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A man was killed in Barren County Saturday after being shot by a sheriff’s deputy, according to Kentucky State Police. State police said the Barren County Sheriff’s Office was conducting a ...
Cave City is located in the northwestern portion of Barren County at (37.137130, -85.956958 U.S. Route 31W (Dixie Highway) passes through the center of the city, and Interstate 65 passes to the west of downtown, with access from Exit 53 (Kentucky Route 70/Mammoth Cave Road).
The Cave City Commercial District, in Cave City, Kentucky, is a historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [1] It is located along Broadway between 1st and 2nd Streets in Cave City. The district included 15 contributing buildings on 3.5 acres (1.4 ha). [1] According to its NRHP nomination, the district
The Kentucky & Tennessee Railway in nearby Stearns, KY bought the track and a scrap company bought the old converted wooden cabooses. This resulted in the park's final fire. During the scrapping process for the wooden coaches, the bodies of the cars were accidentally set on fire with a cutting torch, with the fire quickly getting out of hand.
The Kentucky gun shop that sold an assault weapon to a man who used it to kill five co-workers and wrote in his journal the gun was “so easy” to buy is facing a lawsuit filed Monday from ...
A couple camping at Kentucky's Mammoth Cave National Park were woken up by a man trying to kill Bigfoot, according to WBKO. Man fires gun in Mammoth Cave National Park after claiming he saw ...
The station began broadcasting as WKVE on May 23, 1975, under Twin City ownership. [5] [6] The station originally transmitted from a tower on the southern outskirts of Cave City along U.S. Route 31W. [6] Evidence from old radio-and-TV-hobbyist publications dating from the 1970s to 1984 show that WKVE broadcast a Top-40 format.
The newspaper was founded in the 1960s by Aubrey C. and Dorothy Wilson as The Cave City Progress. The newspaper expanded its coverage area in the late 1970s, opening a news bureau in Glasgow and changing the name to The Barren County Progress. Editorial management of the newspaper passed on to A.C. Wilson Jr. at about that same time.