Three foundational nineteenth-century figures shaped the square mile around 112 North Main Street. Two are buried within a five-minute walk of the front door. The third designed the building itself. This is the primary-source record.
Why we built this section
The Kentucky Bourbon Trail tells its story through distilleries. The Woodford Hotel tells it through the people who made Versailles itself — the Scottish chemist who turned bourbon from craft to science, the Lexington architect whose Italianate building was the first in town built expressly for a hotel, and the French-Huguenot-descended Revolutionary War officer who named the town after the city of his family’s birth in France.
Every page in this section is anchored to a primary source: National Register nominations, period newspaper transcriptions, the 1880 land conveyance deed, and published bourbon-history scholarship. Where a source is contested or unverified, we say so plainly.
The figures
Dr. James C. Crow
Edinburgh-trained chemist who brought the saccharometer, the thermometer, and the sour-mash protocol to Kentucky distilling. The methods he wrote down are still in every bourbon distillery in operation today. Buried at Versailles Cemetery, Section B2 Lot 37 — four blocks from our front door.
Phelix L. Lundin
Lexington architect who, in an eighteen-month window in 1879–80, designed Lexington’s first purpose-built City Hall, the Maria Dudley House at Gratz Park, the Clark County National Bank in Winchester, and the Woodford Hotel itself. The 1881 building at 112 N Main is the most operationally continuous surviving structure in his documented Bluegrass portfolio.
Marquis Calmes
French-Huguenot-descended Revolutionary War captain and War of 1812 brigadier general; intimate friend of Washington and Lafayette. Named Versailles, Kentucky for his father’s and grandfather’s birthplace in France. Entombed under a dry-stack limestone vault on his Canewood estate, two miles east of town. A walnut gavel carved from his home’s staircase is still used by the mayor of Versailles, France to call council to order.
The geography
Crow’s grave is on Lexington Street, four blocks from the front door of The Woodford Hotel. Calmes’ tomb is two miles east on Paynes Mill Road. The Lundin-designed hotel sits at 112 N Main, between the two — a half-mile walk to Crow’s grave and a ten-minute drive to Calmes’. The bronze DAR tablet honoring Calmes was erected at the head of North Main Street, in the same block as the hotel.
These figures are not abstractions in a brand deck. They are buried, built, and commemorated within a fifteen-minute radius of our check-in desk. We tell their stories because the place we operate is the same place they made.
For researchers and the curious
Every page in this section is built to be cited. We use primary sources where they exist, secondary sources where the primary record is incomplete, and we hedge openly where the documentation is contested. Where a Wikipedia article exists for a person, we link to it; where one does not yet exist, we are writing the primary research that may eventually support one.
If you are a bourbon historian, a preservation architect, an academic working on Kentucky’s nineteenth century, or a descendant of any of these figures and have material we should incorporate, please reach out via the Press contact on our Press page.
The Woodford Hotel is owned and operated by Eric and Kristen Carrico through Old Woodford Hotel LLC. For booking, see our book-now page. For the brand narrative, see Our Story.
