When I was in jail there in Stanford I kept the grass mowed nice there at the Fort in Stanford. Not the real fort but they have reenactments there. Kept the Courthouse and Mainstreet clean and the flowers watered and pretty. Changed my life since then. I've lived in the next county over all my life. Garrard co. Enjoyed listening to our local history.
I lived in Lancaster for a few years back in 04-11 i think(blurry part of life lol). Lived on the "shoot"... Lank-uh-ster. You learn that really quickly. If you wanna fit in. 🤣 That's a good story man. Keep telling it. Some people need hope and your life shows grace abounds. 🙏 🙌🏴☠️
@@punkdrummr2000 😂😂 good ole Lankster 😂 they rebuilt the shoot. It use to be dilapidated and abandoned houses. Its all clean and nice houses there now. I'm between Lancaster, Crab Orchard and Paint Lick myself.
My gggg grandfather, Wild Cat (John) McKinney was the first school teacher of Lexington. He caught a wildcat in the school one morning, shut up the doors and windows, to trap and kill the large cat, but then wished he had not done that. The story hit all the main newspapers in the nation, and the name Wild Cat McKInney stuck. John signed the first Kentucky constitiution, a member of the first congress there in KY. In in 70's Mr. McKinney used to visit his son in Missouri, taking 50 cents with him, living off the land on the way there and back to his farm in KY - the 50 cents, 25 to cross the Mississippi there, 25 back. John McKinney made the Draper Papers, twice. Hardy, self-reliant people back then - they would not recognize America today. Kent Crutcher, CPA, MBA - Lubbock area.
Hahh, we might be distant relatives. My X5 grandfather James Harris married Ann McKinney in this general area. I don't know if John was a relative of Ann's but considering how many settlers were around in that area then I'd be shocked if there were two sets of unrelated McKinney's. They're both buried in Greensburgh.
@@Falconlibrary The cat wrapped his claws around the rib cage ribs of Wildcat, and Wildcat pressed the cat against a desk, killing him that way. But it took 3 men to pry break the cats claws loose from his ribs. Wildcat was in bed there after for 3 days, the ordeal and the disease from the cats claws, into his blood stream almost killed him. For most people disease from cats claws are poisonous, or fatal. Different times back then.
A great summary of your Historic Ancestor, and written with an infusion of positive energy that makes it an uplifting morsel read of History. Your writing reminds me of the talent necessary for writing successful Press Releases. Each purpose of written information required a specific style to serve the point and most obvious are that which are in the scope of Advertising, Marketing, and Public Relations, PR the writers of Press Releases, and a particular focus in my Education and early Professional experience, my degrees being in Sociology, Journalism, and History. I suggest you keep an awareness of this talent, as it may very well served you in your Career Choices and Decisions. Should you desire to gain some accreditation in the area, and if you already have your Bachelor's Degree, a few specific classes would serve to fill the merit. If you don't have your degree, I would recommend a consideration of a Jr College with major in Journalism, focus in Public Relations, a speciality that serves to support all the areas of Public Relations, Marketing, Advertising, and Sales, the latter offering the highest of Financial Returns over any other Profession period, it is merely a measure by what is being sold, ie Medical Equipment, one of the most lucrative, comes to mind. The point is with talent, and some value 9f credentials, it just a matter 9f 0ers9nsl interest. (Seeing your age, I paused to share this, for all the potentials are your opportunities, 8f interested.) Best Thoughts and Successes, Beth Bartlett Sociologist/Behavioralist and Historian Tennessee, USA (Retired from a Career in Sales, Marketing, and Public Relations. VP Sales in Toxicology, Corporate Drug Testing Fortune 500 and DOT)
As a homeschool mom and a native of Kentucky I was so excited to find your channel. I myself don’t know a lot about KY history as I was not taught it. Public school doesn’t teach History about each state. I am on a mission to teach my kids. You also have the perfect voice for a voice over so clear with a hint of the good ol’ KY accent. I to have one even tho I group up in central KY. Thank you for doing this.
Great video. I'm 26 living in Lexington and grew up in Richmond. I was always ignorant of our local history. I could talk for hours about European history, world history in general, but not our local history. Thanks for sharing I learned a lot.
