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Get the Somerset, KY local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
National Weather Service Louisville is a weather forecast office responsible for monitoring weather conditions for 49 counties in north-central, south-central, and east-central Kentucky and 10 counties in southern Indiana. The office is in charge of weather forecasts, warnings and local statements as well as aviation weather.
A building near the corner of Versailles Road and Bennett Avenue sustained damage during storms in Lexington, Ky., on Tuesday, April 2, 2024. Branches are down afte a storm passed through ...
Cumberland Hill is a neighborhood in southeastern Lexington, Kentucky, United States.Its boundaries are Hickman Creek to the west, Clearwater Way to the north, Tates Creek Road to the east, and Forest Lake Drive to the south. [1]
Much of the Somerset area housing growth in the last 20 years is lake oriented. As of the census [15] of 2000, 11,352 people, 4,831 households, and 2,845 families resided in the City of Somerset. The population density for the city was 1,007.1 persons per square mile (388.8 persons/km 2). A karst valley occupies the south-central portion of the ...
Nancy is an unincorporated community eight miles west of the city of Somerset in Pulaski County, Kentucky. The ZIP Code for Nancy is 42544. [1] According to the 2020 census the total population is 5,053. [2] Nancy has a lending library, a branch of the Pulaski County Public Library. [3]
Lake Cumberland Regional Airport (IATA: SME, ICAO: KSME, FAA LID: SME) is a public use airport located three nautical miles (6 km) south of the central business district of Somerset, a city in Pulaski County, Kentucky, United States. [1] The airport is owned by the city of Somerset and Pulaski County. [1] It also serves the area around Lake ...
During the late evening of Friday, December 10, 2021, a large and extremely violent, long-tracked, and devastating EF4 tornado, sometimes referred to as the Western Kentucky tornado, [3] Mayfield tornado, [4] or The Beast, [5] moved across Western Kentucky, United States, producing severe-to-catastrophic damage in numerous towns, including Mayfield, Princeton, Dawson Springs, and Bremen. [2]