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Main menu. Main menu. move to sidebar hide. Navigation Main page; Contents; ... It was named for the Moseley family. There was a post office from 1886 to 1909. [5 ...
Waveland State Historic Site, also known as the Joseph Bryan House, in Lexington, Kentucky is the site of a Greek Revival home and 10 acres now maintained and operated as part of the Kentucky state park system. It was the home of the Joseph Bryan family, their descendants and the people they enslaved in the nineteenth century.
Lexington is a consolidated city coterminous with and the county seat of Fayette County, Kentucky, United States.As of the 2020 census the city's population was 322,570, making it the second-most populous city in Kentucky (after Louisville), the 14th-most populous city in the Southeast, and the 59th-most populous city in the United States.
Lexington had 21 property crimes per 100,000 people Lexington had only 21 property crimes per 100,000 people, according to FBI crime data from 2022. The next lowest was Dennison with 38, followed ...
This site is the center piece of the University of Kentucky's Adena Park and is located on a bank 75 feet (23 m) above Elkhorn Creek.It features a causewayed ring ditch with a circular 105-foot (32 m) diameter platform, surrounded by a 45-foot (14 m) wide ditch and a 13-foot (4.0 m) wide enclosure with a 33-foot (10 m) wide entryway facing to the west.
Beaumont Centre is a neighborhood and major retail and office park in southwestern Lexington, Kentucky, United States.Its boundaries are New Circle Road to the north, the older Harrods Hill neighborhood to the south, Man o' War Boulevard to the west, and Harrodsburg Road to the east. [1]
"The Rise and Fall of Mother's Southwestern Branch: A Socio-demographic Study of the Shaker Community at Pleasant Hill, Kentucky 1805-1910." Thesis. Lexington, KY: University of Kentucky. 1996. Stein, Stephen J. Letters from a Young Shaker: William S. Byrd at Pleasant Hill (Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky, c1985, repr. 2004)
White Hall State Historic Site is a 14-acre (5.7 ha) park in Richmond, Kentucky, southeast of Lexington. White Hall was home to two legendary Kentucky statesmen: General Green Clay and his son General Cassius Marcellus Clay, as well as suffragists Mary Barr Clay and Laura Clay. On April 12, 2011, White Hall was designated as a national historic ...