Trail of Tears Commemorative Park
1838Commemorative park near Hopkinsville marking the route where thousands of Cherokee passed through western Kentucky during forced removal in 1838-39.
Everything Benton is known for
Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Benton.
Commemorative park near Hopkinsville marking the route where thousands of Cherokee passed through western Kentucky during forced removal in 1838-39.
6 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
Commemorative park near Hopkinsville marking the route where thousands of Cherokee passed through western Kentucky during forced removal in 1838-39.
Get ready to be dwarfed! Kentucky Dam isn't just a wall of concrete; it's a monument to ambition and a testament to the power of the New Deal. Back in the late 1930s and early 1940s, the Tennessee Valley Authority began…
Imagine a bustling city here nearly a thousand years ago! The Kincaid Mounds site was once a major center for the Mississippian culture. Between 1050 and 1400, people built at least eleven platform mounds here. These…
Get ready to witness a truly unique memorial! Right here in Mayfield, Kentucky, stands a collection of monuments unlike anything you've probably ever seen. It all started with Colonel Henry G. Wooldridge. After losing…
Even in devastation, some stories stand tall. This historic post office, built in 1910, was partially destroyed by a recent tornado, offering a glimpse into the resilience of the Mayfield community. The U.S. Post Office…
On the night of December fifteenth, eighteen eleven, in a kitchen at Rocky Hill plantation in Livingston County, two of Thomas Jefferson's nephews, Lilburne and Isham Lewis, killed an enslaved seventeen year old named…