Born and raised in Boyle county/ Lincoln County. Spent plenty of time in both Standford and harrodsburg. A lot of history. I mostly resided in Danville though. Where constitution square is. Where Kentucky established their statehood.
As a brief background of Lincoln County, it was originally part of Virginia, and was formed in 1780. The county seat is located in Stanford, Kentucky. Most of Kentucky was part of Virginia in the 1700s. Lincoln County was one of the three original counties in Kentucky. In 1776, a part of Fincastle County was taken to form Kentucky County, Virginia. Kentucky County was then divided by the Virginia legislature in 1780 to form the counties of Fayette, Jefferson, and Lincoln . When Kentucky became a commonwealth in 1792 , nine counties had already been created. They were Nelson, Bourbon, Madison, Mercer, Masonand Woodford. Therefore, when searching your families, you may wish to look in Fincastle Co, Virginia, Kentucky Co., Virginia as well as those counties previously mentioned.
Maysville was established under the Virginia legislater 1786. Old Washington , which is even older almost became the state capital. Your list breaks my heart.
"Warrior's path" on the map intrigued me. I know the Shawnee kind of ranged through KY/OH/IN so that was probably a major travel route for them. I'll have to look in to it. I believe the Red River in KY was Warrior's Fork or something like that.
I come from the Lawrenceburg area, which was founded originally as Kaufman/Coffman's Station in the 1780s but wasn't established officially until 1820 when the Franklin Co. Courthouse named the town after James Lawrence, a Naval Officer... It sits dead between Frankfort and Harrodsburg and is a horror show during the 127 Yard sale...
Five minutes after Lexington was established they started construction on New Circle and immediately had traffic jams. They should be done in another 200 years
Very interesting. I had ancestors killed at Ruddel's Station in 1780, and others captured in the same action. My wife and I met at school in Kentucky. I've always had an interest in the settlement history of the area.
My kin where taken to Detroit in the same raid. They join Butler's Rangers and returned to Ruddels station in 1782 and fought at Blue Lick. We all live on the Canadian side of the Detroit river some returned after the war.
@@daveknight1154 My direct lineal grandfather and his older sister were taken to Detroit as well. She apparently had a physical deformity, and so she and her infant brother were spared. She later married a Hessian deserter who served with American revolutionary forces in the west (family tradition says with GR Clark, but the dates don't line up by my reckoning.) my lineal grand later moved to Fayette County, Ohio (Washington Court House) where documents indicate several members of the family received Revolutionary war land grants. Several of them are buried in the Primitive Baptist Church cemetery there. Isn't it interesting how we end up where we do?
My 5th great grandparents were also captured at Ruddle’s Station. One deposition by another inhabitant said that my 5th great grandfather and Captain John Hinkson were the only two inhabitants of the station that were not handed over to the natives when they surrendered (despite the terms of surrender being that all captives would remain under guard by the British). My ancestors were taken to Detroit, then on to Montreal where they remained until being released in 1782.
Great video. I assume the main route for most to the region was through the Gap. I'm surprised that Maysville region wasn't represented on the list by pioneers from "Westsylvania" arriving by rafting down the Ohio River. The largest portion of my genealogy are participants in the Upper South Migration.
Any chance you could do a video on Willis Russell? He is from Monterey, Kentucky in modern day Owen County. He served on the confederate side in the civil war and became a marshall after the war and fought against the KKK. Truly underrated individual!
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel from the intro of the Wikipedia article. Willis Russell (1844 - July 1, 1875) was a Deputy United States Marshal who fought against William Smoot and his Ku Klux Klan chapter in Owen County, Kentucky. Smoot and his followers conducted a bloody reign of terror in Franklin (Frankfort), Owen County, and Henry Counties. Russell finally stopped them, though it cost him his life.[1][2]
Thanks so much for this informative and well organized video. 👍👍👍 Just one bit of constructive criticism… the background music is rather distracting; perhaps something a bit slower and softer would complement the pictures and narrative better.
My family, the Overstreets came to Mercer county in the late 1700s. And most of my family still lives there. I have fond memories of Harrodsburg and lawrenceburg ❤️
Do you have any information about the abandoned hospital in Frenchburg? I was born there. I know that my dad's mother was from the Benson family but she's been gone about 55 years. I believe that some of our family lived in Suddath. in the '50s or '60s. No family left to really ask. I haven't been back since my Grandmother's funeral, other than taking basic at Ft. Knox.
