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The first Railbird Festival was held on August 10–11, 2019 at Keeneland. [3] In 2020, a lineup was announced for August, [4] before the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [5] 2021 saw the return of Railbird to Keeneland, but also a substantial increase in ticket sales.
The 17th Kentucky Cavalry Regiment was organized at Russellville, Kentucky and mustered in for one year. It mustered in under the command of Colonel Samuel F. Johnson.. The regiment was attached to Military Department of Kentucky and assigned to duty at Hopkinsville, Kentucky, and in southern Kentucky, along the Louisville and Nashville Railroad.
The Fenian units involved in the battle were the 7th Buffalo (NY), the 18th Ohio, the 13th Tennessee, and the 17th Kentucky Fenian Regiments, as well as independent companies from Indiana and from New Orleans (the Fenian Louisiana Tigers). The Fenians wore an assortment of blue U.S. Army and grey Confederate Army tunics, some with green facings ...
Tickets for the 2024 Railbird Festival go on sale at noon on Thursday, Dec. 7 at Railbirdfest.com. Kentucky-born Chris Stapleton closed out the 2022 Bourbon & Beyond music festival on Sunday ...
The event now draws more than 50,000 visitors each year from more than a dozen countries including Japan and the U.K. The festival also is almost always a sold-out event, with over 10,000 tickets available and sold between both distilleries and attendees. This makes it one of Kentucky's largest events. [3]
The Kentucky Distillers’ Association, the Bourbon Crusaders and bourbon writer Fred Minnick are putting together an auction to raise money for Eastern Kentucky flood relief.
Kevin Bacon grooved to the music as The Bacon Brothers performed on the fourth and final day of the Bourbon & Beyond music festival in Louisville, Kentucky on Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024.
The 17th Kentucky Infantry Regiment was organized at Hartford and Calhoun, Kentucky, and mustered in for a three-year enlistment in December 1861 under the command of Colonel John Hardin McHenry Jr. Colonel McHenry was relieved of command on December 4, 1862, for issuing an order to his men to return runaway slaves to their masters, which was contrary to standing orders.