Hardin County History Museum

Hardin County History Museum 201 West Dixie Avenue, Elizabethtown, KY
Open Tuesday thru Saturday 10 AM - 2 PM
No Admission Charge

Kentucky Faces of the Confederacy photo exhibit open now through January 31st in the upper gallery at the museum. Many o...
12/05/2013

Kentucky Faces of the Confederacy photo exhibit open now through January 31st in the upper gallery at the museum. Many of these men served under the leadership of Hardin County's own General Ben Hardin Helm or with General John Hunt Morgan.
The UDC is also accepting images of Confederate soldiers from the local area to add to this extensive collection.

The Hardin County History Museum was proud to organize this 150th Commemorative Event on Saturday, September 14, 2013. W...
09/15/2013

The Hardin County History Museum was proud to organize this 150th Commemorative Event on Saturday, September 14, 2013. We sincerely thank the Louisville, KY Albert Sidney Johnston Chapter #120 United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Elizabethtown, KY General Ben Hardin Helm Camp Sons of Confederate Veterans for their assistance in remembrance of the Life of this Remarkable Hardin County Citizen in the years leading up to and including the American Civil War. His leadership will be remembered for generations to come.

06/14/2013

The immediate past president and one of the original organizers of the Hardin County History Museum, Elizabethtown Mayor Timothy C. Walker, has died.
Tim was a lover of history and a wonderful leader here at the museum, in the local community, and in his church. As a leader he shared his faith and his vision to improve the quality of life for all.
Robert F. Kennedy once said, “It is from numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped. Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope.”
Tim Walker has shaped the history of Elizabethtown and Hardin County and made it a better place for his time among us.

05/02/2013

Today is the 62nd annual observance of the National Day of Prayer. This year’s theme, “Pray for America”, is based on Matthew 12:21, “In His name the nations will put their hope.”
Visit the Hardin County History Museum and learn about the many congregations that have established churches in the county since its beginning.

04/22/2013

The Hardin County History Museum will be participating in KY Gives Day on April 24th...24 hours of giving to our nonprofit organization that will enable us to continue serving Hardin County residents and guests as we collect and preserve artifacts, documents and other memorabilia that tells the story of Hardin County from its early Native American inhabitants to modern times.
Visit kygives.org and make a tax deductible donation on April 24th to the museum!

Elizabethtown's Very Own Bad Boy...his story on display at the museum and before you finish your museum tour please reme...
03/03/2013

Elizabethtown's Very Own Bad Boy...his story on display at the museum and before you finish your museum tour please remember to pick up your very own copy of the latest book released on Philip Arnold:

Long before Charles Ponzi's name was permanently attached to the word "scheme" and a hundred years before Bernie Madoff mastered the investment con, Kentuckian Philip Arnold put together a plan which, like none before, would bilk rich (and greedy) investors with a "sting" entirely befitting America's still-wild West. Not content with simply swindling some of the country's brightest luminaries, politicians and high-profile celebrities of the day, Arnold did so in grand style, making himself and his story the subject of nation-wide headlines.
Award winning author Ron Elliott takes the reader behind the scenes of this little known and almost too fantastic to be true scam, and reveals how a fake diamond mine induced investors to heap a fortune on its perpetrator and describes his inevitable downfall.
In the years following the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill in 1848, which led to the California Gold Rush and Nevada's silver Comstock Lode in 1859, the largely unexplored American West was prime territory for the next discovery of untold treasure. So, in 1872 when news of a newly found diamond mine swept the nation, many people were eager to join in the quest for fortune.
American El Dorado is the true story of how Philip Arnold and John Slack, cousins from Kentucky, convinced some of America's most notable citizens to invest in their discovery of an untouched field of precious stones in an unspecified Western location. So convincing was the scheme that even America's s most famous jeweler, Charles Lewis Tiffany, was taken in. The con game made the pair rich until the fraud was eventually revealed.
American El Dorado is a story of the lust for riches and the consequences of greed; a cautionary tale which proves that things which seem to be too good to be true usually are.

03/01/2013

Visit the Hardin County History Museum and learn about our early resident's part in the War of 1812 and earlier Northwest Indian Wars.
In 2012 the museum honored Christopher Miller for his part in these conflicts that defined our nation.
Check out this special event at the following link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VStixx7I7Dc

Grave Marking Ceremony for Captain Christopher Miller, A True American Patriot. July 23, 2012- Freeman Lake Park.

The Hardin County History Museum is a member of the Kentucky Civil War Sites Association. Check out what is going on at ...
03/01/2013

The Hardin County History Museum is a member of the Kentucky Civil War Sites Association. Check out what is going on at these unique Civil War destinations across the state at http://www.kycivilwarsites.org/

03/01/2013

There will be a dedication of the new Lincoln Legacy Museum on Friday April 12th at 10:30 am in Springfield, KY. We hope that you will be able to attend as we celebrate yet another attraction on the Kentucky Lincoln Heritage Trail.

Address

201 W Dixie Avenue
Elizabethtown, KY
42701

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