
I went to the American city that's the bourbon capital with unusual museums and the world's biggest baseball bat
FANCY a holiday in Louisville, Kentucky? First, learn to say it right.
Is it Louie-ville, or maybe Loo-uh-vul or simply Luh-vul?
Say it wrong and a Kentuckian will correct you. Say it right, and they'll probably still correct you.
While we can't guarantee you'll nail the pronunciation — which definitely features a silent S — we can tell you where to eat, drink, explore and sleep in the city of horse-racing, baseball bats and bourbon.
WHY SHOULD I GO? Louisville packs big-city fun with small-town Southern charm — without the tourist hordes of Nashville or New Orleans.
As the bourbon capital of the world, it has more than a dozen distilleries within the city limits.
It also features the historic Kentucky Derby racetrack.
And now is the perfect time to visit the city as 2025 marks 100 years of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, partly inspired by the author's boozy nights with mobsters at Louisville's Seelbach Hotel.
STREETS MADE FOR WALKING? Most of Louisville's highlights are walkable, with ten to 15 minutes on foot between the major sights.
6
The city has a bus system, but Ubers are affordable and easy to use. For a stroll that will take in most of the sights, start on Main Street's Whiskey Row, a stretch of 19th-century buildings now home to top bars and restaurants.
Then head east to NuLu (New Louisville), a once-industrial district now a hub for galleries, indie boutiques and everything from Cuban to Yucatan food.
From there, loop back west via Waterfront Park, which traces the edge of the Ohio River.
You'll get sweeping views across to Indiana. The park is expanding this year, with new sections connecting downtown to the up-and-coming neighbourhood of Portland, just west of the city centre.
6
ANYTHING FOR THE BUCKET LIST? The Evan Williams Bourbon Experience is the place to get a handle on Kentucky's most famous export.
The five-storey-high bourbon bottle out front sets the tone, and tours end with a guided tasting in a sleek underground bar.
Just a few steps away is the KMAC Museum, a contemporary art museum where the descriptions actually help you understand what you're looking at.
I popped in between distillery visits and found it fascinating, though that might have been the bourbon talking.
Baseball fans can swing by the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory, where the world's biggest baseball bat leans against the building. You can also catch Minor League team Louisville Bats from April to September.
For something a bit more offbeat, look out for Louisville's disco balls. During the 1970s and 1980s, the city made nearly 90 per cent of America's mirror balls.
6
They are now on show as part of the Frazier History Museum's Cool Kentucky exhibit. Churchill Downs, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby, is a must-visit. When there's no racing, the Kentucky Derby Museum offers daily tours of the historic track.
No trip to Louisville is complete without paying tribute to its most famous son: Muhammad Ali. The legendary boxer is honoured at the Muhammad Ali Center, a riverside museum that's part tribute and part interactive exhibition on civil rights, confidence and courage.
It's powerful stuff — and the views from the upper floors are knockout.
WHERE SHOULD I EAT? Housed in an old petrol station and garage, Garage Bar now fuels up customers with epic pizzas.
I wolfed down a house-made pepperoni, then got convincingly beaten at late-night table tennis on their glowing tables.
Just down the street, Feast BBQ lives up to its name.
Their tater tots (those crispy little potato nuggets Am- ericans obsess over) are legendary. I recommend them piled with smoked brisket and washed down with a bourbon slushie.
6
I FANCY A DRINK! My favourite, for the sheer variety of bottles, was Down One Bourbon Bar on Whiskey Row.
They stock more than 130 different bourbons and whiskeys and their Mexican food is great. Don't miss the speakeasy room hidden behind an old red British phone booth.
Meanwhile, over at The Lucky Penny, a mirror-covered bar pays tribute to Louisville's disco legacy with drinks such as the Mirror Ball cocktail.
WHERE SHOULD I STAY? I stayed at the Embassy Suites by Hilton Louisville Downtown. The rooms are spacious and it's well located for a night of live music in the lively Downtown area.
For more character, the nearby Seelbach Hilton, one of Louisville's grandest hotels, has just unveiled a new Great Gatsby Suite decked out in full 1920s style.
