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Pages in category "People from Adair County, Kentucky" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C.
Adair County Community Voice: Columbia: 2002 Weekly Sharon Burton [3] Adair Progress: Columbia: 1987 Weekly Donna Hancock [4] The Advance Yeoman: Wickliffe: 1889 [5] Weekly Kentucky Publishing, Inc. The Advocate-Messenger: Danville: 1940 Tue–Sat Boone Newspapers: Created by merger of The Kentucky Advocate and The Danville Daily–Messenger ...
The Adair County News was a weekly newspaper published on Wednesdays, [1] in Columbia, Adair County, Kentucky [1] The Adair County News was first published in 1887, and was last published in 1987. History
Evelyn West was born Amy May Coomer, in Adair County, Kentucky. Her parents were Henderson and Annie Coomer of the poor farming community of Elroy, Adair County, Kentucky. A few years after her birth, her parents divorced. Annie and Amy moved to Illinois where her mother remarried Curtis Hinds of Petersburg, Illinois, where Amy grew up on a ...
Her works include the Piney Woods trilogy, consisting of The Enduring Hills (1950), Miss Willie (1951), and Tara's Healing (1952), and the Kentucky trilogy, consisting of The Kentuckians (1953), Hannah Fowler (1956), and The Believers (1957). The Janice Holt Giles and Henry Giles Society was established in 1996 to preserve the Giles' literary ...
The Adair County facility is one of more than a dozen run statewide by the Kentucky Department of Juvenile Justice, which has seen a series of scandals and systemic failures over the years ...
Pages in category "Adair County, Kentucky" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Adair County is a county located in the U.S. state of Kentucky.As of the 2020 census, the population was 18,903. [1] Its county seat and only municipality is Columbia. [2] The county was founded in 1801 and named for John Adair, then Speaker of the House in Kentucky and later Governor of Kentucky (1820 – 1824). [3]