Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This list of museums in Kentucky is a list of museums, defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.
This site is the center piece of the University of Kentucky's Adena Park and is located on a bank 75 feet (23 m) above Elkhorn Creek.It features a causewayed ring ditch with a circular 105-foot (32 m) diameter platform, surrounded by a 45-foot (14 m) wide ditch and a 13-foot (4.0 m) wide enclosure with a 33-foot (10 m) wide entryway facing to the west.
Get familiar with Kentucky’s cast of cryptids. ... A Bigfoot suit on display at the Bell County Historical Society Museum in Middlesboro, Ky, on Sept. 1, 2016. The Bigfoot suit was part of a ...
The Biggs site (15Gp8), also known as the Portsmouth Earthworks Group D, is an Adena culture archaeological site located near South Shore in Greenup County, Kentucky.Biggs was originally a concentric circular embankment and ditch surrounding a central conical burial mound with a causeway crossing the ring and ditch.
The museum [1] was founded in 1981 as the Kentucky Art and Craft Foundation to build interest in the state's craft heritage which quickly led to a one of a kind collection of American Folk Art from the region. [2] In 2001, the organization relocated to its current home, a four-story historic cast iron structure.
To celebrate the season of spookiness, we want your help in crowning Kentucky’s Cryptid Champion. Voting in our final round will finish on Halloween day. Final round: Vote for your favorite ...
Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind; Civil War Museum , including the Civil War Museum of the Western Theater, Pioneer Village, Women's Civil War Museum, War Memorial of Mid America and the Wildlife Museum; John Hay Center; Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory, showcases the history of the Louisville Slugger and baseball in general
In 1932, Fain W. King, a lumberman, amateur archaeologist, and Indian artifact collector from Paducah, Kentucky, who was a member of the Board of Regents of the Alabama Museum of Natural History, Tuscaloosa requested and privately paid for the Alabama Museum archaeology staff to conduct the excavations of the center portions of three mounds (A ...