Nando Felty Saloon | |
| Former site of the saloon. Levee wall protecting vs. flooding of the Ohio River at rear. | |
| Location | 1500 Front St., Ashland, Kentucky |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 38°28′51″N82°38′21″W / 38.48083°N 82.63917°W |
| Built | 1895 |
| MPS | Ashland MRA |
| NRHP reference No. | 79003557 [1] |
| Added to NRHP | July 3, 1979 |
The Nando Felty Saloon, at 1500 Front St. in Ashland, Kentucky, was built in 1895. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. [1] [2] [3]
It was a three-story three-bay brick commercial building, overlooking the Ohio River and railroad tracks. Its first-floor windows were filled with brickwork later, but the facade had surviving cast-iron pilasters with "serpentine relief", a motif "formerly also found on the facade of the City Market building on Greenup Avenue, demolished in 1978." The facades also had pressed metal Italianate-style cornices and window hoods. The building's southwest wall was painted with "several fine early commercial graphics, including 'LET US BE YOUR TAILORS; THE UNITED WOOLEN MILLS CO; TAILORS TO THE MASSES.'" [2]
The building served as a saloon and a boarding house. It was significant as "a prominent Ashland social center until Prohibition. Barry and Johnson, John Cobs, and Nando Felty were successive owners of a saloon here. This is one of the most substantial nineteenth-century commercial buildings in Ashland, and is the only surviving early hostel building." [2]