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel I appreciate whatever you can dig up, when you get to there. I'm 100% disabled and can only drive about a half hour per day so it is unlikely that I'll ever get to go back for a visit.
my hometown is center kentucky which is in metcalfe county i don't know when my home town center was founded you can find that out i'd really appreciate you doing a story on it a lot of people don't know that metcalfe county is a county in appalachia
My direct ancestor fought with george rodgers clark in the battles of blue licks and chilicothe and was one of the first lot holders in lexington . he also had a tavern there. he was in the virginia militia and sent to protect harrodsburg and boonesboro. one of my ancestors couisins is recorded on revolutionary pensioners records as having helped bury daniel boones brother
Some relatives on my mama’s side are buried in Zachary Taylor Cemetery it would be her mom & dad so my grand parents & my great grandfather & great grandmother. My grandmother used to work with Muhammad Ali’s mom in Louisville & my grandfather sold his dad insurance to his dad but this was all before he changed his name. On the same side of that family on of my relatives was in Waverly Hills during what they would call Tent City Days his name was Herman Lee Roth
I have a question...what about doing one on a subject not too many ppl know about or much about....cornwallce island...i think thats the name ..named after a guy named cornwallce ...see i cant even articulate what it is even....plz educate us....mainly me i guess....i already subbed lol.. appearently is sank...or the water lvl got higher...i remember something about it in 1st grade i think it was general corwallce maybe ...iys been a very long time since 1st grade...
hmm I purchased an old Kentucky History Book at COURT DAYS in Preston Ky. it tells a different story on the map provided in the book. Lexington wasn't even on this map, West Liberty was. "COURT DAYS" the ORIGINAL WAY OF LIVING BARTER/TRADE, Bath County Ky. still CELEBRATES this event Montgomery does too but it is more commercialized.TRUE HISTORY
Thank you and glad you enjoyed it! That’s a topic we’ve been interested in too! Hopefully we’ll be able to get it moving forward soon! Thanks for the suggestion!
45 minutes after Lexington was established they made it a law that all houses had to have the words “Live , Laugh ,Love” in their living rooms and “Gather” in their kitchens. This was mainly to cheer people up after you know…. Dysentery
I live in Bardstown and historians angrily "debate" whether Bardstown or Harrodsburg was the first incorporated city in Kentucky. Want to start a fight, show them this video.
Wikipedia has Harrisburg founded 14 years before William Bards got his land grant.... however they also speculate in the 1770s there was a 'Salem' at the location... Bardstown was incorporated much (46 years) earlier however. (from Perryville myself, but I'm a 'Jones/Buell/Mattingly' so I've got family in both :p )
@@krisjones4680 In the Daniel Boone series, Fess Parker talked about taking , " A short walk to Salem," I always wondered about which and where this Salem was. He was a great history buff and l always, it seemed to have his facts straight.
@@grassroot011 probably that Salem, KY then as Salem, TN wasn't established until 20 odd years after he died, and he would have been like 70yrs old to go to the current Salem, KY... lots of places changed names several times as other places had the same names, they just didn't know about... or all died and a new group came. Could also be a TV screwup, not doing enough research.
You set up parameters for your topic early on: "fort, cabins, courthouse, taverns and so on" (which avoids the technical definitions used normally, which you do state) but you don't refer to these or even hint at any documentation as you tell your story. They will seem arbitrary and of questionable value to some but it's your story to tell. Since your podcast has a visual presence, I wish the ending graphic we're left with wasn't First Five Towns of Kentucky with no asterisk. A lot of scholarly work and effort has gone into Ky history (this subject included) and it is certainly always open for more. Please be mindful that as sources of information gathering change the responsibility is still there. If you want to do a credible job with history be clear, transparent, and have a stringent journalistic ethic. I really am curious as to when each of these had their first courthouse and their first tavern.
If you believe the books. Like all the rest of the history books, this is a lie. Stanford (Standing Fort) is the first city in Ky. Cowards ran to Harrodsburg. Scared of Indians. Real men stayed in Stanford.
None of those towns was established in Kentucky but Kentucky County, Virginia. Ky didn't become a state till 1792. You need to check towns that were established after Ky became a state.
