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The local independent-league baseball team renamed itself the Florence Y'alls in January 2020, [10] but it had celebrated the tower even during its 16 seasons as the Florence Freedom. The team's mascot is a large inflatable "Y'all Star" mascot; [ 11 ] the team has given away Florence Y'all water tower bobblehead dolls. [ 12 ]
Florence is a city in Boone County, Kentucky, United States, [6] part of the Cincinnati metropolitan area. The population was 31,946 at the 2020 census , [ 7 ] making it the second-most populous city in Northern Kentucky , the eighth-most populous city in Kentucky and the state's most populous that is not a county seat.
Kentucky Route 1017 (KY 1017) is an 3.984-mile-long (6.412 km) state highway in Boone County, Kentucky.The route runs between KY 18 and Oakbrook Drive southeast of Limaburg and east-southeast of Burlington, to U.S. Route 25 (US 25), US 42, and US 127 in northern Florence.
The Wood Avenue Historic District is a historic district in Florence, Alabama. The residential neighborhood was primarily developed after Reconstruction , although five houses date from before the Civil War .
Kentucky Route 74 (KY 74) is a 16.753-mile state highway in Bell County, Kentucky that runs from Tennessee State Route 90 at the Kentucky-Tennessee border in the community of Pruden to U.S. Route 25E in Middlesboro.
Garrett is an unincorporated community and coal town in Floyd County, Kentucky, United States.It is located at the intersection of Kentucky Route 80 and Kentucky Route 7. CSX E&BV Subdivision also passes through the center of town between Front Street and State Route 7.
Annville is an unincorporated community, a census-designated place (CDP), and the largest community in Jackson County, KY. As of the 2020 census, the population was 1,102. The community was established in 1878 and named for local resident Nancy Ann Johnson.
The "Plan of Cincinnati" from the 1878 Encyclopaedia Britannica, showing the layout of downtown Covington and Newport to the south. In 1814, John Gano, Richard Gano, and Thomas Carneal purchased 150 acres (0.6 km 2) on the west side of the Licking River at its confluence with the Ohio River, referred to as "the Point," from Thomas Kennedy for $50,000.