Even if you can't book it, take their free hotel tour (Thursday-Saturday at 4.30pm) to see the Oakroom, where gangster Al Capone played cards, and the Rathskeller Room, where Fitzgerald knocked back drinks and drew inspiration for his novel.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
21 minutes ago
- The Independent
Trump's new travel ban takes effect as tensions escalate over immigration enforcement
President Donald Trump 's new ban on travel to the U.S. by citizens from 12 mainly African and Middle Eastern countries took effect Monday amid rising tension over the president's escalating campaign of immigration enforcement. The new proclamation, which Trump signed last week, applies to citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. It also imposes heightened restrictions on people from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela who are outside the U.S. and don't hold a valid visa. The new ban does not revoke visas previously issued to people from countries on the list, according to guidance issued Friday to all U.S. diplomatic missions. However, unless an applicant meets narrow criteria for an exemption to the ban, his or her application will be rejected starting Monday. Travelers with previously issued visas should still be able to enter the U.S. even after the ban takes effect. During Trump's first term, a hastily written executive order ordering the denial of entry to citizens of mainly Muslim countries created chaos at numerous airports and other ports of entry, prompting successful legal challenges and major revisions to the policy. In the hours after the new ban took effect, no disruptions were immediately discernible at Los Angeles International Airport. And passengers appeared to move steadily through an international arrival area at Miami International Airport, where Magda Moreno and her husband flew home Monday from Cuba. 'Everything was normal," said Moreno, a Cuban American who had traveled to the Caribbean island nation to visit family. "They only asked me where I was coming from and how many days I was in Cuba.' Asked about the new travel restrictions for Cubans, Moreno, a U.S. citizen, said: 'It is difficult not being able to bring the family and for them not being able to enter into the U.S.' Haitian-American Elvanise Louis-Juste, who was at the airport earlier Sunday in Newark, New Jersey, awaiting a flight to her home state of Florida, said many Haitians wanting to come to the U.S. are simply seeking to escape violence and unrest. 'I have family in Haiti, so it's pretty upsetting to see and hear,' Louis-Juste, 23, said of the travel ban. 'I don't think it's a good thing. I think it's very upsetting.' Many immigration experts say the new ban is more carefully crafted and appears designed to beat court challenges that hampered the first by focusing on the visa application process. Trump said this time that some countries had 'deficient' screening for passports and other public documents or have historically refused to take back their own citizens. He relied extensively on an annual Homeland Security report of people who remain in the U.S. after their visas expired. Measuring overstay rates has challenged experts for decades, but the government has made a limited attempt annually since 2016. Trump's proclamation cites overstay rates for eight of the 12 banned countries. Trump also tied the new ban to a terrorist attack in Boulder, Colorado, saying it underscored the dangers posed by some visitors who overstay visas. U.S. officials say the man charged in the attack overstayed a tourist visa. He is from Egypt, a country that is not on Trump's restricted list. The ban was quickly denounced by groups that provide aid and resettlement help to refugees. 'This policy is not about national security — it is about sowing division and vilifying communities that are seeking safety and opportunity in the United States,' said Abby Maxman, president of Oxfam America, a nonprofit international relief organization. The inclusion of Afghanistan angered some supporters who have worked to resettle its people. The ban does make exceptions for Afghans on Special Immigrant Visas, generally people who worked most closely with the U.S. government during the two-decade-long war there. Afghanistan had been one of the largest sources of resettled refugees, with about 14,000 arrivals in a 12-month period through September 2024. Trump suspended refugee resettlement his first day in office.


