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Knox Historical Museum

History & Genealogy Center

Established 1987 in Barbourville, Kentucky
knox historical museum logo
downtown-barbourville-circa-1921
Visit the Knox Historical Museum's extensive COLLECTION OF PHOTOGRAPHS

Help Us Find a Permanent Home!

The Museum is looking for a new permanent location.  Due to changes related to the renovation of the Barbourville Municipal Building, the Museum will not have the required space to operate fully from its prior location within the Municipal Building.  We are looking for a new location that will be fully dedicated to housing the Museum's considerable physical collections of artifacts and all of its genealogical research materials for the enjoyment and use of future generations.

The Knox Historical Museum, Inc. is a 501(c)-3 nonprofit organization that operates from the generous donations of patrons and from the sale of items like calendars, books, and other items from its Museum Store.

If you'd like to make a donation to help us with the expenses incurred for locating and securing a permanent location for the Museum, you may make a safe and secure online donation using our PayPal account by clicking on the Donate button below. You do not need to have a PayPal account to make a donation.

You may also make a donation by check. Please make your check payable to Knox Historical Museum and write 'Donation' in the memo line and mail it to:

Knox Historical Museum
PO Box 1446
Barbourville, KY 40906

The Knox Historical Museum continues as always to appreciate our generous donors for their gifts. Your gift will be used for our daily operational purposes and will be classified as unrestricted funds unless otherwise indicated. Donors will be provided with a receipt of their donation and a huge thank you.

john a black banknote knox hm composite small

The Museum is Temporarily Closed

The Knox Historical Museum closed to the public March 31, 2023, temporarily, due to the Municipal Building, in which the museum is housed, having scheduled a complete renovation, including removal of all internal structures.

The museum has not closed as an institution and will continue research and genealogy services via e-mail and postal mail, but we are not permitted to have public traffic in our temporary facilities.

Contact Information: Museum e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Genealogy e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

U.S. Postal Service:

Knox Historical Museum
PO Box1446
Barbourville, KY  40906

Important Shipping Information

Our Museum is staffed by Volunteers and our hours of operations currently are such that our Volunteer staff members are only able to check for Online Orders once per week. Typically on either Tuesday or Thursday.

This means that online orders may not be shipped for up to 10 days after your order is placedPLEASE give our Volunteer staff the time to process your order and ship it out to you.  We will do our best to ship all orders as quickly as possible.  Before you ask PayPal for a refund due to non-shipment, please send us an e-mail first to ask about your order's status.

Thank You!

Editor's Notes: The following article was taken from WKYT-TV  about the the old Parker Building in Barbourville, whereby a wall section fell on June 7, 2021 and the building was becoming the victim to the wrecking ball. The Parker Building  was initially erected in 1909 but became the home of the Union National Bank in the early 1920's.

The  Parker Building also once contained a dentist and a library, both on the second story. A ballroom and meeting room for clubs, such as the the Moose Club, were held on the third story.

In our next Knox Countian magazine, the Knox Historical Museum staff will be featuring the demise of the Parker Building and the status of six other three-story buildings.

BARBOURVILLE, Ky. (WKYT) - For about a century, the Union National Bank building has sat at the corner of Liberty and Knox streets in downtown Barbourville. It’s that long history that officials believe caused the roof to partially cave in.

“Old age, honestly that’s what we’re thinking right now, there was a hole in the roof where it rotted out and it’s just old brick, it just finally gave way,” said Jack Partin with the Barbourville Fire Department.

Take a look at these photos from the Mountain Advocate Newspaper:

The fire department responded to find bricks littered across the road, a damaged car, and the bank building noticeably leaning.

 “At that point we started blocking off the whole square as you can tell and just making sure we evacuated the other buildings that were in danger,” Partin said.

From nearby businesses, crews evacuated between 50 and 75 people in all, and their biggest concern that the building wasn’t finished falling.

“This building is unoccupied but every building around it was occupied, we’ve got the library, we’ve got law offices,” Partin said.

After cutting electricity and gas in the area and boarding up windows on surrounding businesses, officials wasted no time getting a crane through the downtown streets to start knocking down the unstable parts of the building.

The demo created a major clean up job for crews that will likely keep some roads closed through Tuesday, but they’re just grateful that no one was hurt.

The city got an emergency order to tear the building down immediately because it was a public safety hazard. There’s no word yet on the estimated cost of that demolition.

Copyright 2021 WKYT. All rights reserved.

old parker building new

The Parker Building in its prime in Barbourville, Kentucky

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What our patrons have to say...

I love the layout and colors of the new website!
Jim

How do I order drawer 2 on the Begley family gistory file
Ed Begley

I would like to see family and friends sharing old Powell photos and info. Thank you!

Dennis Powell
Dennis Powell

Having difficulty trying to subscribe to emails on your site. It goes to a unsupported page. Also, do I need to pay $20 subscription to do a search on your page? Or to sed newsletters? Thanks Nancy
Nancy Bryant

I would love to purchase michael's
pictorial look back publication
merrill hibbard

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