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The Elizabethtown Courthouse Square and Commercial District, in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, is a 10 acres (4.0 ha) historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. The listing included 38 contributing buildings. [1] It includes the Hardin County Courthouse, built in 1933 in Georgian Revival style.
US Post Office-Elizabethtown: US Post Office-Elizabethtown: October 5, 1988 : 200 W. Dixie Ave. Elizabethtown: 81: Jacob Van Meter House: October 5, 1988 : Kentucky Route 222, 0.6 miles west of Glendale
An enlargeable map of the 120 counties of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. The metropolitan areas of the Commonwealth of Kentucky include the urban statistical areas that are defined by the United States Office of Management and Budget and regions of urban population in which are defined by other organizations.
Elizabethtown is a home rule-class city [3] and the county seat of Hardin County, Kentucky, United States. The population was 28,531 at the 2010 census , [ 4 ] and was estimated at 31,394 by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2020, making it the ninth-most populous city in the state.
Hardin County is a county located in the central part of the U.S. state of Kentucky.Its county seat is Elizabethtown. [1] The county was formed in 1792. [2] Hardin County is part of the Elizabethtown-Fort Knox, KY Metropolitan Statistical Area, as well as the Louisville/Jefferson County—Elizabethtown-Bardstown, KY-IN Combined Statistical Area.
The Elizabethtown–Fort Knox Metropolitan Statistical Area, as defined by the United States Census Bureau, is an area consisting of two counties in Kentucky, anchored by the city of Elizabethtown and the nearby Fort Knox Army post. As of the 2020 census, the MSA had a population of 155,572.
The Grange Fair will offer free parking on Wednesday, Aug. 24, to recognize Customer Appreciation Day. Visitors who are in it for the long haul are welcome to camp at the Grange Park, too. The ...
Glendale was the site of the first organized woman suffrage association in Kentucky. Mary Barr Clay included in her summary of Kentucky women's suffrage activities in the History of Woman Suffrage included a report given in The Revolution from Glendale: "We organized here an association with twenty members the first of October, 1867, and now have fifty.