Tidbits

Kentucky Trivia & Tidbits - Page 3

Looking for Kentucky trivia? Try our list Kentucky little know facts, tidbits and trivia.

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—Built in 1909 by Maggie Steed, the Hotel Metropolitan in Paducah (pop. 26,307) once was the heart of the city’s black business community. Famous patrons included Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway and Louis Armstrong. The hotel is being restored.
—In 1831, the town of Fredericksburg was renamed Warsaw (pop. 1,811) after a popular book of the day, Thaddeus of Warsaw, by Jane Porter.
—The 4,791-acre rugged Beaver Creek Wilderness near Greenwood includes remains from the ghost town of Bauer.
—Incorporated in 1851, Eminence (pop. 2,231) was so-named because it’s the high place—about 900 feet above sea level—along the railroad between Louisville and Lexington.
—On the federal list of endangered species, Short’s goldenrod grows within Blue Licks Battlefield State Resort Park in Robertson County (pop. 2,266). The yellow flowering plant is named for Charles Short, who discovered it in 1840 near Louisville.
—The state has an official honey festival, the Clarkson Honeyfest in Clarkson (pop. 794), designated in 2006.
—A game of marbles called rolley hole often is under way at the Marble Super Dome of Monroe County (pop. 11,756) in Tompkinsville (pop. 2,660). Many of the adult sharpshooters make their own marbles.
—Saxophonist Boots Randolph (1927-2007), best known for his 1963 instrumental hit, “Yakety Sax,” played sax on recordings for Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, Brenda Lee, Chet Atkins and other legends. He was born Homer Louis Randolph in Paducah (pop. 26,307).
—One of nation’s oldest distilling sites is Buffalo Trace Distillery in Franklin County (pop. 47,687), where whiskey has been produced since 1787. The site also is an ancient buffalo crossing.
—Central Park in Henderson (pop. 27,373) is believed to be the oldest municipal park west of the Allegheny Mountains. The Transylvania Company included the park in the town’s original plans in 1797.
—Born Louis Marshall Jones in 1913 in Niagara, the banjo player and comedian was dubbed “Grandpa Jones” at age 22 by singer Bradley Kincaid, who said Jones sounded grumpy during their early morning radio shows. Jones, who performed on Hee Haw and the Grand Ole Opry, died in 1998.
—Supporting themselves first by farming when they came to central Kentucky in 1848, Trappist monks at the Abbey of Gethsemani near Loretto (pop. 623) today are known for their bourbon fudge, fruitcakes and cheese.
—A parade of 1,138 all-terrain vehicles rolled through Evarts (pop. 1,101) in Harlan County (pop. 33,202) on June 24, 2006, and set a Guinness World Record for the world’s longest ATV parade.
—Since the 1790s, Augusta (pop. 1,204) has had a ferry crossing; it is one of the oldest operating on the Ohio River.
—Built in 1788, four years before statehood, the three-story stone Duncan Tavern in Paris (pop. 9,183) now is a historic center and the state headquarters of the Kentucky Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
—Opened last year, the 21c Museum Hotel in downtown Louisville is both a public art museum and a 91-room hotel. The museum’s art collection includes paintings, sculptures, video and interactive technology-based works.
—Stearns (pop. 1,586) was founded in 1902 as a company town for the Stearns Coal and Lumber Co. with a hotel, stores, depot and everything needed for employees. Today, the company buildings are being restored, and one of the offices houses the McCreary County Museum.
—The Beaumont Inn in Harrodsburg (pop. 8,014) was built as a girls’ school in 1845 and has been operated as a hotel and restaurant since 1919 by the Goddard-Dedman family.
—For 15 years, the rock band Street Heat has entertained students across the state with popular songs and an upbeat message. Based in Louisville, the band’s members are police officers, sheriff’s deputies, correctional officers and firefighters who use music to reach kids with messages about resisting drugs, avoiding violence and dealing with peer pressure.
—The only major league baseball player believed to have died from an on-field injury was Raymond Chapman, born in 1891 in Beaver Dam (pop. 3,033). A shortstop for the Cleveland (Ohio) Indians, Chapman was killed during a 1920 game when he was hit in the head by a “spitball.” Now banned, “spitballs” were smeared with lard, peanut butter and other greasy substances, which made the ball travel wildly.
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