Boxhill (Louisville)

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Location3200 Boxhill Lane, Louisville, Kentucky or Glenview, Kentucky
Coordinates38°18′5″N 85°39′28″W / 38.30139°N 85.65778°W / 38.30139; -85.65778
Built1906 - 1910[1]
ArchitectJoseph E. Chandler, Stratton Hammon (1956 addition)
Winkworth
Front, seen through the fence
Boxhill (Louisville) is located in Kentucky
Boxhill (Louisville)
Boxhill (Louisville) is located in the United States
Boxhill (Louisville)
Location3200 Boxhill Lane, Louisville, Kentucky or Glenview, Kentucky
Coordinates38°18′5″N 85°39′28″W / 38.30139°N 85.65778°W / 38.30139; -85.65778
Built1906 - 1910[1]
ArchitectJoseph E. Chandler, Stratton Hammon (1956 addition)
Architectural styleGeorgian Revival
MPSJefferson County MRA
NRHP reference No.83002752[2]
Added to NRHPAugust 16, 1983

Boxhill, also called Winkworth, is a Georgian Revival house in Glenview, Kentucky, a small city east of Louisville, Kentucky. It was built in 1906 or 1910 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.[1][2]

As with other nearby mansions such as Lincliff, Boxhill reflects a period of Louisville history around the turn of the 20th century where wealthy Louisvillians built showcase homes along the Ohio River above Downtown Louisville. The 29 remaining mansions constitute the largest such collection along the 981-mile long river, and are among the best-preserved collections of turn-of-the-century estates in the United States.[3]

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