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Augusta, KY


Categories: Augusta KY


Bardstown

Bardstown is the second oldest city in Kentucky, and was recognized as one of the “100 Best Small Towns in America”. This friendly community is a delight for the historian, and the Historic District and its many attractions are within jus...

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Berea

Few people realize it, but Berea, Kentucky, located 40 mi/65 km south of Lexington, was founded as a Utopian colony. Today, this small college town is the state's foremost center for folk arts and crafts. There are more than 100 artists working in an...

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Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area

A large wilderness area extending into Tennessee and Kentucky, Big South Fork is a must for white-water enthusiasts as well as admirers of scenic beauty. The Blue Heron area contains a drive to the overlook of Devils Jump, and the Big South Fork Scen...

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Bluegrass Country

This region in north-central Kentucky is a lovely area of rolling hills, racehorses and lavish estates. Lexington serves as the epicenter of Bluegrass Country and is the location of many of the horse farms and racetracks. The surrounding area should ...

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Bowling Green

Bowling Green, about midway between Louisville and Nashville, Tennessee, is of special interest to sports-car buffs: This is Corvetteville. You can see the cars being made at the GM Corvette Assembly Plant. If you're lucky, at the end of the tour you...

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Brandenburg

The historic downtown area, located in a fold of land between two high cliffs, hosted General John Hunt Morgan and his troops as they crossed the Ohio River into Indiana in 1863. If you want to travel the backroads of Kentucky and get the flavor ...

Categories: Brandenburg


Columbus, KY


Categories: Columbus KY


Covington

Just across the river from Cincinnati, Ohio, this appealing little community is nestled under several bridges, including the Roebling Suspension Bridge, the prototype for the Brooklyn Bridge. For travelers to the Cincinnati area, Covington offers an ...

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Cumberland Gap National Historical Park, KY

Thanks in large part to Daniel Boone's explorations, pioneers crossed the Cumberland Gap as they traveled the Wilderness Road to Kentucky. Today, Cumberland Gap is the second-largest national historical park in the country, with more than 20,000 acre...

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Daniel Boone National Forest

Running in a north-south direction from the Tennessee border to Interstate 64 in northeastern Kentucky, this beautiful and rewarding forest is filled with rivers, lakes, waterfalls, natural bridges and mountains. It truly has changed little since it ...

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Elizabethtown

On your way from Mammoth Cave to Louisville (or vice versa), consider a stop in the area around Elizabethtown. Among the attractions is the Lincoln Heritage House, a cabin built by Abe's father. There's a driving tour of historic homes and, in summer...

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Frankfort

Located on the Kentucky River, Frankfort is the state capital. Be sure to see the graves of Daniel Boone and his wife in the Frankfort Cemetery, the capitol buildings (old and new) and the lieutenant governor's mansion. The city's real show-stopper, ...

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Glasgow, KY


Categories: Glasgow KY


Henderson

Henderson lies along the beautiful Ohio River, and offers a beautiful riverfront, great southern food, and friendly hospitality. Before prohibition, Kentucky had the largest number of vineyards in the U.S. and reviving this tradition Hender...

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Hopkinsville


Categories: Hopkinsville


Lake Barkley


Categories: Lake Barkley


Lake Cumberland State Park

One of the most popular recreation areas in the region, Lake Cumberland is a lovely area that offers good fishing and a wide variety of water-based activities. Although it's a man-made lake, the countryside is so rugged and green that it reminded us ...

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Land Between The Lakes, KY

This gorgeous area is a popular vacation spot that extends south from Kentucky into Tennessee. Encompassed by Lake Barkley and Kentucky Lake, it has some 170,000 acres/69,000 hectares available for camping, bass fishing, and deer and turkey hunting. ...

Categories: Land Between The Lakes KY


Lexington, KY

Every visitor to Kentucky should spend a few days in the Lexington area. It's in the heart of Bluegrass Country, the region where horse farms predominate, named in honor of the nutritious groundcover that's the staple of the Thoroughbreds. In additio...

