Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This is a complete list of National Historic Landmarks in Kentucky. [1] There are 33 such landmarks in Kentucky; one landmark has had its designation withdrawn. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap
Roughly bounded by the Southern railroad line, Taylorsville Rd., and Jeffersontown city limits, near Jeffersontown, Kentucky but within Louisville Coordinates 38°11′35″N 85°32′09″W / 38.19306°N 85.53583°W / 38.19306; -85
USGS physiographic map of Kentucky showing the location of the Knobs. The Knobs Region or The Knobs is located in the US state of Kentucky. It is a narrow, arc-shaped region consisting of hundreds of isolated hills. The region wraps around the southern and eastern parts of the Bluegrass region in the north central to northeastern part of the state.
Basilica of St. Joseph Proto-Cathedral , the first Roman Catholic cathedral west of the Appalachian Mountains; Belle of Louisville, the oldest Mississippi-style steamboat in operation on the inland waterways of the U.S. (built 1914–1915 in Pittsburgh for service in Memphis as the Idlewild, renamed Avalon in 1948, purchased by Jefferson County ...
The summit of Black Mountain, August 2013 Black Mountain summit plaque. Route 160 east of Lynch and west of Appalachia crosses the mountain. The summit is reached by a narrow road that turns off to the right (coming from Lynch or to the left, if coming from Appalachia) at the Kentucky-Virginia line (the gap that is the highest part of Route 160) and leads past a Federal Aviation Administration ...
Location: Louisville (937 Phillips Lane) Standard single-day ticket prices: A ticket costs low as $44.99, according to Kentucky Kingdom's website. Park hours: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Kentucky Kingdom ...
This is a list of properties and historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in downtown Louisville, Kentucky.Latitude and longitude coordinates of the 87 sites listed on this page may be displayed in a map or exported in several formats by clicking on one of the links in the adjacent box.
In 1910, Louisville and Nashville Railroad acquired the land when it purchased the Lexington and Eastern Railroad. In 1926, L&N's President Wible L. Mapother turned over its approximately 137 acres to the Kentucky State Park Commission, [1] making the Park one of Kentucky's original four state parks when that system was established the same ...