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Kentucky Route 144 (KY 144) is a 95.325-mile (153.411 km) state highway running northeast from KY 603 in Owensboro, Kentucky to US 31W in Radcliff near Fort Knox Route description [ edit ]
Barlow Baxter House: August 2, 2001 ... 701 N. Main St. ... Tompkinsville: Located at the junction of KY-63 and KY-163 near the center of town 3: Clark C. Fowler ...
KY 1072 in Ludlow: Dodd Drive in Dayton — — KY 9: 116.285: 187.143 KY 1 near Grayson: KY 8 in Newport: c. 1929: current KY 10: 117.760: 189.516 KY 9 near Vanceburg: SR 253 near Greenup: c. 1929: current KY 11: 182.546: 293.779 KY 30 near Levi: Mountain Parkway at Slade: c. 1929: current KY 11: 182.546: 293.779 US 460 near Mount Sterling
Kentucky Route 9 is a 116.285-mile-long (187.143 km) state highway maintained by the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) in the U.S. state of Kentucky. The highway extends from Grayson to Newport (a city in Kentucky across the Ohio River from Cincinnati, Ohio), roughly paralleling the Ohio River between Vanceburg and Newport.
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Newport is a home rule-class city [6] at the confluence of the Ohio and Licking rivers in Campbell County, Kentucky, United States. The population was 14,150 at the 2020 census. Historically, it was one of four county seats of Campbell County. [7] Newport is a major urban center of Northern Kentucky and is part of the Cincinnati metropolitan area.
The Monmouth Street Historic District is located in Newport, Kentucky. The district was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. [ 1 ] The district includes Monmouth Street, the main commercial street of the city, between Third Street (near Newport on the Levee ), then south to Eleventh Street.
Newport was designated as the county seat until 1823, when it was moved to Visalia, at that time closer to the geographical center of the county. This was an unpopular action, however, as the overwhelming majority of residents lived in the north, along the Ohio River. The county court returned to Newport in 1824 and remained there until 1840.