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KY 3321 west (Country Club Drive) – National Cemetery, Metts Drive Industrial Park: Eastern terminus of KY 3321: 30.323: 48.800: US 68 / KY 52 west (West Main Street) – Campbellsville, Perryville: South end of KY 52 overlap; 68 both ways, 52 to the east: 30.604: 49.252: KY 55 north (West Walnut Street) – Springfield: South end of KY 55 ...
Mineral Mound State Park: Eddyville [2] 541 acres (2.2 km 2) My Old Kentucky Home State Park: Bardstown: 285 acres (1.2 km 2) Nolin Lake State Park: Edmonson County: Park: 333 acres (1.3 km 2) Lake: 5,795 acres (23 km 2) [4] Old Fort Harrod State Park: Harrodsburg: 15 acres (0.06 km 2) Paintsville Lake State Park: Johnson County [3] Park: 242 ...
The Pottsville Escarpment is a resistant sandstone belt of cliffs and steep sided, narrow crested valleys in eastern Kentucky, USA. It features rock shelters, waterfalls, and natural bridges. It is also called the Cumberland Escarpment and forms the western edge of the Cumberland Plateau.
Levi Jackson Wilderness Road Park is a former state park located just south of London, Kentucky in Laurel County. It is now a city park under the auspices of the city of London, KY. The park encompasses 896 acres (363 ha) and includes a section of the Wilderness Road that early settlers used to reach Kentucky.
US 150 west (West 2nd Street) / North Buell Street – Perryville Battlefield State Park, Springfield: Western end of US 150 concurrency: 236.067: 379.913: US 150 east / KY 52 east (East 2nd Street) / KY 1856 south (South Bragg Street) – Danville: Eastern end of US 150 and KY 52 concurrencies; 52/150 continue east, 68 turns north 266.181: 428.377
The downtown business district of Louisville is located immediately south of the Ohio River, and southeast of the Falls of the Ohio.The airport is located approximately 6.5 miles (10.5 km) south of the downtown area, and easily connected to most parts of the city by three Interstate Highways, maximizing its accessibility.
Kingdom Come State Park is a part of Kentucky's state park system in Harlan County atop Pine Mountain near the city of Cumberland.It was named after the 1903 best-selling novel The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come by native Kentuckian John Fox, Jr. [2] Features of the park include Raven Rock, Log Rock, and a 3.5-acre (1.4 ha) mountain lake.
Three decades after E.P.. Tom Sawyer State Park opened in 1974, then in 2004, Louisville City officials suggested that Otter Creek Park, a 2,600-acre (1,100 ha) city-operated park lying outside of Louisville's city limits, become a state park in an exchange for E. P. "Tom" Sawyer State Park becoming a city park. [3]