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  • Galt House
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  • In 1834, the Galt House was opened by Colonel Ariss Throckmorton as a 60-room hotel on the northeast corner of Second and Main streets. During the next few decades, the Galt House was acclaimed as Louisville's best hotel. Many noted people stayed at the original Galt House, including Jefferson Davis, Charles Dickens, Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant.
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  • In 1834, the Galt House was opened by Colonel Ariss Throckmorton as a 60-room hotel on the northeast corner of Second and Main streets. During the next few decades, the Galt House was acclaimed as Louisville's best hotel. Many noted people stayed at the original Galt House, including Jefferson Davis, Charles Dickens, Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant. During the Civil War, the Galt House housed meetings of Union generals. In September 1862, it was the scene of an unusual murder, when General Jefferson C. Davis (not to be confused with the other Jefferson Davis) shot General William "Bull" Nelson after a dispute. A popular, but possibly apocryphal, story says that in March 1864, Generals Grant and William Sherman met at the Galt House to plan Sherman's March to the Sea. This Galt House burned down in 1865.