Monday, June 27, 2011

Gestville - Hotel

General store section of the building
 After several photo trips to Gestville, I have compiled a few after gaining access to a large, old building alongside the Kentucky River's Lock Number 3. This old building is recalled by many locals as the Gestville General Store.
Much time has passed since it had been occupied by store owners, and rented out as low income housing for a while. Nearly every room has an iron fireplace mantel, and the structure appears to be late 19th Century, which would be all indicative of this building having once been a hotel.
Note the ashtray
Drennon Springs is the next stop past the locks, where many wealthy people in the late 19th Century stayed for the reputation that the sulphur springs healed various diseases. This leaves Gestville to be a place where river boatmen were to stay the night. The locals tell of two different taverns in town, one directly across the street from the hotel. The dam and lock are no longer in use, but was active in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. All evidence indicates that this was a river boatman's hotel.
The interior looks worn out, yet much of the railing and floors look to be hand made and from local trees. Locals tell of their parents and grandparents ordering supplies from downstream towns such as Frankfort. I can imagine luxury furniture and beds in each room.
It seems that decades of abuse and many years of neglect has left this onetime gem a rotting shell. Its former glory now rests with chairs sitting in lonely, dark rooms next to empty beer cans and even an ashtray mounted in a wall. Water damage has buckled the walls and warped the hardwood floors.
An upcoming article on the history of Gestville, KY, is on its way. Much of what was planned for this town likely called for such a large hotel in the center. Until then, here are some teasers: Gestville was zoned and planned to be another thriving river city like Cincinnati and Louisville along the Ohio; a combination of a crippling cholera outbreak and the rise of the locomotion were likely culprits to the exodus of Gestville; of the at least three churches in Gestville, only one of those congregations exist today.




As many of you guys know, I am not a big fan of PhotoShop. However, I had some fun with one of my photographs making it appear old and worn.


PhotoShop made this photo fun.

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