Historical Marker Search

You searched for Postal Code: 42001

Page 5 of 6 — Showing results 41 to 50 of 59
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVTA_barkleys-law-office_Paducah-KY.html
Alben W. Barkley, Congressman, U.S. Senator and Vice President, began practice of law here, 1901. He had read law for two years in offices of Rep. Charles K. Wheeler and Judge Wm. Sutton Bishop, the old Judge Priest of Irvin Cobb's stories. Barkle…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVT8_col-hicks-hdqrs_Paducah-KY.html
Here stood the headquarters of Col. Stephen G. Hicks, commander of the USA occupation forces here during Battle of Paducah March 25, 1864. Next day Col. Hicks ordered sixty private homes that had been used by CSA forces as cover near the fort burn…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVT7_5-bought-paducah_Paducah-KY.html
In 1827, Gen. Wm. Clark purchased 37,000 acres of land, including the site on which Paducah now stands, for $5. This land, part of a Revolutionary War grant to his brother, George Rogers Clark, was secured from George Woolfolk, of Louisville, who …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVT6_hanks-bros-and-jones-hardware_Paducah-KY.html
This Property has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of The Interior Hank Bros and Jones Hardware 1897 G.E. Hank *Hank* Maj. T.T. Jones
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVT3_american-red-cross_Paducah-KY.html
Side AMcCracken County Chapter chartered May 14, 1917. Organized by Mrs. A.R. Meyers, with W. F. Paxton as first Chairman. Initial WWI fund drive raised $42,000. During great Ohio Valley Flood of 1937 carried on an amazing evacuation and relief pr…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVT2_dr-reuben-saunders_Paducah-KY.html
Side AOn this site stood the office of Reuben Saunders, M.D., credited with discovering that hypodermic use of morphine~atropine halted cholera during epidemic here in 1873. Telegraphed prescription to other plague~stricken areas. Accepted by Mate…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVT1_irvin-s-cobb-said-alben-w-barkley-said_Paducah-KY.html
Irvin S. Cobb Said:"Here in Paducah one encounters, I claim, an agreeable blend of Western kindliness, and Northern enterprises, superimposed upon a Southern background. Here, I claim, more chickens are fried, more hot biscuits are eaten, more cor…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVST_second-courthouse_Paducah-KY.html
First courthouse at Wilmington, 1824~32. Second courthouse, a two story brick structure, 36 feet square, built near here at a cost of $3,049, on land given by Gen. William Clark, founder of Paducah. Courthouse also provided meeting place for vario…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVSR_tennessee-tombigbee-waterway_Paducah-KY.html
Paducah: Mid~America's Gateway to the GulfThis historic waterway reaches from Paducah to Mobile, providing a navigational artery between the upper Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee Rivers and the Gulf of Mexico's east~west Intracoastal Waterway and …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVSQ_raymond-c-schultz-park_Paducah-KY.html
This riverfront park is dedicated to Raymond C. Schultz, celebrated public official who served as McCracken County Judge Executive from 1974 to 1985. An Ohio county native, Judge Schultz was born July 8, 1911. He was a graduate and lecture at the …
PAGE 5 OF 6