The Hunt-Morgan House

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The Morgans at Hopemont, c1870. J. Winston Coleman, Jr., Collection, Transylvania University
The Morgans at Hopemont, c1870. J. Winston Coleman, Jr., Collection, Transylvania University

The Hunt-Morgan House, historically known as Hopemont, is a Federal style residence in Lexington, Kentucky built in 1814 by John Wesley Hunt, the first millionaire west of the Alleghenies. The house, located in the Gratz Park Historic District. The Alexander T. Hunt Civil War Museum is located on the second floor of the Hunt-Morgan House. [1]

Other notable people that resided at Hopemont include John Wesley Hunt's grandson, General John Hunt Morgan, a general in the Confederate Army. Thomas Hunt Morgan, the only Kentuckian to have won the Nobel Prize, was born in the house in 1866.

The House has many beautiful architectural features, including the Palladian window with fan and sidelights that grace its front façade. In 1955 the Blue Grass Trust for Historic Preservation was formed to save the home from impending demolition. The organization restored the home to its Federal appearance.[1]

The Hunt-Morgan House is located on the corner of Mill and Second Streets, at 201 N. Mill Street.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hunt-Morgan House, National Park Service web site. url accessed 10/18/2006

[edit] External links

The Hunt-Morgan House, Lexington, Kentucky web site

www.bluegrasstrust.org