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Monroe County is the only county of the 3,144 in the United States named for a President where the county seat is named for his vice-president. The county was formed in 1820; and named for James Monroe the fifth President, author of the Monroe Doctrine. [3] The county seat was named for Daniel Tompkins. They both served from 1817 to 1825.
The Carlisle County News: Bardwell: 1894 [14] Weekly Kentucky Publishing The Casey County News: Liberty: 1904 [15] Weekly Paxton Media Group: Central Kentucky News-Journal: Campbellsville: 1910 Paxton Media Group: The Citizen–Times: Scottsville: 1918 Weekly Robert Pitchford Created from merger between The Citizen (1908) and Allen County Times ...
The Herald-News is a part of the Horse Cave-based Jobe Publishing's news and advertising network that, in addition to Metcalfe County, also serves neighboring Barren and Metcalfe Counties, along with Butler, Edmonson and Hart Counties by virtue of Jobe's ownership of weekly newspapers in the aforementioned counties. [1]
Monroe County Planning Director Jackie Nester Jelen said the county now has 45 zoning designations for the roughly 64,000 parcels and 231,000 acres it regulates and is trying to get that number ...
The five-member Monroe County board of commissioners voted unanimously Tuesday to recommend suspending the director of the tax payer funded agency that oversees tens of millions of dollars in ...
This partial list of city nicknames in Kentucky compiles the aliases, sobriquets and slogans that cities and towns in Kentucky are known by (or have been known by historically), officially and unofficially, to municipal governments, local people, outsiders or their tourism boards or chambers of commerce.
The chamber’s chair did not consider the case as “theft.” Former Forsyth-Monroe Chamber president accused of theft, wrongly spending chamber’s money Skip to main content
Fountain Run is located at (36.721319, -85.961398) [17] in western Monroe County, near the point where Allen, Monroe, and Barren counties come together Kentucky Route 100 passes through the south side of the community, leading east 18 miles (29 km) to Tompkinsville, the county seat, and west 16 miles (26 km) to Scottsville.