I’m in Bardstown for the first time. It’s overwhelming how beautiful this town is. California is absolute crap, next time anyone tells you how good CA is, walk away.
When I was in jail there in Stanford I kept the grass mowed nice there at the Fort in Stanford. Not the real fort but they have reenactments there. Kept the Courthouse and Mainstreet clean and the flowers watered and pretty. Changed my life since then. I've lived in the next county over all my life. Garrard co. Enjoyed listening to our local history.
Glad to know you’re having success and thank you for keeping the Fort clean, was there yesterday for the 5th reenactment.
are you PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN SIR??? I BELIEVE YOU ARE! 🇺🇸
@@junefranklin458 absolutely 😎🇺🇸
I lived in Lancaster for a few years back in 04-11 i think(blurry part of life lol). Lived on the "shoot"...
Lank-uh-ster. You learn that really quickly. If you wanna fit in. 🤣
That's a good story man. Keep telling it. Some people need hope and your life shows grace abounds. 🙏 🙌🏴☠️
@@punkdrummr2000 😂😂 good ole Lankster 😂 they rebuilt the shoot. It use to be dilapidated and abandoned houses. Its all clean and nice houses there now. I'm between Lancaster, Crab Orchard and Paint Lick myself.
Born and raised in Harrodsburg. Attended the 200 year celebration in 1974. Got to see Happy Chandler and Bob Hope play golf at Brightleaf golf course.
Same here!
My gggg grandfather, Wild Cat (John) McKinney was the first school teacher of Lexington. He caught a wildcat in the school one morning, shut up the doors and windows, to trap and kill the large cat, but then wished he had not done that. The story hit all the main newspapers in the nation, and the name Wild Cat McKInney stuck. John signed the first Kentucky constitiution, a member of the first congress there in KY. In in 70's Mr. McKinney used to visit his son in Missouri, taking 50 cents with him, living off the land on the way there and back to his farm in KY - the 50 cents, 25 to cross the Mississippi there, 25 back. John McKinney made the Draper Papers, twice. Hardy, self-reliant people back then - they would not recognize America today. Kent Crutcher, CPA, MBA - Lubbock area.
Wow! That’s a wild event. Thanks for sharing.
Hahh, we might be distant relatives. My X5 grandfather James Harris married Ann McKinney in this general area. I don't know if John was a relative of Ann's but considering how many settlers were around in that area then I'd be shocked if there were two sets of unrelated McKinney's. They're both buried in Greensburgh.
Wild Cat is the coolest nickname ever.
@@Falconlibrary The cat wrapped his claws around the rib cage ribs of Wildcat, and Wildcat pressed the cat against a desk, killing him that way. But it took 3 men to pry break the cats claws loose from his ribs. Wildcat was in bed there after for 3 days, the ordeal and the disease from the cats claws, into his blood stream almost killed him. For most people disease from cats claws are poisonous, or fatal. Different times back then.
A great summary of your Historic Ancestor, and written with an infusion of positive energy that makes it an uplifting morsel read of History.
Your writing reminds me of the talent necessary for writing successful Press Releases. Each purpose of written information required a specific style to serve the point and most obvious are that which are in the scope of Advertising, Marketing, and Public Relations, PR the writers of Press Releases, and a particular focus in my Education and early Professional experience, my degrees being in Sociology, Journalism, and History.
I suggest you keep an awareness of this talent, as it may very well served you in your Career Choices and Decisions.
Should you desire to gain some accreditation in the area, and if you already have your Bachelor's Degree, a few specific classes would serve to fill the merit.
If you don't have your degree, I would recommend a consideration of a Jr College with major in Journalism, focus in Public Relations, a speciality that serves to support all the areas of Public Relations, Marketing, Advertising, and Sales, the latter offering the highest of Financial Returns over any other Profession period, it is merely a measure by what is being sold, ie Medical Equipment, one of the most lucrative, comes to mind.
The point is with talent, and some value 9f credentials, it just a matter 9f 0ers9nsl interest.
(Seeing your age, I paused to share this, for all the potentials are your opportunities, 8f interested.)
