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・ Joe Coyle
・ Joe Crabtree
・ Joe Craddock
・ Joe Craddock (footballer)
・ Joe Craft
・ Joe Craft Center
・ Joe Craig
・ Joe Craig (footballer)
・ Joe Crail
・ Joe Craven
・ Joe Craven (footballer)
・ Joe Cravens
・ Joe Crawford (baseball)
・ Joe Crawford (basketball)
・ Joe Creason
Joe Creason Park
・ Joe Crede
・ Joe Cressy
・ Joe Cribb
・ Joe Cribbs
・ Joe Crisp
・ Joe Crispin
・ Joe Cronin
・ Joe Crookston
・ Joe Cross
・ Joe Cross (baseball)
・ Joe Cross (filmmaker)
・ Joe Crotty
・ Joe Crowl
・ Joe Crowley (television presenter)


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Joe Creason Park : ウィキペディア英語版
Joe Creason Park

Joe Creason Park is a municipal park in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. Located in the Poplar Level neighborhood, it is in roughly the central portion of the city. The park adjoins and connects to Beargrass Creek State Nature Preserve, and both were originally part of the same property prior to becoming parks.
The park is located on the south fork of Beargrass Creek. It opened as a park in 1966.
The park is named for Joe Creason, a popular features journalist for ''The Courier-Journal'', who died while playing tennis at the park's Louisville Tennis Center in 1974.〔(Welsh, Rev. Joey N., "A Thanksgiving Homage to Joe Creason," ColumbiaMagazine.com, November 19, 2006 )〕
==History==
In 1789, Joseph Kinney and Basil Prather purchased the land that became the park as adjoining estates from Robert Daniel. Kinney built a house where the current Metro Parks administration building stands; Prather's house was located to the northwest, across Illinois Avenue near where the Quarry Shopping Center is today.
Kinney's estate was called ''Fox Hill'' and passed through several owners. John B. Castleman, a Confederate veteran and local real estate investor, owned the property from 1885 to 1894 and renamed it Castleford. Ben Collings, a construction materials supplier specializing in concrete, purchased the property in 1937 and renamed it ''Colonial Farms''.〔
The Basil Prather estate was partitioned after his death, with numerous owners over the years until they were acquired for the temporary Camp Taylor operation during World War I. Ben Collings permanently reassembled them after the war.〔
Collings accumulated almost by the time of his death in 1951, including much of what became the Louisville Zoo. His widow sold some of the land to private interests and the Archdiocese of Louisville. Bellarmine College purchased the remainder of the estate. In 1966, the city of Louisville paid Bellarmine approximately $600,000 ($ today) for , including the mansion.〔
The farm had been used to grow tobacco at some points, but by Collings' ownership it was a horse farm. It was also used as an orchard, and a few fruit trees still remain. The Prather graveyard still remains on the property.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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