Daily Mail
44 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Flight attendant reveals real reason why you should never swap seats with someone else
Switching seats on a plane is always controversial. And now a flight attendant has taken to social media to warn passengers not to let another holidaymaker switch seats with them. Leanna Coy (@leannacoy), a cabin crew member based in the USA, posted a TikTok video titled ' Why you shouldn't switch seats on the plane'. The flight attendant explains that she was recently asked to switch seats with a passenger on a United Airlines flight. Leanna says that the woman asked her to swap her aisle seat for another aisle seat in a different row. She reveals: 'Normally, I am absolutely 100 per cent against changing seats. Your lack of planning should not constitute me having to move.' But on this occasion, Leanna explains that she decided to swap seats. However, the flight attendant quickly regretted her decision. The cabin crew member says that if the woman did anything against the aircraft's rules, such as smoking in the bathroom, her behaviour would be associated with Leanna's seat number. And there's another reason that Leanna says she was left 'anxious' by her decision to trade seats. 'I realised I'm flying United,' explains Leanna. 'If you know anything about United's service, if you want to buy drinks or anything, you have to put your card onto the app ahead of time, which I've done before.' This means that the passenger who swapped with Leanna would be able to access her card to pay for items. Leanna claims that she spoke to the flight attendant who confirmed that the passenger would be able to use Leanna's card to order items to the seat. She adds: 'Now, do I think this lady was trying to scam me out of money on my card? No. But that's just something to be aware of. 'I fully support you if you don't want to switch seats. You are entitled to the seat that you chose.' In the comments, TikTok user and cabin crew member 'FAWN' says: 'I always ask people their last name when they buy a drink to verify it's the saved card. 'Honestly I don't ever charge without verifying because I'm always scared I'll charge the wrong person.' And another flight attendant agrees, saying: 'Usually we ask for last names for inflight purchases'. But a user who said they worked as a United gate agent, also warned passengers not to switch seats on the plane. 'Molly' says: 'Please never switch up seats without telling the gate agents/flight attendants, for the exact reasons you said and we can get in trouble.' A flight attendant recently revealed why crew are required to carry two flashlights at all times.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
10 holiday red flags to watch out for this summer, according to travel writers
A holiday is meant to be a time of relaxation: a pressure valve releasing all the stress of day-to-day life. Especially a summer holiday, where thoughts turn to sunshine and the beach, and the only difficult decisions should be between ice cream and sorbet, cone and tub. But too often, these precious weeks away can be fraught with traps and tricks, issues and irritations – from the vastly inflated taxi fare to the resort fee that (you're sure) wasn't mentioned in the brochure, and those insidious terms and conditions where the devil is most definitely in the details. What to do, and what to watch out for? Here, 10 of Telegraph Travel's regular contributors name their main travel bugbears – and the 'holiday red flags' you should take care to avoid if you are heading to distant shores in the coming months. 1. The double tip (of the iceberg) I am not pointing the finger at America in particular. But the USA, the spiritual home of service culture, does seem to be especially guilty of this very modern sin: the double surcharge on the cost of your dinner. It is a pitfall that seems to have widened and deepened in the post-Covid world, where most transactions are not just electronic, but so commonplace in their contactless simplicity that, very often, we fail to check, properly, the sum we are coughing up. Yet it is well worth pausing to peruse the small print. More often than you would like, a restaurant will add a – perfectly reasonable – service charge to your bill, only to then present you with a hand-held payment terminal whose screen asks you whether you want to add a tip -– sometimes 20 per cent or more – on top of what should be the total amount. How to avoid it There is no shame in taking your time, and examining, again, the bottom of the 'cheque'. It certainly makes for less expensive evenings. Chris Leadbeater 2. The departure gate rush 'Now Boarding'. When the message flashes up at the departure gate, there is always a stir of movement towards the desk. Indeed, many passengers start queuing as soon as they arrive. It's a mistake. Airlines now start the boarding process before the plane is even at the gate – as a way of speeding things up. The result? You spend 15 or 20 minutes crowded into a chilly, airless tunnel with no idea how much longer you will have to wait. How to avoid it Don't rush forward. Check the window to see if the plane has actually arrived yet, and ideally wait until passengers are actually boarding, before you move forward. Nick Trend 3. Off-airport car hire headache That first, nail-biting hire car journey from the airport is bad enough: add an uncomfortable journey on a packed shuttle bus and a long queue in a sizzling parking lot before you even get the keys and that bargain off-site car hire deal starts to seem like a dreadful way to kick off a holiday. How to avoid it Before you book, check with a consolidator such as as they offer competitive deals from in-terminal operators that can be as cheap as the off-airport alternatives. Another bonus? You'll have more time on the beach pre-departure too. Amanda Hyde 4. Hotel buffet horrors We've all been there – that first circuit of the hotel buffet, fresh off a flight and ravenous. Loading up a plate with a random assortment of foods that may look enticing, but At best there are the mini pastries at breakfast that are all deviations of the