Best Thoughts and Successes,
Beth Bartlett
Sociologist/Behavioralist
and Historian
Tennessee, USA
(Retired from a Career in Sales, Marketing, and Public Relations. VP Sales in Toxicology, Corporate Drug Testing Fortune 500 and DOT)
As a homeschool mom and a native of Kentucky I was so excited to find your channel. I myself don’t know a lot about KY history as I was not taught it. Public school doesn’t teach History about each state. I am on a mission to teach my kids. You also have the perfect voice for a voice over so clear with a hint of the good ol’ KY accent. I to have one even tho I group up in central KY. Thank you for doing this.
You’re welcome! I’m glad they’re of use to you. And I agree, schools need to be teaching more local and state history! I’ll keep the accent too lol
Great video. I'm 26 living in Lexington and grew up in Richmond. I was always ignorant of our local history. I could talk for hours about European history, world history in general, but not our local history. Thanks for sharing I learned a lot.
So glad you enjoyed the video and learned some local history! That’s our main goal with the channel! Making local history more available.
Richmond ky here
We had Kentucky History in 7th grade. This C student got A's and B's
10 minutes after Lexington was established they started complaining that UK wasn’t in the final 4.
High expectations even back then!
Love it! My Kentucky roots go deep and way back. I'm Brashear and Hall (descent)
I have Halls in my bloodline from Knott County.
I worked at Fort Boonesbourgh for a couple seasons. That was fun!!
Thank God for our ancestors with backbones.
…& guns 😏
Daniel Boone the guy who founded boons borough is my 7th great uncle!
Love this episode! So much history packed into this one! This video will be referred back to for many years! Thanks for making it.
Thank you!
Born and raised in Boyle county/ Lincoln County. Spent plenty of time in both Standford and harrodsburg. A lot of history. I mostly resided in Danville though. Where constitution square is. Where Kentucky established their statehood.
Interesting. My wife’s family lived in Lincoln County, Hustonville and Stanford. I pastored a small Baptist church in Harrodsburg 1980-82
I worked at Fort Boonesborough for about 2yrs. People from all over the world visited. Germany, japan, Sweden, etc...
I moved to Paris 2 years ago. Some of the most scenic county roads anywhere in the world!
I agree, I live in Fleming County.
I Love KY. My Home
As a brief background of Lincoln County, it was originally part of Virginia, and was formed in 1780.
The county seat is located in Stanford, Kentucky. Most of Kentucky was part of Virginia in the 1700s.
Lincoln County was one of the three original counties in Kentucky.
In 1776, a part of Fincastle County was taken to form Kentucky County, Virginia. Kentucky County was then divided
by the Virginia legislature in 1780 to form the counties of Fayette, Jefferson, and Lincoln .
When Kentucky became a commonwealth in 1792 , nine counties had already been created.
They were Nelson, Bourbon, Madison, Mercer, Masonand Woodford. Therefore, when searching
your families, you may wish to look in Fincastle Co, Virginia, Kentucky Co., Virginia as well as those counties previously mentioned.
Always enjoy listening to the podcast !!! Now I can enjoy the videos too !!!
Keep up the great work 😎✌🍀!!
Thank you! Glad you’re enjoying both!
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel 😎👊
Maysville was established under the Virginia legislater 1786. Old Washington , which is even older almost became the state capital. Your list breaks my heart.
Maysville is a great town! A lot of history!
Middlesborough, KY was the first city in Caintucky. 1763. Middlesborough was built inside the meteor crater that created the Cumberland Gap.
@@smokinlouie9885 Middlesboro didn't really become a town until the late 1800s...
Thank Very much for this interesting piece of Kentucky History. So Thankful you are posting your vids, your hard work shows!
Thank you! More to come!
"Warrior's path" on the map intrigued me. I know the Shawnee kind of ranged through KY/OH/IN so that was probably a major travel route for them. I'll have to look in to it.
I believe the Red River in KY was Warrior's Fork or something like that.
Lived in lexington yr 1966 and 1967,loved that town..i miss the keenland races and the Ky Derby.
Derby Day today!
I come from the Lawrenceburg area, which was founded originally as Kaufman/Coffman's Station in the 1780s but wasn't established officially until 1820 when the Franklin Co. Courthouse named the town after James Lawrence, a Naval Officer... It sits dead between Frankfort and Harrodsburg and is a horror show during the 127 Yard sale...
The 127 yard sale is a nightmare!
Nice coverage. Thanks.
I have always thought Danville was one of the first 3. Nice video that makes one want to learn more !
