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Nicholasville is a home rule city [7] in and the county seat of Jessamine County, Kentucky. [8] The population was 31,490 during the 2020 U.S. census, making Nicholasville the 10th-largest settlement in the state. Since the late 20th century, Nicholasville has undergone rapid growth; the population increased 440.23% between 1970 and 2020.
On Glass Mill Road crossing Jessamine Creek 37°50′32″N 84°38′42″W / 37.8422°N 84.6451°W / 37.8422; -84.6451 ( Glass Mill Road Four Arch Wilmore
Man o' War Boulevard, named after the racehorse Man o' War, [1] is an almost 17-mile (27 km) urban arterial, circling Lexington, Kentucky to its south. Its western terminus is at US 60 (Versailles Road) / Keeneland Boulevard at Keeneland Race Course's main entrance, from which the highway heads southeast, intersecting with US 68 (Harrodsburg Road), US 27 (Nicholasville Road), and other roads.
In 2009, Southland opened its first satellite campus in Danville, KY. In 2010, Southland purchased the former Lexington Mall and a campus opened there in January 2013. In 2015, Southland began holding services in Georgetown, KY at Lemons Mill Elementary. In 2018, Southland announced a launch of a new campus in Richmond, KY in 2020.
Workers with Whittaker Enterprises take down signage at the Arby’s restaurant at 3261 Nicholasville Rd. Monday, Aug. 5, 2024 in Lexington, Ky.
Kentucky Route 620 (KY 620) is a 19.3-mile-long (31.1 km) state highway in Scott County that runs from U.S. Route 62 (US 62) in far northwestern Georgetown adjacent to Toyota Motor Manufacturing Kentucky to U.S. Route 25 (US 25) and Harbor Village Drive west of Rogers Gap via Delaplain, Biddle, Double Culvert, Turkey Foot, and Rogers Gap.
The Brick House on Shun Pike, near Nicholasville, Kentucky, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. The listing included four contributing buildings on 40 acres (16 ha). [1] The house is a five-bay one-story brick central passage plan house, with an original brick ell and brick end chimneys.
Jessamine County was established in 1798 from land given by Fayette County. [4] Jessamine was the 36th Kentucky county in order of formation. [5] The county is claimed to be named for a Jessamine Douglass, the daughter of a pioneer settler, who was either killed by Native Americans or committed suicide after being unlucky in love, but that story is dismissed by modern scholars, who say the ...