Recreation
and Places of Interest
Facilities for picnicking, camping, hiking,
horseback riding, and other forms of outdoor
recreation are found throughout the state, especially
in the various units of the state park system.
Many of these units lie on rivers, lakes, or
reservoirs and are popular areas for swimming,
boating, fishing, and water-skiing. Hunting and
fishing are two very popular pastimes. The Kentucky
countryside, noted for its scenic diversity,
is considered one of the state’s principal
tourist attractions. In addition, Kentucky is
noted for its numerous places of historical interest.
National Parks
The four units administered by the National
Park Service are among the state’s most
popular attractions. The underground passages
of Mammoth Cave National Park are still being
mapped by explorers. Mammoth Cave itself is a
series of limestone chambers and narrow passages
on five separate levels. It connects with two
other cave systems that together extend 560 km
(348 mi), making it the longest explored cave
system in the world. In this vast subterranean
world are giant vertical shafts, including the
towering Mammoth Dome. Some passages and rooms
are decorated with sparkling white gypsum crystals,
while others are fitted with the sculpted shapes
of stalactites, stalagmites, and other cave formations.
Underground rivers, with names like Echo River
and the River Styx, flow through Mammoth’s
deepest chambers.
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic
Site, located near Hodgenville, includes a 19th-century
log cabin representing the home in which Lincoln
might have been born. Cumberland Gap National
Historical Park was established in 1940 to preserve
the historical Cumberland Gap area, a route through
the Appalachian Mountains used by pioneers to
enter the Kentucky territory. A portion of the
Big South Fork National River and Recreation
Area on the Cumberland River is located in southeastern
Kentucky. The free-flowing river passes through
scenic gorges and valleys containing a variety
of natural features.
National Forests
Daniel Boone National Forest covers 271,000
hectares (670,000 acres) of the Appalachian Plateaus
region of Kentucky. The forest, a relatively
narrow ribbon of land, extends across the region
from the Tennessee state line to within about
30 km (about 20 mi) of the Ohio state line. Within
the forest is the Red River Gorge, a protected
geological area. Kentucky also contains a small
section of Jefferson National Forest, most of
which is in Virginia.
State Parks
Kentucky maintains a widespread system of 50
state parks, 17 of which are resort parks. The
Pennyrile Forest State Park is located south
of Dawson Springs. Grouped around the vast Kentucky
Lake, which lies on the Tennessee River behind
Kentucky Dam, are Kenlake and Kentucky Dam Village
state resort parks. Situated in the western part
of the state, both of these state parks provide
excellent facilities for fishing and water sports.
Cumberland Falls State Resort Park, surrounded
by Daniel Boone National Forest, is on the Cumberland
River. The Cumberland Falls, the park’s
principal attraction, are 38 m (125 ft) wide
and have a drop of 21 m (68 ft). They are known
for their moonbow, a rainbow that forms at full
moon in the mist over the falls. In Natural Bridge
State Resort Park, which is also surrounded by
the national forest, is a spectacular, natural
stone arch. The Kentucky Horse Park at Lexington
features a great variety of horses and international
competition.
In addition, there are units of the park system
that are noted for their historic associations.
Jefferson Davis Monument State Historic Site,
at Fairview, in southwestern Kentucky, commemorates
the birthplace of Jefferson Davis, who served
as the only president of the Confederacy. John
James Audubon State Park, near Henderson, in
northwestern Kentucky, is named for the famous
19th-century naturalist and artist John James
Audubon, who lived and worked in Henderson. In
the park are a bird sanctuary and a museum that
houses some of Audubon’s famous works.
At Bardstown, about 50 km (about 30 mi) southeast
of Louisville, is My Old Kentucky Home State
Park, one of the state’s most famous landmarks.
The park preserves Federal Hill, the mansion
where, according to tradition, Stephen Foster
was inspired to write the famous song for which
the shrine is named. This song is now the state
song of Kentucky.
Old Fort Harrod State Park, at Harrodsburg,
commemorates the first permanent white settlement
in Kentucky. It includes a reconstruction of
the original Fort Harrod, which was built in
1775, the year after the first settlers arrived.
The site of a settlement organized by Daniel
Boone is in Fort Boonesborough State Park. In
Levi Jackson State Park, near London, in southeastern
Kentucky, are reproductions of pioneer buildings.
Two other units, Perryville Battlefield State
Historic Site, in central Kentucky, and Blue
Licks Battlefield State Park, northeast of Lexington,
commemorate the bloodiest battles that occurred
in Kentucky during the Civil War and the American
Revolution (1775-1783). Other state park units
include Columbus-Belmont Battlefield State Park,
which marks the site of a Civil War engagement;
Dr. Thomas Walker State Historic Site, which
is dedicated to the first white person to discover
the Cumberland Gap; and William Whitley House
State Historic Site, in which is preserved what
is said to be the first brick house built west
of the Allegheny Mountains. The house, which
has been restored, was completed in 1794.
State Forests
There are six state forests, which cover a total
area of about 16,000 hectares (40,000 acres).
The largest is Pennyrile State Forest, which
covers 6,260 hectares (15,470 acres). The others
are Dewey Lake Forest and Kentenia, Kentucky
Ridge, Tygart, and Olympia state forests.
Museums
The Speed Art Museum, in Louisville, is noted
for exhibits of European art, Native American
artifacts, and Kentucky art. Other noted art
museums include the University of Kentucky Art
Museum and the Allen R. Hite Art Institute at
the University of Louisville. Bardstown is the
site of the Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History.
The Schmidt Museum of Coca-Cola Memorabilia is
in Elizabethtown, and the National Corvette Museum
is in Bowling Green. In Louisville is the Kentucky
Derby Museum. There is also the International
Museum of the Horse in Lexington. The United
States Army maintains Patton Museum of Cavalry
and Armor at Fort Knox.
Other Places to Visit
Among the state’s most interesting places
to visit are the houses associated with famous
Kentuckians. Ashland, in Lexington, was the home
and estate of the noted statesman Henry Clay.
Also in Lexington are the childhood home of Mary
Todd, who became the wife of Abraham Lincoln,
and the home of John Hunt Morgan, a famous Confederate
cavalry officer.
About 30 km (about 20 mi) southwest of Lexington
is the Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill, a restored
community that was founded in about 1805 by members
of a religious society known as Shakers. Also
in the Lexington area are the famous horse farms
of the Bluegrass region. Many of the farms are
open to visitors. In a cemetery at Frankfort,
the state capital, are the graves of the famous
frontiersman Daniel Boone and his wife, Rebecca.
Near Louisville is the Zachary Taylor National
Cemetery, where Zachary Taylor, 12th president
of the United States, and members of his family
are buried. Taylor, although born in Virginia,
grew up in Kentucky on a farm his father bought
after the American Revolution. The Lincoln Heritage
Trail, which traces sites associated with Lincoln
through Illinois and Indiana, begins near Hodgenville.
Source: MSN
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