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General Information <br />History <br />In 1878 Louis Nawatny, a Polish immigrant, <br />bought forty acres of homestead land for ninety <br />dollars, under a grant signed by President <br />Rutherford B. Hayes. He platted the land, named <br />the area Louisville after himself, and proceeded to <br />sell lots to incoming coal miners. The new town <br />of Louisville grew to a population of two hundred <br />by 1879. <br />Those who had bought Louisville lots from <br />Nawatny built modest homes as soon as they had <br />saved enough from their wages at the Welch - <br />Louisville coal mine. Small kitchen gardens began <br />to green the area; their produce kept mining <br />families going during the summer months, slack <br />time at the mines. <br />Incorporation for Louisville was a slow process <br />because some of the residents feared it, but the <br />first Mayor was elected in 1882. <br />Louisville greeted the twentieth century with more <br />streetlights, the telephone, ice cream cones, and <br />soda pop. The forty-four streetlights in Louisville <br />gave the town a settled look despite its dusty, <br />unpaved roads. <br />1 <br />The height of sophistication, telephone service, <br />came to Louisville in 1903. Three years later, 119 <br />Louisville residents had telephones. <br />Life in the early days of Louisville was not always <br />characteristic of quiet, small town living. A <br />violent mine strike and one mine explosion added <br />a tragic sequel to the town's history. <br />During the Long Strike (so-called because it lasted <br />from 1910 to 1915) the Hecla mine, on the <br />northeast edge of Louisville was the scene of a <br />miniature battle, resulting in several injuries and <br />one death. Due to violent conditions erupting at <br />various mines, 128 state militia arrived in <br />Louisville to keep the peace. They were replaced <br />by the Twelfth United States Cavalry and were <br />well accepted by the battle -weary residents. At the <br />end of 1914 President Wilson called for federal <br />mediation and the union movement was thwarted. <br />This would weaken the force of the miners' <br />demands to the coal operators. <br />In the early morning hours of January 20, 1936 ten <br />miners were completing the graveyard shift at the <br />Monarch mine when an explosion occurred. <br />Eight miners lost their lives. It was later <br />determined that the coal dust which lay five and <br />six inches thick on the mine floor, had combined <br />with a pocket of methane gas and was touched off <br />by a spark, perhaps from a trolley. The operators <br />were found negligent. <br />Louisville's colorful past has now transitioned into <br />the age of technology. Manufacturing and high- <br />tech industry have provided a solid economic base <br />for Louisville, bringing with it the stores, <br />restaurants and other amenities for residents to <br />enjoy. <br />Resources from: "Once a Coal Miner..." by Phyllis Smith <br />Photos courtesy of Louisville Historical Museum and Louisville Public <br />Library <br />