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Louisville

Louisville is the largest city in Kentucky and an industrial, financial, marketing, and shipping center of the South. The city has some of the nation's largest whiskey distilleries and cigarette factories. Louisville developed as a portage place arou...

Categories: Louisville


Mammoth Cave National Park

Like Niagara Falls, Mammoth Cave is a classic U.S. travel attraction and remains one of the country's most popular. The first tours of the cave system were given in 1839, but Mammoth Cave didn't become a national park until 1941. Today, it's the long...

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Maysville

Maysville is a wonderful getaway destination that offers something for everyone. Maysville-Mason park is an excellent place to take in the beautiful kentucky scenery while enjoying the par-three gold course, 12-acre fishing lake, walki...

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Owensboro

Owensboro is the industrial, medical, retail and cultural hub of western Kentucky. Owensboro is strategically located on the southern banks of the Ohio River, which provides a majestic backdrop to the city's ambitious Downtown Revitalization initiat...

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Paducah

Paducah is a thriving, artistic city on the banks of the Ohio River. The city supports its artisans through incentive programs, offering the opportunity to create a truly unique community. Along the riverfront, the Market District hosts many opportun...

Categories: Paducah


Richmond, KY

Only 25 mi/40 km southeast of Lexington, there is plenty to do in Richmond, and you'll certainly find plenty of Kentucky's history. Fort Boonesborough State Park is a reconstruction of Daniel Boone's fort, Kentucky's second settlement. Craftspeople a...

Categories: Richmond KY


Smithland

Smithland, Kentucky has a population of 386 (2009) and total area of .6 sq miles. It is situated at the confluence of the Ohio and Cumberland Rivers. Smithland is the seat of Livingston County. Named for an early explorer of the area, James Smith. Sm...

Categories: Smithland


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Kentucky


Bluegrass means a lot of things in the Bluegrass State. There's the grass itself, a lush variety of groundcover—more green than blue—that powers the state's racehorses. There's Bluegrass Country, where most of those horses are raised—a region of immaculate rolling pastures, tidy white fences and large, stately mansions. This is the land of Kentucky's royalty, be they horse or human. And then there's bluegrass music, a folk art from a much different side of the state—the remote and beautiful Appalachian Mountains.

Travelers can experience all the varieties of bluegrass in one vacation—plus a whole lot more. Visit a Civil War battlefield in the morning and ogle Corvettes in the afternoon; hike through the same forests that greeted Daniel Boone or sip a glass of fine bourbon whiskey; enjoy the museums and performances of Louisville along with the geologic wonders of Mammoth Cave. Whatever kind of visit you have planned for Kentucky, keep yourself open to new possibilities: You'll likely find more than you expect.

Geography

Kentucky's most prominent feature is the Appalachian Mountains that run along its eastern border, creating rugged gorges and valleys. The center of the state is the famed Bluegrass Country, with lush pastures spread over rolling limestone hills. To the south and west, the state is made up of hilly terrain known as the Knobs and contains both underground caverns (including Mammoth Cave) and several large lakes that were created by damming rivers. The entire northern border of the state is formed by the Ohio River, and the far western part of the state lies on the Mississippi.

History

Evidence of Kentucky's early inhabitants is found in cave shelters and burial remains in the eastern part of the state. In the west, traces of the ancient Mississippian culture are visible at the Wickliffe Mounds archaeological complex, where remnants of a ceremonial site and a trading center can be visited. In both places, the people hunted, farmed and lived in stockaded villages along the rivers.

The formidable Appalachian Mountains prevented Europeans from settling Kentucky for centuries, though a few hardy traders found their way through gaps in the mountains. The westward expansion was led in part by Daniel Boone, the legendary pioneer who developed the Wilderness Road and led settlers through the Cumberland Gap beginning in the 1770s.

This westward migration was in defiance of a British decree that forbade settlement west of the mountains, and the influx only increased following the Revolutionary War. The settlers and Native Americans soon clashed, and battles continued until 1794, when a key victory over the natives in the Ohio area ended resistance in Kentucky. Though Kentuckians considered an alliance with Spain for a time, they eventually became part of the U.S., achieving statehood in 1792.