same (dry, uninspired) thing. At worst there's a paella at dinner that's been a hit with the local fly population. The husband of one of my colleagues once memorably described the seafood and raw bar section of a resort hotel dinner buffet as 'certain death'. You have been warned! How to avoid it Embrace mindful eating – think carefully about whether a particular item is likely to be high quality. Do an initial lap to assess the full selection rather than just grabbing the first thing you see. And if you see flies, walk on by. Rachel Cranshaw 5. The lure of all inclusive 'All inclusive': such magic words! Your golden ticket to eat, drink and repeat – no fretting over the bill, and no need to scrimp on your third (ok, fourth) margarita. But reader, beware the small print. Hotels' dining packages are becoming outrageously stingy, whether they're charging extra for à la carte dining (or else you're stuck in the hellish buffet canteen, see above), or rinsing you for key dishes on the menu. I stayed at one 'all-inclusive' resort recently that demanded a premium for prosecco, and just three cocktails on its entire menu were bottomless. Never again! How to avoid it Read the terms and conditions (see below), quiz your travel agent – and check your favourite bevvy is definitely included. Hazel Plush 6. Check-in terms and conditions In a similar vein to the above, watch out for the hotels that seem determined to fleece guests at every turn. There might be a room service tray table charge that's more costly than the item you ordered, or a minibar coke priced at €12 when it can be found at a shop down the road for €1.50. Hotels that charge guests for the use of their swimming pool and spa facilities also leave a sour taste in the mouth, as do those with ruinous 'resort fees,' purporting to cover water and Wi-Fi (surely a human right at this point). How to avoid it Be less British. Ask for a breakdown of various spurious charges and check any resort fees before booking. Emma Beaumont 7. Do not trust (British) public transport Air-travel related stress once began after take-off: in the event of bad weather, bumpiness, uncouth piloting, and horrors like minimal legroom, rotten food, snotty stewards. But as planes have become safer, the stresses seem to have been rewound to begin ever earlier. First was the nasty frisking and all-round faffing at security. Then they turned airports into shopping malls. Then dropping off became ripping off. For non-Londoners, though, the stress begins at home. Based in the North West, every time I use the train (Northern, Cross Country, Avanti West Coast, take your pick), without fail it lets me down – and I'm not alone. Cancellations, delays and general chaos mean there's a very good chance of missing the flight. How to avoid it Avoid public transport if you want to relax before the inevitable stresses of the airport – especially if you live beyond the capital. Get a lift, or a taxi, or doze in a pod hotel the night before. Chris Moss 8. Dog-friendly dilemmas Thousands of pet owners wouldn't dream of going away without the dog – they deserve a holiday, too, after all. When a hotel advertises as 'dog-friendly' I'm thrilled, but all too often I'm disappointed on check-in: we arrive to receive a long list of rules my dog – who cannot read – must follow. He's not allowed in the dining area, breakfast room or the bar. He can't sleep on the sofa as he does at home, and he's not to be left alone in the room (lord knows what I'm supposed to do at breakfast time). Hardly dog tolerant, let alone dog-friendly. How to avoid it Avoid this kind of disappointment by booking the extra dog-friendly hotels – the ones that provide a canine menu, like Kimpton or Four Seasons, or those with their love of dogs displayed on their website, like Homewood Bath. Lottie Gross 9. Neighbourhood watch There are multiple red flags that suggest you are in the touristy part of a city and should leave immediately, in search of a more authentic part of town. These include: people throwing those whizzy toys in the air; a pub with O' in its name; open-top buses; tuk-tuks; people in waistcoats beckoning you into their restaurant. But you know of all these already. More nuanced signals include people wearing hiking trainers, being somewhere shaded in orange on Google maps, and the much maligned key lock boxes affixed outside homes. Increasingly, a not-so-subtle clue is a piece of graffiti scrawled on a wall, politely requesting that you 'go home'. How to avoid it Whether visiting a small city like Bratislava or a behemoth like Berlin, it always pays to do your research before you arrive. After asking friends for recommendations and scouring online sources (such are The Telegraph's city guides). I like to build a customised Google Map filled with some of the most interesting cafes, restaurants, galleries, bars and parks. Generally this pinboard of 'good stuff' seems to cluster in one or two quarters of a city, which can make planning the day over breakfast each day a much smoother process. 10. The tourist trap restaurant After a long day exploring, and eventually hobbling, exhausted, around a city – determined to see all the sites – it's easy to succumb to an overzealous restaurant greeter (spot them, more often than not in a skimpy vest and ripped jeans, drenched in sweat, chain smoking and gesticulating like Basil Fawlty). The red flags of a tourist trap restaurant might also include: laminated menus displayed outside, TripAdvisor stickers plastic table filled by British and American couples (spot bum bags and DSLR cameras as necklaces) and (most importantly) diabolical food. How to avoid it Contrary to popular belief, it is easy to eat extremely well within a stone's throw of iconic landmarks – but you may need to divert from the beaten track a little. Observing crowds is a good way to suss out any restaurant – if a place is full of locals it is usually a good sign. Asking for recommendations is, most certainly, the easiest way to find a good restaurant – but avoid hotel staff, and instead strike up conversation with shopkeepers, bartenders, cleaners, or taxi drivers. Jonathan Hatchman