Moving
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Kentucky presents
a mixture of both the Midwest and the South. The northern, more urban
portion of the state, particularly the Ohio Valley corridor, is characterized
by manufacturing and is oriented to the Midwest. Southern and western
Kentucky tend to be rural in nature, concentrating on agriculture and
mining; they are generally associated with the South. The state's abundant
natural resources, scenic beauty, historic sites and other treasures,
and its proud people contrast with Kentucky's problems of poverty, poor
housing, and low levels of education.
Kentucky is centrally located within the eastern United States, bordered
by the seven states of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia,
Tennessee, and Missouri. The state has an extreme width of 290 km (180
mi) and a length of 676 km (420 mi). Kentucky was once an Indian hunting
ground. The name is believed to come from an Indian word meaning "prairie."
White men had explored the area by 1750. In 1792, Kentucky separated from
Virginia to become the 15th state.
LAND
Kentucky shows diversity in its terrain. Considerable areas of plains,
many hills, and a limited mountainous area in southeastern Kentucky, the
highest part of the state, can be found in the state. Elevations generally
decrease to the west and north, varying from 610 to 914 m (2,000 to 3,000
ft) in the southeast to between 122 and 183 m (400 and 600 ft) in the
northwest and 396 m (1,300 ft) in the north. The highest point is Black
Mountain, 1,262 m (4,139 ft), located near the Virginia border; the lowest
elevation, 78 m (257 ft), is the Mississippi River along the state's western
tip.
The state may be divided into six regions that closely conform to geologic
structure. The Pennyroyal region, located in central and western Kentucky
and named for a type of mint native to the area, is a flat to rolling
limestone agricultural area. It extends nearly two-thirds of the distance
across the state and accounts for about 30 percent of the total area.
Well to the east of the Pennyroyal, the Eastern Mountain and Coalfield
claims more than 25 percent of the land. This part of the state, Kentucky's
Appalachia, is characterized by vast coal resources, rugged terrain, and
widespread poverty. The Knobs, a narrow crescent-shaped belt of conical
hills, contains less than 10 percent of Kentucky's area and surrounds
the limestone-based Bluegrass region, centered on Lexington. The Bluegrass
region covers about one-fifth of the state along the Ohio River. It is
famous for its horse farms, tobacco, and cattle.
The Western Coalfield, more than 10 percent of the state, is a relatively
rolling sandstone and shale area north of the Pennyroyal where agriculture
and area stripping of coal take place. To its west, the Jackson Purchase,
6 percent of Kentucky, is that region lying west of the Tennessee River
that was bought from the Chickasaw Indians in 1818 by Andrew Jackson and
former governor Isaac Shelby. It is characterized by large farms developed
on unconsolidated floodplain deposits.
The state is geologically simple: rocks are sedimentary and consist primarily
of limestones, sandstones, and shales. The strata are nearly horizontal
except for deformation associated with thrust faulting in mountainous
southeastern Kentucky. Rocks vary in age from the recent (less than 10,000
years) in the Jackson Purchase to more than 420 million years, found in
the Ordovician limestones of the Bluegrass.
Soils are primarily woodland residual, but extensive areas possess alluvial
and aeolian, or wind-borne, soils. The most fertile soils are associated
with alluvial deposits along the Mississippi and Ohio rivers and their
tributaries.
Climate
The climate is moderate but variable due to the state's location in the
path of major storm tracks. Kentucky's weather is influenced by warm air
from the Gulf of Mexico in summer and by cyclonic storms during winter.
The west is slightly warmer than the east in summer, and the south is
marginally warmer than the north in winter. Summer temperatures range
from highs of 33 degrees C (92 degrees F) to lows of 17 degrees C (62
degrees F). Winter highs average 10 degrees C (50 degrees F) and lows
- 3 degrees C (26 degrees F). The growing season extends from 206 days
in the west to 165 days in the southeast.
Annual precipitation decreases from south to north, with northern Kentucky
receiving an average of 1,016 mm (40 in) and southern Kentucky more than
1,270 mm (50 in). Much of the state's rainfall occurs between March and
June; the least amount occurs in October. Severe storms are most common
from March to September.
Drainage
Three streams mark Kentucky's western, northern, and eastern boundaries:
the Mississippi, Ohio, and Big Sandy rivers. Other important streams include
the Cumberland, Tennessee, Green, Kentucky, Licking, and Salt rivers.
Virtually all of Kentucky's streams flow from the south or southeast to
the north or northwest and into the Ohio River. The stream pattern is
mainly dendritic.
Kentucky has several man-made lakes (reservoirs) and smaller natural ponds
or sinks. The best-known lakes include Cumberland (205 sq km/79 sq mi),
Kentucky (194 sq km/75 sq mi), and Barkley (184 sq km/71 sq mi). Lakes
Cumberland and Barkley were formed by damming the Cumberland River, while
Kentucky Lake was formed on the Tennessee and is part of the Tennessee
Valley Authority. The state's largest natural lake is Swan Lake, a 121
ha (300 acre) body of water located in Ballard County. The most productive
groundwater areas are in the Jackson Purchase, in the Ohio River floodplain,
and in the Pennyroyal. Relatively little groundwater is associated with
the coalfield and Bluegrass regions.
Vegetation and Wildlife
The state lies at the center of the Eastern Deciduous Forest and is about
48 percent tree covered. Little of the original forest remains, however.
Dominant trees include oak, tulip poplar, hickory, beech, buckeye, maple,
pine, cedar, and hemlock. Animal life consists largely of deer, rabbit,
squirrel, opossum, raccoon, skunk, woodchuck, snake, and quail. Fish include
crappie, bass, perch, catfish, and darters.
Resources
Kentucky's most abundant natural resources include reserves of bituminous
coal, limestone, sand and gravel, and water and forest resources. Also
present are reserves of natural gas, petroleum, oil shale, clay, and fluorspar.
PEOPLE
Kentucky's population grew at a rate far lower than the national average
for the decade between 1980 and 1990. In-migration related to the "Sun
Belt" phenomenon was largely offset by lower rates of natural increase
and out-migration associated with poor economic conditions. The state's
population density is lower than that of the eastern United States but
somewhat higher than the average of the south-central region. The farm
population continues to decrease.
Kentucky has a relatively large rural and small-town population. Few cities
are of significant size. The state has two large cities, Louisville and
Lexington, and one other city with a population in excess of 50,000--Owensboro.
A number of other cities have more than 25,000 people, including Covington,
Bowling Green, Hopkinsville, Paducah, Frankfort, and Henderson.
The state's population is mostly white. Blacks form the largest nonwhite
group, followed by persons of Spanish origin (less than 1 percent of the
population), Asian and Pacific Islanders, and American Indians. Of the
state's foreign-born residents, most originated from Germany and Ireland.
Baptists constitute the largest religious group. Other large denominations
are the Roman Catholics, Presbyterians, Methodists, and Disciples of Christ.
Education
Kentucky's first school opened in Harrodsburg in 1775, and the public
school system was established in 1838 by the state legislature. The state
department of education is in charge of the public school system; it is
headed by a commissioner of education.
Higher education can be traced to the 1780 chartering of Transylvania
Seminary, now Transylvania University. The state's two largest schools
are the University of Kentucky (1865) and the University of Louisville
(1798); in addition the state supports six regional universities (see
Kentucky, state universities of). There are 14 public-supported community
colleges in Kentucky. There are also a number of private colleges and
universities located in the state.
Many public libraries, along with college and specialized libraries, serve
Kentucky. The largest library collections are found at the University
of Kentucky, in Lexington; the University of Louisville; the Kentucky
State Library, in Frankfort; and the Louisville Public Libraries.
Culture
The state's museums contain natural history, science, and art collections.
Historic houses, planetariums, and nature centers are also part of Kentucky's
cultural life. The J. B. Speed Art Museum is in Louisville. Examples of
unique museums in the state include the John James Audubon Museum in Henderson
and the Kentucky Derby Museum in Louisville. The state's three principal
symphony orchestras are located in Louisville, Lexington, and Owensboro;
other cities support university or community orchestras. One opera company
and one resident theater are located in Louisville, and ballet companies
are headquartered in Lexington and Louisville.
Historical Sites
Federal, state, and local historic attractions total about 2,000 in number.
Some of the more significant include reconstructed forts Harrod and Boonesborough;
Cumberland Gap; the Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis birthplaces; Ashland,
home of Henry Clay; Federal Hill, known as Stephen Foster's "My Old Kentucky
Home"; and the communities of Danville and Frankfort, the state capital.
Communications
Kentucky has a number of daily newspapers, including the influential Louisville
Courier-Journal and the Lexington Herald-Leader. There are also commercial
television and radio stations and an educational television system in
the state.
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
Contrary to popular opinion, manufacturing contributes far more to Kentucky's
economy than agriculture and mining combined. The greatest single source
of income is derived from manufacturing, although the various service
industries together make up the largest segment of the gross state product.
Agriculture is still important to the state, and Kentucky ranks among
the leading U.S. states in the production of tobacco. Eastern Kentucky
is highly dependent on coal mining and is the poorest region of the state.
Beginning in the 1960s both the state and federal governments established
poverty-combating programs in Kentucky's Appalachian region, but income
has remained lower and unemployment higher in that area than elsewhere
in the state.
Agriculture
Kentucky's agriculture is confined generally to the western two-thirds
of the state. Crops and livestock activities each account for about half
of farm income. By far the most valuable crop is tobacco--primarily burley;
the crop is grown in almost every county in the state. Also significant
are corn, soybeans, and hay. Livestock is dominated by cattle with associated
dairy products, hogs, horses, and poultry.
Although Kentucky is a leader in hardwood production, forestry contributes
relatively little to the state's economy except on a local level in eastern
and southern Kentucky.
Mining
The only state with two distinct coalfields--the Appalachian in eastern
Kentucky and the Eastern Interior in western Kentucky--Kentucky is among
the nation's leading bituminous coal-producing states. Coal is obtained
both by underground and surface, or strip, methods. