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Elk Horn is an unincorporated community in Taylor County, Kentucky, United States.It lies along Route 76 southeast of the city of Campbellsville, the county seat of Taylor County. [1]
Elkhorn City was first settled by William Ramey of North Carolina c. 1810. However, in 1767–1768, Daniel Boone took his first steps in what is now Kentucky near present-day Elkhorn City on a hunting expedition. [3] It was originally named "Elkhorn", after an elk's horn that was found on the banks of the nearby creek (also named Elkhorn. [4])
East Ridge High School was built in 2002 by Elliott Contracting Inc. It was built for students from three smaller high schools: Millard High School, Elkhorn City High School, and Feds Creek High School. The school's first principal was Ralph Kilgore, who retired in 2007.
Volunteers and city workers try to reconnect the water supply to a nursing home in Elkhorn City, Ky., on Friday, July 29, 2022. The pipe, along with some of KY-197, washed away yesterday when the ...
Elkhorn Middle School - Opened in 1967 as Elkhorn Jr/Sr High School; Elkhorn Grandview Middle School - Opened in fall 2014; Elkhorn Ridge Middle School - Opened in 2003; Elkhorn Valley View Middle School - Opened in fall 2011; Elkhorn North Ridge Middle School - Opened in fall 2021, financed by a bond worth $149.6 million that was issued in 2018.
Mount Michael's only direct connection to the rest of the road system is by using the namesake Mt. Michael Road. Located north of Elkhorn and additionally close to the village of Waterloo, Nebraska, the school's primary road connections by highway are Nebraska Highway 64 and U.S. Route 275.
Kentucky Route 80 (KY 80) is a 483.55-mile-long (778.20 km) state highway in the southern part of the U.S. state of Kentucky.The route originates on the state's western border at Columbus in Hickman County and stretches across the southern portion of the state, terminating southeast of Elkhorn City on the Virginia state line.
With Scott County being the fastest-growing in the state during the last half of the 2010s, and with more than 3,000 high school students expected by the 2020–21 school year, the county school district began construction on the new Great Crossing High School next to the ECS campus in 2017.