Thank you! And we hope you dive deeper! A lot of Kentucky history out there.
Five minutes after Lexington was established they started construction on New Circle and immediately had traffic jams. They should be done in another 200 years
Very true!
Very interesting. I had ancestors killed at Ruddel's Station in 1780, and others captured in the same action. My wife and I met at school in Kentucky. I've always had an interest in the settlement history of the area.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it!
My kin where taken to Detroit in the same raid. They join Butler's Rangers and returned to Ruddels station in 1782 and fought at Blue Lick. We all live on the Canadian side of the Detroit river some returned after the war.
@@daveknight1154 My direct lineal grandfather and his older sister were taken to Detroit as well. She apparently had a physical deformity, and so she and her infant brother were spared. She later married a Hessian deserter who served with American revolutionary forces in the west (family tradition says with GR Clark, but the dates don't line up by my reckoning.) my lineal grand later moved to Fayette County, Ohio (Washington Court House) where documents indicate several members of the family received Revolutionary war land grants. Several of them are buried in the Primitive Baptist Church cemetery there. Isn't it interesting how we end up where we do?
My 5th great grandparents were also captured at Ruddle’s Station. One deposition by another inhabitant said that my 5th great grandfather and Captain John Hinkson were the only two inhabitants of the station that were not handed over to the natives when they surrendered (despite the terms of surrender being that all captives would remain under guard by the British). My ancestors were taken to Detroit, then on to Montreal where they remained until being released in 1782.
My grandfather Meredith Cox sat on the first board of education in Kentucky. Carol Jackson-Acree
Great video. I assume the main route for most to the region was through the Gap. I'm surprised that Maysville region wasn't represented on the list by pioneers from "Westsylvania" arriving by rafting down the Ohio River. The largest portion of my genealogy are participants in the Upper South Migration.
Those areas came soon after. Washington, which was established by Simon Kenton, would be the ground work for Maysville.
Any chance you could do a video on Willis Russell? He is from Monterey, Kentucky in modern day Owen County. He served on the confederate side in the civil war and became a marshall after the war and fought against the KKK. Truly underrated individual!
Would love to! Do you know of any good resources available!
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel I found out about him while researching Owen County. There is a Wikipedia article on him if I'm not mistaken.
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel from the intro of the Wikipedia article. Willis Russell (1844 - July 1, 1875) was a Deputy United States Marshal who fought against William Smoot and his Ku Klux Klan chapter in Owen County, Kentucky. Smoot and his followers conducted a bloody reign of terror in Franklin (Frankfort), Owen County, and Henry Counties. Russell finally stopped them, though it cost him his life.[1][2]
@@KentuckyMills That sounds like a something good to research! Going to have to do some digging! Thanks for sharing!
I live in Monterey and never knew that’s cool
Middlesborough, KY was the first city in Caintucky. 1763. Middlesborough was built inside the meteor crater that created the Cumberland Gap.
Big mining area. My family settled there in the early 1800’s straight off the boat.
Thanks so much for this informative and well organized video. 👍👍👍 Just one bit of constructive criticism… the background music is rather distracting; perhaps something a bit slower and softer would complement the pictures and narrative better.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it! The music can be a little difficult to get right sometimes.
I personally thought the music was great.
Brooksville ky here
Thankya kindly
Was there ever a Brinston KY
Not that I know of but will keep an eye out.
Great info!
Thank you!
My family, the Overstreets came to Mercer county in the late 1700s. And most of my family still lives there. I have fond memories of Harrodsburg and lawrenceburg ❤️
My mother was an Overstreet. ❤
I live i Kentucky and I'm creeped out how old things are
The natives lived in Kentucky for 14,000 years.
Try to stay calm 'fer the yungins'.
I'm from Jackson County, McKee.
Smithland ky should be on the list..
Where can i find more information on Cox's station?
Not sure right off. Where was it located?
Library
Google it. There is a lot of History on line.
Do you have any information about the abandoned hospital in Frenchburg? I was born there. I know that my dad's mother was from the Benson family but she's been gone about 55 years. I believe that some of our family lived in Suddath. in the '50s or '60s. No family left to really ask. I haven't been back since my Grandmother's funeral, other than taking basic at Ft. Knox.
Not right off but we are hoping to do an episode on Menifee County.
