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US 68 begins at the William H. Harsha Bridge over the Ohio River and is immediately concurrent with US 52 and US 62 for 5.6 miles (9.0 km) while traveling on the north bank of the river. US 52 leaves the concurrency at Ripley , at which point US 68 and US 62 head north for 5.3 miles (8.5 km) as a generally rural two-lane highway.
Routes 9 and 10 run concurrently through the south edge of Maysville as the AA Highway. The AA Highway links the Kentucky suburbs of Cincinnati approximately 50 miles west of Maysville with Vanceburg, Ashland and Interstate 64 near Grayson to the southeast. Kentucky Route 11, a north–south highway that approaches Maysville from the south from ...
Maysville is located in Mason County, Kentucky, and contains a large roadcut along U.S. Route 68. The cut was human-made in the 1950s and consists of rock that is roughly 450 million years old. [1] Maysville provides an opportunity to observe the stratigraphy of the formations present of the Ordovician time period.
It ran through Maysville southeast of the main US 68 corridor, which bypasses Maysville to the north. US 68 Bus. ran concurrent with US 62 for most of its length. It intersected with Kentucky Route 2515 (KY 2515), KY 1236, KY 9 (AA Hwy.), KY 1448, KY 2516, KY 10, and KY 8.
PeoplesBank, a community bank in Western Massachusetts; Peoples Federal Savings Bank, headquartered in Brighton, Massachusetts; see Rockland Trust § 2001-2018; People's Bank and Trust Company Building, listed on the NRHP in New Jersey; People's Bank of Buffalo, New York; People's Bank and Trust, Rocky Mount, North Carolina, merged into Centura ...
US 68 south / KY 36 east (Maysville Road) Eastern end of KY 36 overlap. South end of overlap with US 68: 55.276: 88.958: KY 1244 north (Barterville Road) Southern terminus of KY 1244: 55.328: 89.042: US 68 north (Maysville Road) Northern end of US 68 overlap: 57.509: 92.552: KY 36 west (Concrete Road) West end of KY 36 overlap: 57.915: 93.205
Phillips' Folly is an historic three-story brick residence in Maysville, Kentucky.The home's Antebellum architecture displays a blend of styles which may be explained, in part, by the home's speculative six-year construction period, which ended with its completion in 1831.
John Armstrong, a local developer and industrialist, built the Mechanic's Row houses circa 1816. They are considered among the finest examples of New Orleans-inspired architecture in Kentucky. The land on which Mechanics' Row sits once belonged to Edmund Martin who purchased the property in 1797 from John May.