LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Crews replacing a Louisville water main have dug up a piece of history more than 140 years old.
Jay Ferguson, education specialist for the WaterWorks Museum, said crews were excavating a 36-inch cast iron pipe under Frankfort Avenue that was installed in 1877.
Back then, Rutherford B. Hayes was in the White House.
"Louisville has grown a little bit since 1877," Ferguson said.
Now, 144 years and 27 presidents later, part of one of the city's oldest water mains is being replaced.
A construction inspector found an old horseshoe in a bucket of dirt, Ferguson said.
"I know the editor of the American Farriers Journal, who put me in touch with the Head of Farrier Services at Cornell University," said Ferguson. "He said this was a hind shoe with an extended heel for a horse that pulls a light carriage or a wagon.”
Ferguson said a photo from when the pipe was installed shows a horse and carriage in the background.
"Did it come from this horse? We don’t know.”
He hopes to put the horseshoe and photographs on display in the WaterWorks Museum.
The more than $13 million project to install new water mains began in August and is expected to take a year, according to Louisville Water Company.