Inscription
Early pioneer settlement erected before 1779. Developed by George Clark, brother-in-law of William Whitley, whose party came to Ky. about 1775. Located on Clark's Run Creek, named for George Clark, it was one of the first stations built in the vicinity of the forts at Harrodsburg and Stanford. Clark raised a crop here as early as 1775, improved the site in 1776.
Location
Sources
More markers in Boyle
Family Services Association of Danville
Danville, KY
On June 1, 1916, representatives of local churches, civic clubs and Centre College, inspired by Hull House and the Progressive Era,...
Sinking Spring
Danville, KY
SINKING SPRING - Referred to by geologists as a "karst window," sinking springs form when bedrock has collapsed to reveal groundwater...
Site of First Rural Electric Co-Op Substation in County
Perryville, KY
W. H. Rogers, president of Inter-County R.E.C.C., threw the switch at the Perryville substation on June 10, 1938, to energize 56 miles of...
Kirkland Home
Perryville, KY
Near here was the home of Charles King and Caroline Purdom Kirkland.
First USCT Recruits at Camp Nelson
Danville, KY
May 23, 1864, nearly 250 black men, most of them slaves, left Boyle Co. to march to Camp Nelson in Jessamine Co. to enlist in the Union...
