The following is a of the history of the city of Louisville, Kentucky, USA.
Prior to 19th century
19th century
20th century
1901âÂÂ1959
1960âÂÂ2000
21st century
- 2001 â Louisville Bats win the Governors' Cup, AAA Championship
- 2002
- Louisville Extreme Park opens.
- Valley Sports wins the 2002 Little League World Series.
- Forecastle Festival begins its annual music festival.
- 2003
- CityâÂÂcounty merger increases Louisville's total population to near one-million.
- Democrat Jerry Abramson is elected mayor for the second time.
- 2004
- Fourth Street Live opened as entertainment complex/venue in downtown Louisville.
- Valhalla Golf Club hosted the annual Senior PGA Championship, won by Hale Irwin.
- 2005
- Muhammad Ali Center opens as a tribute to the champion boxer Muhammad Ali.
- The annual Abbey Road on the River is held in Louisville for the first time.
- The Louisville Cardinals join the Big East Conference.
- Jim Patterson Stadium opens as the new home of Louisville Cardinals baseball.
- 2006 â Churchill Downs hosted the annual Breeders' Cup.
- 2007
- The Louisville Cardinals competed in their first BCS game by defeating Wake Forest in the Orange Bowl.
- The Cardinals made their first appearance in the College World Series, the eight-team finals of the NCAA Division I baseball tournament.
- Thunder Over Louisville sets record crowd of over 800,000 people.'
- John Yarmuth becomes U.S. representative for Kentucky's 3rd congressional district.
- 2008 â Valhalla Golf Club hosted the biennial Ryder Cup, won by the United States.
- 2009
- McAlpine Locks and Dam are expanded.
- Widely publicized extortion trial between University of Louisville men's basketball coach Rick Pitino and Karen Sypher occurred.
- Dedication ceremony held for Lincoln Memorial at Waterfront Park.
- 2010
- 2010 US Census Population: 602,011.
- Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom closed due to the rejection of an amended lease by the Kentucky State Fair Board.
- KFC Yum! Center opened as Louisville's new downtown multi-use arena.
- Churchill Downs hosted the annual Breeders' Cup.
- 2011
- Democrat Greg Fischer is elected mayor after Jerry Abramson becomes Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky
- Valhalla Golf Club hosted the annual Senior PGA Championship, won by Tom Watson.
- Sherman Minton Bridge temporarily closed in September after construction crews found cracks in the main load-bearing structural element.
- Churchill Downs hosts the annual Breeders Cup.
- 2012
- Sherman Minton Bridge reopened in February after months of repairs.
- The KFC Yum! Center hosted second and third-round games of the 2012 NCAA men's basketball tournament.
- 2013
- The Big Four Bridge partially opened as a converted pedestrian walkway from Louisville into Jeffersonville, Indiana, although the complete crossing would not reopen until the Indiana connection was completed in May 2014.
- The Louisville Cardinals won their third men's basketball NCAA Championship. The title would later be vacated due to NCAA rules violations (see 2015, 2017, and 2018).
- The Cardinals competed in their second BCS game, defeating Florida in the Sugar Bowl.
- The Cardinals also competed in their second College World Series.
- 2014
- Kentucky Kingdom reopened as Louisville's theme park.
- Valhalla Golf Club hosted the annual PGA Championship; Rory McIlroy won the competition.
- Mayor Fischer is re-elected in November.
- Construction of the Ohio River Bridges Project begins.
- The Louisville Cardinals played in their second consecutive College World Series and third overall.
- Shortly after the College World Series appearance, the Cardinals joined the Atlantic Coast Conference.
- 2015
- The KFC Yum! Center hosted second and third-round games of the 2015 NCAA men's basketball tournament.
- The Abraham Lincoln Bridge (part of the Ohio River Bridges Project) opened for public use.
- Katina Powell, a self-described former madam, published a book in which she alleged that Louisville Cardinals men's basketball staffer Andre McGee had paid her $10,000 from 2010 to 2014 to provide strippers and prostitutes for players and recruits. The NCAA soon launched an investigation into the Louisville program.
- 2016
- Speed Art Museum reopened after a -year, $60 million expansion project.
- Death of Muhammad Ali, his globally televised funeral procession, and private interment at Cave Hill Cemetery.
- Lewis and Clark Bridge opens in the East End of Louisville.
- Louisville City FC began play in the United Soccer League.
- Louisville Cardinals quarterback Lamar Jackson became the Cardinals' first Heisman Trophy winner as the top player in college football for 2016.
- 2017
- The Louisville Cardinals played in their fourth College World Series. Additionally, Cardinals pitcher and first baseman Brendan McKay was named the consensus college baseball player of the year for 2017.
- The NCAA announced sanctions against the Louisville men's basketball program stemming from the 2015 sex scandal. The most significant were scholarship restrictions, a six-game suspension for head coach Rick Pitino, a 10-year show-cause penalty for Andre McGee (who by that time had left the program), and the vacating of 123 wins over four seasons, including the 2013 national title. The school appealed the sanctions.
- Louisville City won the USL championship.
- U of L fired both Pitino and athletic director Tom Jurich in the wake of an FBI investigation into "pay-for-play" college recruiting schemes that allegedly linked Pitino to illicit payments to the family of at least one U of L recruit.
- 2018
- The NCAA denied Louisville's appeal against the sanctions announced against the men's basketball program in 2017, officially making the Cardinals the first Division I school forced to vacate a men's or women's basketball championship.
See also
References
Bibliography
Published in 19th century
Published in 20th century
- (first edition published in 1979)
- (fulltext)
Published in 21st century
External links