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3293 and 3109 Big Springs Rd. 36°52′58″N 86°14′13″W / 36.882778°N 86.236944°W / 36.882778; -86.236944 ( Big Spring School-Oliver Farmstead Settle
March 13, 2017 (37 Mary Ingalls Hwy. Dayton: 17: East Row Historic District: East Row Historic District: August 25, 1983 (Roughly bounded by the C&O railroad line, 6th, Saratoga, and Oak Sts.
Dawson Springs: 5: John Cox House: December 13, 1988 : Kentucky Route 502, 0.5 miles north of Nebo: Nebo: The house has been demolished. [citation needed] 6: Cranor School: Cranor School: March 8, 1989
The Mill Springs Battlefield National Monument was the location of the Battle of Mill Springs (also known as Battle of Fishing Creek and as Battle of Logan's Crossroads) in January 1862. It was declared to be a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 1993 and authorized as a national monument in 2019.
The springs uphill from the site were reportedly discovered by pioneer Daniel Boone, who suggested the site would be a good location for a mill. [ 2 ] The mill is a three-story frame building upon a 20 feet (6.1 m) basement, 40 by 40 feet (12 m × 12 m) in plan, supported by large stone columns.
Mill Springs, Kentucky is an unincorporated community in Wayne County, Kentucky. The area includes multiple springs and the Mill Springs Mill, a watermill built in 1877 which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. There are said to be 13 springs, discovered by Daniel Boone, who suggested that it was a good site for a mill. [2]
It is a "once famous sulphur springs spa established in 1832, originally consisted of a two-story hotel of logs located near what is the Inn's present entrance." [2] In 1976 what remained included well casings and a remodelled building which formerly contained a bowling alley at the spa, and was later used as a post office, general store, and ...
Pennyrile Forest State Resort Park is a park located in northwestern Christian County, Kentucky, just south of Dawson Springs, Kentucky.The park encompasses 863 acres (349 ha) and takes its name from a colloquial form of the word pennyroyal, a small flowering plant native to the area.