16136. (photograph) United States Coast Guard Station, Louisville, Kentucky. c.1928.
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16136. (photograph) United States Coast Guard Station, Louisville, Kentucky. c.1928.
16136. (photograph) United States Coast Guard Station, Louisville, Kentucky. c.1928. Clear, close original 8” x 10” press photo shows great detail of the one-of-a-kind river Coast Guard stations. The United States Life-Saving Service was established in 1848 and soon stations were established around the country near dangerous waters. The first such lifesaving station on the Western Rivers was established at Louisville , Kentucky , in 1881 to guard the treacherous Falls of the Ohio River . In 1902, another wooden lifeboat station replaced the first. It too was moored at the foot of Third Street . The wooden hull of the second Louisville Life-Saving Station eventually became worn out and a new station was built. The present station was built on the lines of the earlier station wharfboats, but a more durable steel hull replaced the wooden hulls of the earlier boats. This boat, now the Mayor Andrew Broaddus, was commissioned in 1928 and still exists in Louisville as a museum. Dating from about the late 1920’s, this view shows the third station in fine detail. Behind can be seen the large Steamboat Cincinnati of the Louisville & Cincinatti Packet Company. Clear and close view. (VG+). $44.