I have traveled to Louisville, Kentucky twice for the Imaginarium Convention, and managed some sightseeing in the process. East on Interstate 64 for about a four-hour drive, Louisville’s fondness for fleur-de-lis emblems reminded me of my home base, St. Louis, and got me thinking about the parallels between these two river cities. The easy drive takes you across the Illinois prairie, then through the hilly terrain of the Hoosier National Forest of southern Indiana. This is wine country, and you might want to schedule a stop for lunch. Alert: Time travel happens somewhere along here. St. Louis is in the Central Time Zone; Louisville is in the Eastern. Once you cross the Ohio River, you’re in Louisville.
Booze and Brews
The bourbon culture is strong in Louisville, while beer rules St. Louis. You can visit at least ten different distilleries or even make a trail of it, starting at the Frazier History Museum. I only visited Copper & Kings Distillery, which specializes in brandy and liquors other than bourbon. The facility is beautiful and the tour interesting, especially the aging room for the barrels, where they play music to keep the liquors agitated. Tastings, of course, are available, and a nice, on-site restaurant is usually open (just not on the day of my visit).
St. Louis will host you to the “king of beers” Anheuser-Busch Brewery tour, as well as numerous microbreweries and brewpubs. (Shout out to my friends at Bluewood Brewery!) If you enjoy learning how everyday objects are made, the brewery tour is a great behind-the-scenes look at one of the most iconic beer brands in the world. Free samples! And the pretzels are the best.
Baseball
Louisville doesn’t have a major league baseball team, but the minor league Louisville Bats plays at Louisville Slugger Field. Louisville’s greatest claim to baseball fame is the Louisville Slugger Bat Factory. (Get it? Baseball Bats?) I didn’t get to a Bats game, but the tour of the baseball bat factory is fascinating and informative. They give you a mini bat to take home, and it looks like you (or the kids) could do some real damage with it, so be careful! The site also includes a baseball museum with engaging, interactive displays. Guests are invited to (carefully) hold the most revered artifacts of America’s traditional past time. Both my husband and I choose Babe Ruth’s bat as our brush with greatness.
St. Louis is home to the National League baseball team, the St. Louis Cardinals, once owned by Anheuser-Busch Brewery. The Cardinals play at the downtown Busch Stadium.
And there is a Cardinal connection with Louisville: The Louisville minor league baseball team was once associated with the St. Louis Cardinals and called the Louisville Cardinals. Now, the Louisville Cardinals are a college baseball team, the University of Louisville’s varsity intercollegiate baseball program.
Riverboats
Louisville has several excursion riverboat rides, harkening back to Louisville’s steamboat era.[1]
Riverboats plied the Mississippi from points south, making St. Louis a major transportation hub in the nineteenth century. Now, recreational boat rides are available from the riverfront area just below the Gateway Arch.
Boxers
One of Louisville’s famous sons is heavyweight boxing champ Muhammad Ali. We visited both the Muhammad Ali Center and Ali’s burial site at Cave Hill Cemetery, on two separate trips.
The only boxer to gain Ali’s world heavyweight title through a win in the ring was St. Louis’s Leon Spikes, in 1978. Ali retrieved the heavyweight crown in a rematch later that year.
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[1] Tim Talbott, “Louisville’s Steamboat Era,” ExploreKYHistory, accessed August 22, 2023, https://explorekyhistory.ky.gov/items/show/461.
Great post!
Love,
A lifelong Louisvillian who now wants to visit St. Louis!
For sure! Visitors are always welcome. Maybe you’ll see other parallels. And while St. Louis appears to be midwestern on a map, I’ve always maintained we’re a southern city. River influence, no doubt.
I really enjoyed your blog. It was so descriptive that I felt like I was in Louisville with you.
I’m glad you enjoyed the “virtual trip” via the blog. And thanks for reading and commenting!