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South of Augusta on Kentucky Route 1839; also 4465 W. Augusta-Chatham Rd. Augusta: Augusta-Chatham Road address represents a boundary increase of July 11, 2007: 4: George W. Barkley Farm: George W. Barkley Farm: June 18, 2003
The following are approximate tallies of current listings by county. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of April 24, 2008 [3] and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. [4]
KY 749 west (Bonds Mill Fox Creek Road) Eastern terminus of KY 749 5.482: 8.822: US 127 north (Harrodsburg Road) West end of US 127 overlap 5.918– 5.949: 9.524– 9.574: Bluegrass Parkway – Elizabethtown, Lexington: Bluegrass Pkwy exits 59A-B 6.146: 9.891: US 127 south (Harrodsburg Road) East end of US 127 overlap 9.331: 15.017: Harry Wise ...
The Water Street Historic District is a historic district in Augusta, Kentucky, on the National Register of Historic Places.Overlooking the Ohio River, the district includes River Side Drive east to Frankfort Street and west to Ferry Street.
The Confederate Monument in Bracken County, Kentucky, in Augusta, Kentucky, honors eight unknown Confederate soldiers who were killed attacking Augusta in September 1862. . Confederate Colonel Basil W. Duke led a force of Confederate soldiers to raid the town, on September 27, 1862, only to be driven back by a home guard force numbering 100 and backed up by gunb
KY 752 south of Flippin: 1955 (ROW)-when? (now Alexander School Road) KY 752 east of Sandy Hook: 1954C-ca. 1955 (now Sheepskin Road) KY 753: 1954 (ROW, and shown on 1959 county map) KY 753 east of Sandy Hook: 1954C-ca. 1955 (now Newcombe Creek Road) KY 754: 1955 (ROW) KY 754 Sandy Hook-south: 1954C-ca. 1955 (now Howards Creek Road) KY 755: 1954C
Access road off Technology Dr., southeast of the Augusta County Government Center 38°11′22″N 79°00′44″W / 38.189306°N 79.012361°W / 38.189306; -79.012361 ( Verona
West Hall, located on the west side of Bracken Street, is a simpler two-story brick building with a side gable roof and five-bay facade. Both were built in the 1820s to house students at the recently established Augusta College, one of the first Methodist higher education establishments in the United States. The school was closed in 1849. [2]