The mayor of Louisville Jerry Abrahamson came out to welcome us to the city.
Here is the group in the lobby of the motel before the trip.
Here we are with the bus in the parking lot of the old school at Morton and Reubel
Gloria Edelman Robbins and her husband pose with the old Atherton neighbor in the background.
Remember the auditorium. Assemblies, pep rallies, study hall. It is much the same. Even the same old seats.
Shirley Steitz Haag, . Sandy Norman, John Stities, Barbara Friedman Gordon
Joan Burris Spomer now lives in Arizona
Glenn Chestnut with Lenore Terode Hibbs playing the air flute on the stage.
So we all got brave and ventured up on the stage some of us for the first time.
Raleigh Amyx and wife. Raleigh never did fit in these seats.
Nancy Macon Bridges appears to be dribbling across the gym floor.
The office has been enlarged. Here our guide is talking about the new school.
Bobbe Swimme Chance contemplates the portrait of Miss Woerner.
Wanda Merklein Magill in the the Kentucky Crafts Museum.
Artus Heaton Fox, Ethel Straus Montag visit with Charley Farnsley in bronze with Jim Montag behind.
The bus tour included some new housing developments, the new Atherton High School on Dundee Road, a visit to the old school at Morton and Reubel, the new downtown Main Street and a trip down third street.
Notice the old neighborhood looks much the same as it did in 1956. The old school now has a new wing where the portables stood and a real parking lot. It is now called the Jeffrson County Traditional Middle School so they don't play football in the park.
.Bill Baer (back turned) Nancy Macon, Barbara Friedman Gordon, Glenn Chestnut, Molly Mitchell Davidson, Eloise Anderson Cephelas.
Carol Mountjoy Lanning, Barbara Fleishman Gordon, Nancy Macon Bridges, Betty Tichenor Blue , Gloria Edelman Robbins and Raleigh Amyx listen to the school guide.
To the left the hall into the new wing. The school was at one time name Woerner Junior High. Why don't they move Miss Woerner to the new Atherton?
The tour continued to the refurbished Main Street which now has the Louisville Slugger Bat Museum.