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Bryan Station is a neighborhood in Northeast Lexington, Kentucky, United States. It is named after the nearby pioneer settlement by the same name located just 2 miles (3 km) outside the current edge of the city.
Beechmont is a neighborhood in the south end of Louisville, Kentucky Its modern boundaries are I-264 to the north, Taylor Boulevard to the west, Southern Parkway and Southland Boulevard to the south, and Third Street, Allmond and Louisville Avenues to the east.
Bryan Station was located a short distance from a spring that the camp used for drinking water. None of the Bryan men were living in the garrison at the time of the siege. Since the hostile forces secretly surrounding the fort did not realize that their presence was known by the defenders, the men allowed the women to exit the fort to retrieve ...
Valley Station, Kentucky is a former census-designated place in southwestern Jefferson County, Kentucky, United States.The population was 22,946 at the 2000 census. When the government of Jefferson County merged with the city of Louisville, Kentucky in 2003, residents of Valley Station also became citizens of Louisville Metro.
Partial interchange; southern terminus; south end of KY 80 concurrency: Mayfield: 21: I-69 south – Fulton: South end of I-69 overlap; I-69 Exit 21: 1.338: 2.153: 22: KY 80 west / KY 80 Bus. east – Fancy Farm, Mayfield: North end of KY 80 concurrency; western terminus of KY 80 Business: 2.794: 4.497: 24: KY 121 – Wickliffe, Mayfield 3.818 ...
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 1.8 square miles (4.7 km 2), of which 0.01 square miles (0.03 km 2), or 0.63%, are water. [4] Hurstbourne is bounded by Shelbyville Road (U.S. Route 60) to its north, Hurstbourne Parkway to its east, I-64 to its south, and Oxmoor Farm and Oxmoor Center to its west. [6]
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 156 square miles (400 km 2), of which 152 square miles (390 km 2) is land and 4.6 square miles (12 km 2) (2.9%) is water. [4] It is the fifth-smallest county in Kentucky by land area and fourth-smallest by total area.
Bus transit is served by the Transit Authority of Northern Kentucky (TANK). [27] Covington Union Station served Chesapeake and Ohio and Louisville and Nashville passenger trains into the 1960s. The final train making stops at the station was the L&N's Pan-American (Cincinnati-New Orleans) in 1971.