The Blacksmith
Shop

The old Herdt Blacksmith Shop on
Central Avenue
The Blacksmith Shop is
mentioned in two of the Little Colonel books:
The Little Colonel's Hero,
published in 1902, and
The Little Colonel's Christmas Vacation, published in 1905. Excerpt from "The Little
Colonel's Hero,"
Chapter XIII, "The Rescue of the Princess Winsome:"
"Next morning at
the depot,
the post-office, and the
blacksmith shop a sign was displayed which everybody stopped
to read. Similar announcements nailed on various trees
throughout the Valley caused many an old farmer to pull up
his team and adjust his spectacles for a closer view of this
novel poster."
Excerpt from "The Little
Colonel's Christmas Vacation,"
Chapter
VII, "Humdrum Days"
"ALL through the
rest of that week, and through New Year's Day, Lloyd managed
to keep her resolution bravely. Even when the time came for
the girls to go back to school without her, she went through
the farewells like a little Spartan, driving down to the
station with tearful Betty, who grieved over Lloyd's
disappointment as if it had been her own.
When the train
pulled out, with the four girls on the rear platform, she
stood waving her handkerchief cheerily as long as she could
see an answering flutter. Then she turned away, catching her
breath in a deep indrawn sob, that might have been followed
by others if Rob had not been with her. He saw her clench
her hands and set her teeth together hard, and knew what a
fight she was making to choke back the tears, but he wisely
gave no sign that he saw and sympathized. He only
proposed a walk over to the blacksmith shop to see the red
fox that Billy Kerr had trapped and caged."
"Historic Pewee Valley," page
13, notes that there really was a blacksmith shop in Lloydsboro
(Pewee) Valley during the time the Little Colonel stories were
written:
"Pewee Valley had one small
manufacturing concern, Jacob Herdt's carriage and wagon
building business, which evolved from a blacksmith shop and
wagon-building concern on Central Avenue in 1895. In 1910,
Herdt built a new structure on LaGrange Road to accommodate
his growing business. About 1924, as carriages were
gradually being replaced by automobiles, he added a garage
onto the building and became the community's Ford Motor
Company dealer."
On the
Pewee Valley map, the original
blacksmith shop would have been located near the edge of the W.
D. Gallagher property ("The
Haunted House at Hartwell Hollow") The
1924 building, which was constructed during the time Annie
Fellows Johnston was living at The Beeches, is still standing on LaGrange Road and many of
Jacob Herdt's descendents continue to make Pewee Valley their
home today.

Herdt Motors as it looks today

where the original blacksmith shop
stood as it looks today
Page by Donna Russell
This Site:
Home Page
What's New? Biography of Annie Fellows
Johnston,
Books on Line (Complete
Original Little Colonel Book Series)
The Little Colonel (link to U. Penn))
The
Giant Scissors
Two Little
Knights of Kentucky
The Little Colonel's
House Party
The Little Colonel's
Holidays
The Little Colonel's Hero
The Little Colonel
at Boarding-School
The Little Colonel in
Arizona
The Little
Colonel's Christmas Vacation
The Little Colonel, Maid of
Honor
The Little Colonel's
Knight Comes Riding
Mary Ware, The Little Colonel's
Chum
Mary Ware in Texas
Mary Ware's Promised Land
Check our home page for more titles by AFJ on other sites
The People & Characters:
The Little Colonel, Papa
Jack and Mrs. Sherman, The
Old Colonel, Two Little
Knights of Kentucky,
Two Little Knights of Kentucky(2),
Uncle Sidney & Aunt
Elise, parents of the Two Little Knights of Kentucky,
Grandmother McIntyre,
Aunt Allison, The
Waltons, Rob and Anna
Moore, Betty,
Joyce Ware,
Jack Ware, Mom Beck,
Walker, Katherine Marks,
Gay Melville,
The Lees of Arizona,
Small Parts
Their Final Resting Places
The Places: in Pewee (Lloydsboro) Valley:
Map,
Map 2,
Where it all began, The Locust,
The Beeches
Edgewood,
The Little Colonel's Cottage,
The Railroad Station,
"Lloydsboro Seminary",
Clovercroft, The
Post Office, Churches,
The Haunted House at Hartwell Hollow,
Confederate Home
Rollington,
Minor Places In Old Louisville:
The Culbertson
Mansion, "Home of a Hero" Elsewhere:
The Cuckoo's Nest (Indiana),
Lee's Ranch,
Camelback Mountain &
Hole-in-Rock (Arizona),
San Antonio and
The Little Town of Bauer (Boerne),
Texas,
The Gate of the Giant Scissors (France)
Letters from Annie
Fellows Johnston and "Mrs Walton"
Scrapbook
Links
Cooking with The Little Colonel
Guest Book
Email us about this site
We always appreciate your suggestions and insights, and will do our
best to answer your questions.. Much of the material included on
this site comes from devoted Little Colonel Fans like you.
Subscribe to our mailing list
Visit historic Old Louisville
on the web at the:
Old Louisville Guide
(Old Louisville and
Literature)

The Samuel Culbertson Mansion
Historic Inn
in Historic Old Louisville
(your host for this web site)
Home Page
Rooms Page
Annie Fellows Johnston
Room The East
Room The
President's Room
The Little Colonel Suite
The Knights of Kentucky
Suite
The General Lawton
Suite
History
Samuel Culbertson & the
Kentucky Derby
General Henry W.
Lawton
The Samuel
Culbertson Mansion
"Home of the Two Little Knights of Kentucky"
1432 S. Third Street
Louisville, KY 40208
(502) 634-3100
inn@culbertsonmansion.com

original material & research ©
1998-2007 LittleColonel.com

|