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel I appreciate whatever you can dig up, when you get to there. I'm 100% disabled and can only drive about a half hour per day so it is unlikely that I'll ever get to go back for a visit.
Im from Lexington KY!
my hometown is center kentucky which is in metcalfe county i don't know when my home town center was founded you can find that out i'd really appreciate you doing a story on it a lot of people don't know that metcalfe county is a county in appalachia
From what I’ve read it was founded in the early 1800s. We’ll keep looking.
What happen to Decoy Kentucky
My direct ancestor fought with george rodgers clark in the battles of blue licks and chilicothe and was one of the first lot holders in lexington . he also had a tavern there. he was in the virginia militia and sent to protect harrodsburg and boonesboro. one of my ancestors couisins is recorded on revolutionary pensioners records as having helped bury daniel boones brother
That’s a great ancestor connection!
I have ancestoral connections to daniel boone, jesse james and sam bass gang
@@howard6792 how about John Wayne and Al Capone
what history of edmonton co. do you have?
Not at the moment but plan on creating some at some point.
Grew up and went to school in stanford, graduated from lincoln co highschool in 2015
I’m from Harlan County Kentucky but live in Indiana
Some of my relatives during the 1800’s were in a family feud called the HOWARD TURNER FEUD
This would be on my daddy’s side of my family
Some relatives on my mama’s side are buried in Zachary Taylor Cemetery it would be her mom & dad so my grand parents & my great grandfather & great grandmother. My grandmother used to work with Muhammad Ali’s mom in Louisville & my grandfather sold his dad insurance to his dad but this was all before he changed his name. On the same side of that family on of my relatives was in Waverly Hills during what they would call Tent City Days his name was Herman Lee Roth
This would be a good one to resurch and do a vidio on @@virginiathompson7978
You have our sympathy, may God grant you strength and perseverance.
I have a question...what about doing one on a subject not too many ppl know about or much about....cornwallce island...i think thats the name ..named after a guy named cornwallce ...see i cant even articulate what it is even....plz educate us....mainly me i guess....i already subbed lol.. appearently is sank...or the water lvl got higher...i remember something about it in 1st grade i think it was general corwallce maybe ...iys been a very long time since 1st grade...
Would it be Corn Island? It kind of fits your description, named by a general, is now submerged under water.
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel yes thats the one thank you...do you have any videos on that subject
@@printisdead1983 not specific to it but it is mentioned briefly in a few videos. One focused on it would be a good video.
@@KentuckyHistoryChannel well id definitely like to watch one if you ever make it ...keep up the good work...
This is interesting but I wish you would have shown the whole state map for reference
When Kantuckee was still part of Virginia the British had already commissioned 2 forts..
Did he say Marshall county on the harrads town
What about Boonesborough
Boonesborough never became a town.
what was the name of the area before "Settlers" who built Forts there?
just for knowledge sake im asking the history of Kentucky is new to me
You'd probably have to ask someone who is familiar with native Americans since they were here first. I don't think they had many place names tbh.
the oldest grave in KY was Mary Haddix, an ancestor.
That’s an awesome connection!
One hour after Lexington was established there was a law enacted that forced women to name their first born son Jackson spelled with an “X” and a “Y”.
i watching somtin before i go to work
Thank you for watching!
Now we know who to blame for Nicholasville Rd.
😆
hmm I purchased an old Kentucky History Book at COURT DAYS in Preston Ky. it tells a different story on the map provided in the book. Lexington wasn't even on this map, West Liberty was. "COURT DAYS" the ORIGINAL WAY OF LIVING BARTER/TRADE, Bath County Ky. still CELEBRATES this event Montgomery does too but it is more commercialized.TRUE HISTORY
McClelland and Leestown both became Georgetown?
I think he meant to say Frankfort for Leestown.
I thought Bardstown would make it on the list
It’s close!
Kentucky isn't a state its a Commonwealth!!
voice sounds like Jamieson Cable.
Mistake at 6:31. I think you mean Frankfort.
Bardstown is the second oldest. Smh 8:13
I'm pretty sure that Danville, not Leestown, was the first capital of Kentucky, until it burned down and was then moved to Frankfort.
Yes, Danville was the first capital of Kentucky.
I'm just curious what the Native American perspective is through all this. They were the ones who actually owned this place.
