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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I6A_the-dinsmore-homestead_Burlington-KY.html
Side A James and Martha Macomb Dinsmore moved from La. to raise their three daughters here. Completed in1842, the main house served as the center of a typical large, antebellum Boone Co. farm. tenants and slaves raised grains, grapes, sh…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I68_tanners-station-1789_Petersburg-KY.html
Tanner's Station 1789 First settlement in Boone County. Rev. John Tanner built blockhouse, and town began on 2000 acres he and John Taylor owned. Shawnees captured Tanner's 9-year-old son here, held him until grown. An ardent Baptist, Tanne…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I3Q_passage-to-freedom-from-slavery_Burlington-KY.html
In memory of all the slaves in Boone County, those who helped them, and the slaves' descendants who remember & honor them and their legacy. Dedicated 21 March, 2005 by the Problem Solving Team, a diverse group of students, grades five throug…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I3F_rabbit-hash_Burlington-KY.html
Side A Rabbit Hash Kentucky circa 1813 Ohio River Mile 506.1 below Pittsburg one of only a few remaining early 19th century towns along the 981- mile course of the Ohio River. The Rabbit Hash National Registry encompasses 33 acres of this…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I1B_piatts-landing_Union-KY.html
Side A Piatt's Landing Near here on the north bank of the Ohio River at mile 510.5 was a riverboat landing, ferry, and road to the courthouse at Burlington. The landing and large brick home that once stood near, later called Winnfield Cott…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I02_big-bone-lick_Union-KY.html
Discovered in 1739, by the French Capt. Charles Lemoyne de Longueil this famous saline- sulphur spring was frequented for thousands of years byIndians and vast herds of buffalo, deer and other animals. The first English explorers found h…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I01_mary-ingles_Union-KY.html
Reputed first white woman in Ky. Shawnees captured her and two sons in July 1755 at site Roanoke, Va. Led to village at mouth of Scioto River, separated from sons, taken to Big Bone Lick. compelled to make salt here; adopted by chief; given …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1I00_mary-drqper-ingles_Union-KY.html
In celebration & commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the daring escape of Mary Draper Ingles from her Shawnee captors here at Big Bone Lick, Kentucky in the fall of 1755 Her direct descendants met here for a family reunion to honor …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1HZZ_big-bone-lick_Union-KY.html
Scientists consider William Clark's dig at Big Bone Lick in 1807 as establishing American vertebrate paleontology. Bones found here by Clark included mastodon and mammoth. Prehistoric native American artifacts found were given to Dr. Wm. G…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1HZY_lewis-and-clark-in-kentucky_Union-KY.html
In Oct. 1803, while traveling down Ohio River to meet Wm. Clark for expedition to Pacific, Meriwether Lewis visited Big Bone Lick. He was to gather fossilized bones for Pres. Thomas Jefferson. In Sept. 1807, clark supervised a 3-week dig fo…
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