas Stern (1986). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Tyler Settlement Rural Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved March 1, 2018. With 32 photos from 1985.
- ^ "Ancestry.com. History of Kentucky. Original data: Collins, Lewis. History of Kentucky. Vol II. p. 723".
- ^ Jefferson County Kentucky Tax List 1789-1865.