93:, now also part of Louisville (it was then northwest of the larger city). The introduction to the Louisville Directory of 1844 expressed lingering negative public sentiment toward the canal: "The Louisville and Portland Canal, as constructed and maintained, is precisely one of those improvements for private interests, at the expense of the public good, which is obnoxious to the good of the whole community".
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78:. From 1810 to 1820 the population increased 500%, from 98 to over 500, and this seriously challenged Louisville as Kentucky's most important port. Other early features included Elm Tree Garden, where there was horse-racing, and the Napoleon Distillery. The Tarascons' six-story flour mill built in 1817 became a symbol of Shippingport's success.
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In 1803 the settlement was sold to a
Philadelphia-based partnership and renamed Shippingport. Two Tarascon brothers became leaders of the French business community at the Falls, building a large warehouse, a 1200-foot rope walk, and a six-story water-powered flour mill at the site by 1819. Numerous
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Kentucky: A History of the State, Embracing a
Concise Account of the Origin and Development of the Virginia Colony, Its Expansion Westward, and the Settlement of the Frontier Beyond the Alleghanies : the Erection of Kentucky as an Independent State, and Its Subsequent
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Shippingport was hard hit by the loss of its traditional business. In 1828, Louisville incorporated as a city and included
Shippingport in its boundaries. But a bad flood in 1832 was the reason most of the French community moved to
35:. It was located on a peninsula on the south bank of the Ohio River, and incorporated without a name on October 10, 1785. It was later named Campbell Town after Revolutionary War soldier and settler John Campbell. He had been
101:, which swamped this area. About 20 years later, the federal government condemned the remaining private property in 1958 to widen the canal, evicting the last families, some of whom had roots there for more than a century.
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The remnants of the settlement dwindled over the next century as the canal was gradually widened and a hydroelectric plant was built on the island. Most of the remaining families were forced to leave after the devastating
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Among the early streets was
Tarascon, named for the two French brothers who built up early development; and Bengal, perhaps named for a French settler and schoolteacher who came from Bengal via
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and its violence and political chaos, or social unrest in French colonies in the
Caribbean. In 1804 former slaves succeeded in gaining independence for
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across the peninsula left the settlement on an island. Using the canal, ships could bypass the Falls and, by extension, Shippingport.
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Though the town frequently flooded, Shippingport reached its peak in the 1820s with a population of 600. In 1825, construction of the
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families settled in the area, making it a center of French culture for a time. Some of the French settlers came from
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from the
University of Louisville Libraries. Includes street maps of Shippingport prior to razing.
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is an industrial site and one of the six formerly independent settlements at the
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Burnett, Robert A. (April 1976). "Louisville's French Past".
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Historic Maps of
Louisville/Jefferson County, Kentucky
171:, Adair County (Ky.): F. A. Battey, 1887, pp. 287, 294
165:William Henry Perrin, J. H. Battle, G. C. Kniffin,
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240:Burnett (1976), "Louisville's French Past", p. 18
231:Burnett (1976), "Louisville's French Past," p. 17
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267:A Brief History of Shippingport Island, Kentucky
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219:Sketches of Louisville and its environs
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221:. G.R. Clark Press. pp. 158–162.
314:Former populated places in Kentucky
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131:History of the French in Louisville
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319:Geography of Louisville, Kentucky
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121:Geography of Louisville, Kentucky
59:in 1803. Others were fleeing the
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324:History of Louisville, Kentucky
126:History of Louisville, Kentucky
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20:Shippingport as it looks today
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204:Filson Club History Quarterly
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83:Louisville and Portland Canal
192:, ed. John E. Kleber, p. 322
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190:Encyclopedia of Louisville
217:McMurtrie, Henry (1969).
74:and had first settled in
99:Ohio River flood of 1937
41:French & Indian War
116:Fort Nelson (Kentucky)
25:Shippingport, Kentucky
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290:38.27510°N 85.77860°W
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141:Portland, Louisville
33:Louisville, Kentucky
295:38.27510; -85.77860
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53:Kaskaskia, Illinois
259:2012-07-25 at the
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57:Louisiana Purchase
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278:38°16′30″N
147:References
257:Archived
186:"French"
105:See also
91:Portland
72:Calcutta
49:French
65:Haiti
206:: 9.
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