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Location of Boone County in Kentucky. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Boone County, Kentucky.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Boone County, Kentucky, United States.
Kentucky Route 59 (KY 59) is a 25.999-mile-long (41.841 km) state highway in Kentucky. ... KY 1662 west (Rayburn Fork Road) Eastern terminus of KY 1662 ...
Hebron is served by one major interstate highway. Interstate 275 is an outer-belt highway through Northern Kentucky. It is also served by numerous state highways: Kentucky Route 237 (North Bend Road), Kentucky Route 20 (Petersburg Road), and formerly Kentucky Route 3168 (Limaburg Road). ARTIMIS is Greater Cincinnati's interstate information ...
KY 20 meets KY 212 just north of the Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky Airport. KY 212 provides access to Interstate 275 east. KY 20 (Petersburg Road) is the last exit on I-275 West in Kentucky before reaching the Indiana state line. KY 20 descends into the Ohio Valley and comes to an end at the middle segment of KY 8 west of Villa Hills.
Trees are removed along Boonville-New Harmony Road ahead of the first phase of reconstruction project between Petersburg Road and SR 57 in Vanderburgh County, Thursday, Jan. 11, 2024.
I-275 heads west toward Indiana, passing by Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, with Kentucky Route 212 (KY 212) used as the service road to and from the airport. Then, near Hebron , west of the airport, I-275 has an interchange with KY 237 , before passing over the Ohio River into Indiana.
The J.M. Aylor House, at 2162 Petersburg Rd. in Hebron, Kentucky is a historic house listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. The listing included two contributing buildings and a contributing structure. [1] The house is a double-pile central passage plan house.
Prospect Farm was built by steamboat captain J. C. Jenkins on a hill overlooking Petersburg, Kentucky. Jenkins was born in Orange County, Virginia and moved to Boone County in 1832. He invested in the Boone County Distilling Company and also raised cattle on the 1,200 acres then comprising Prospect Farm. [2]