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Warren County became the 23rd county of Kentucky in 1796, from a section of Logan County. [8] [9] It was named after General Joseph Warren of the Revolutionary War. He dispatched William Dawes and Paul Revere on their famous midnight ride to warn residents of the approaching British troops. He was also a hero of the Battle of Bunker Hill. [10]
Kentucky Route 1083 is a 18.081-mile-long (29.099 km) rural secondary highway in western Warren County and southeastern Butler County. The highway begins at US 68 and KY 80, which run concurrently along Russellville Road, southeast of Browning. KY 1083 heads northwest along Browning Road toward Browning, during which the highway crosses Brush ...
Kentucky Route 3172 is a 2.918-mile-long (4.696 km) supplemental road in east central Logan County and west central Warren County. The highway begins at KY 73 (Cave Springs Road) north of the unincorporated village of South Union; the west leg of the intersection is county
Kentucky Route 884 (KY 884) is a south–north highway in Warren County, Kentucky. Primarily a route serving rural areas southeast of Bowling Green, the route enters the city before its end at U.S. Route 231 (US 231, Scottsville Road). The route is known locally as Three Springs Road.
Barren County and Warren County: John Allen (1771–1813), hero of the Battle of Frenchtown in the War of 1812: 21,788: 346 sq mi (896 km 2) Anderson County: 005: Lawrenceburg: 1827: Franklin County, Washington County and Mercer County: Richard Clough Anderson, Jr., Kentucky and United States legislator (1817–21) 24,613: 203 sq mi (526 km 2 ...
Plum Springs is a home rule-class city in Warren County, Kentucky, in the United States. [3] The population was 497 as of the 2020 Census. It is included in the Bowling Green metropolitan area. It is named for its location on Plum Springs Road . [4] [5]
Running concurrently with U.S. Route 31E for its first 8.607 miles (13.852 km) in Kentucky, US 231/31E enters the state from Sumner County, Tennessee, and into Allen County. The two routes separate on the west side of Scottsville after the KY 100 junction.
On July 21, 2023, the OMB delineated 8 combined statistical areas, 9 metropolitan statistical areas, and 15 micropolitan statistical areas in Kentucky. [1] As of 2023, the largest of these is the Louisville-Jefferson County--Elizabethtown, KY-IN CSA , comprising greater Louisville , Kentucky's largest city.