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Mount Sterling, often written as Mt. Sterling, [5] is a home rule-class city [6] in Montgomery County, Kentucky, United States. The population was 7,558 as of the 2020 census, [3] up from 6,895 in 2010. It is the county seat of Montgomery County and the principal city of the Mount Sterling micropolitan area.
July 17, 1997 (Machpelan Cemetery, 1.5 miles east of the junction of U.S. Route 460 and Kentucky Route 713: Mount Sterling: 6: East Mount Sterling Historic District: East Mount Sterling Historic District
Notable bands such as Switchfoot, Relient K, Pillar, and P.O.D. have all played at past Ichthus festivals. Mount Sterling is home to the Gateway Music Festival. Boomslang: A Celebration of Sound & Art is an annual multi-venue music festival in Lexington, sponsored by the University of Kentucky's college radio station, WRFL. The festival is an ...
A Bigfoot suit on display at the Bell County Historical Society Museum in Middlesboro, Ky, on Sept. 1, 2016. The Bigfoot suit was part of a hoax in 2008 which made international news and is now on ...
Montgomery County is a county located in the U.S. state of Kentucky.As of the 2020 census, the population was 28,114. [1] Its county seat is Mount Sterling. [2] With regard to the sale of alcohol, it is classified as a moist county—a county in which alcohol sales are prohibited (a dry county), but containing a "wet" city where package alcohol sales are allowed, in this case Mount Sterling. [3]
Menifee County is part of the Mount Sterling, KY Micropolitan Statistical Area, which is also included in the Lexington-Fayette–Richmond–Frankfort, KY combined statistical area. It is located in the foothills of the Cumberland Plateau. [4]
On July 17, 1997, the Confederate Monument in Mt. Sterling was one of sixty-one different monuments related to the Civil War in Kentucky placed on the National Register of Historic Places, as part of the Civil War Monuments of Kentucky Multiple Property Submission. [2] [3] [4]
The Methodist Episcopal Church South in Mount Sterling, Kentucky is a historic church at the junction of E. Main and N. Wilson Streets. It was built in 1883 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991. [1]