6:32 Frankfort or Georgetown🤷🏼
20 minutes after Lexington was established the towns folk started bottling their own farts , which is now sold as Makers Mark.
You’re killing me! These are hilarious!
@ I love this channel btw!!!
@ thank you!
Why didn't you mention Danville it was the original capital of Kentucky...before Frankfort...our constitution was drafted their ...and signed ...
Yes it was but it was settled a few years later.
Requesting a video on African enslavement in kentucky, specifically Lexington Ky. Great videos
Thank you and glad you enjoyed it! That’s a topic we’ve been interested in too! Hopefully we’ll be able to get it moving forward soon! Thanks for the suggestion!
The will of Benjamin Ford, 1843, would shed a little light on this subject.
6:32 you made a mistake and said leestown became Georgetown, should be Frankfort
45 minutes after Lexington was established they made it a law that all houses had to have the words “Live , Laugh ,Love” in their living rooms and “Gather” in their kitchens. This was mainly to cheer people up after you know…. Dysentery
ok
Kin folk said Jed move away from there 🤠😞
Why?
not sure historians from bardstown would agree with your list. they are pretty adamant that they were arguably number 1 or 2.
You beat me to the draw Kenny. Crossed my mind as well. I'll bet some of those Bardstown folks are already saying, "Them's fightin' words!"
I live in Bardstown and historians angrily "debate" whether Bardstown or Harrodsburg was the first incorporated city in Kentucky. Want to start a fight, show them this video.
Wikipedia has Harrisburg founded 14 years before William Bards got his land grant.... however they also speculate in the 1770s there was a 'Salem' at the location... Bardstown was incorporated much (46 years) earlier however.
(from Perryville myself, but I'm a 'Jones/Buell/Mattingly' so I've got family in both :p )
@@krisjones4680 In the Daniel Boone series, Fess Parker talked about taking , " A short walk to Salem," I always wondered about which and where this Salem was. He was a great history buff and l always, it seemed to have his facts straight.
@@grassroot011 probably that Salem, KY then as Salem, TN wasn't established until 20 odd years after he died, and he would have been like 70yrs old to go to the current Salem, KY... lots of places changed names several times as other places had the same names, they just didn't know about... or all died and a new group came.
Could also be a TV screwup, not doing enough research.
You set up parameters for your topic early on: "fort, cabins, courthouse, taverns and so on" (which avoids the technical definitions used normally, which you do state) but you don't refer to these or even hint at any documentation as you tell your story. They will seem arbitrary and of questionable value to some but it's your story to tell. Since your podcast has a visual presence, I wish the ending graphic we're left with wasn't First Five Towns of Kentucky with no asterisk. A lot of scholarly work and effort has gone into Ky history (this subject included) and it is certainly always open for more. Please be mindful that as sources of information gathering change the responsibility is still there. If you want to do a credible job with history be clear, transparent, and have a stringent journalistic ethic. I really am curious as to when each of these had their first courthouse and their first tavern.
Sounds like they didn't discovery any place, instead they took it from the Indians that was already on the Land.Very sad
Middlesboro was #1
My family settled there in early 1800’s
👍
Boonesborough was the first Town and settlement in Kentucky
If you believe the books. Like all the rest of the history books, this is a lie. Stanford (Standing Fort) is the first city in Ky. Cowards ran to Harrodsburg. Scared of Indians. Real men stayed in Stanford.
Omg! 😳
POV: you’re watching from Danville Ky 👀👄
So true... but how did you know? 😮
Kentfield pall malll
Translate?
None of those towns was established in Kentucky but Kentucky County, Virginia. Ky didn't become a state till 1792. You need to check towns that were established after Ky became a state.
My guess is that Native Americans were almost as bad as Indians .
Alan, recall Jamestown where the "Indians" kept settlers alive one winter by feeding them? They returned the favor by shooting Native americans.
I’m in Bardstown for the first time. It’s overwhelming how beautiful this town is. California is absolute crap, next time anyone tells you how good CA is, walk away.
We’re a commonwealth not a state
turtlehead mitch Mc. represents kentucky,,what's the history of that nonsense
🤣🤣🤣
Kl
1st 5 towns of whites ! people do get confused !
All that mattered someone said.
Let’s be real… Louisville is the oldest town
Communism