The other great conflict to affect Kentucky was the Civil War. The presidents of both sides—Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis—were born in Kentucky about one year and 100 miles apart, and the state's residents were likewise torn between the two sides. Kentucky initially declared itself neutral but ended up being a key battleground where several engagements were fought. The state supplied troops to both the Union and the Confederacy and had a star in both flags, though it never actually seceded from the U.S. because it was under Northern military occupation.

Toward the end of the 1800s, coal mining began to vie with agriculture as the prime force in Kentucky's economy. Its effect was felt both economically and socially, as management and burgeoning labor unions negotiated, argued and sometimes violently battled well into the second half of the 20th century. Today, Kentucky is still a leader in U.S. production of coal. Agriculture and manufacturing also employ many people in the state, and Kentucky farmers are beginning to diversify to overcome their traditional dependence on tobacco farming.

Snapshot

Among Kentucky's main attractions are beautiful mountain scenery, Mammoth Cave National Park, horse farms, horse racing, Louisville, historic sites, Lexington, Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area, Bluegrass Country, rivers and lakes, mountain crafts, Churchill Downs, Red River Gorge, bourbon and southern-style cooking.

Travelers (especially families) who seek beautiful scenery and outdoor activities or are interested in horses and history will love Kentucky. Those who insist on the constant buzz of a big metropolis may find the state less to their liking.

Potpourri

Although the coonskin cap is associated with Daniel Boone, he never actually wore one: He favored the much more practical wide-brimmed hat donned by most of the Quaker pioneers (Boone was born in Pennsylvania and was a member of the Religious Society of Friends). Another pioneer, Tennessean Davy Crockett, did don a coonskin cap.

Kentucky native Bill Monroe (born in Rosine) is considered the father of bluegrass music. (The genre is named for Monroe's band—the Bluegrass Boys.) Monroe was the music's figurehead for more than 50 years and continued to perform regularly until shortly before his death in 1996. Kentucky has also been fertile ground for many country music stars: Loretta Lynn, Tom T. Hall, Dwight Yoakam, Billy Ray Cyrus, the Judds, Ricky Skaggs, Crystal Gayle and many others hail from eastern Kentucky, in the vicinity of U.S. Highway 23. The road has been named the Country Music Highway in their honor.

The McCoys of the famous Hatfield-McCoy feud lived in eastern Kentucky, on the West Virginia border. Members of the clan are buried in Dils Cemetery in Pikeville.

Col. Harland "Kentucky Fried Chicken" Sanders is remembered at the restored Harland Sanders Cafe and Museum in Corbin. This was the original KFC, where chicken and those 11 herbs and spices were first brought together.

The state takes great pride in its host of well-known writers, including Robert Penn Warren, Barbara Kingsolver, Wendell Berry, Bobbie Ann Mason, Sue Grafton, Silas House and Hunter S. Thompson. Other famous Kentuckians include Jefferson Davis, Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln, Kit Carson, Carry A. Nation, Duncan Hines, Harland Sanders, Muhammad Ali, Tom Cruise, Diane Sawyer, Lionel Hampton, Johnny Depp, George Clooney, Rosemary Clooney and Helen Thomas.

Lime—the mineral, not the fruit—is the reason that Kentucky water makes such good bourbon. Some say the best brands are distilled at Bardstown, Clermont, Frankfort, Lawrenceburg and Loretto. Georgetown claims to be the place where the liquor was first made—by a Baptist preacher, no less. Before Prohibition, there were 189 bourbon distilleries operating in Kentucky. Today there are only nine.

Bluegrass is not really blue—it's green. But in the spring, the grass sprouts bluish-purple buds that can give it a blue cast when seen in large fields. Visitors rarely see this, however, because the pastures are always being grazed or mowed.

Kentucky's autumn colors rival those of New England, and you can view them from the state's three official National Scenic Byways and 28 state-designated scenic routes ranging from 1 mi/1.6 km to 144 mi/232 km in length.




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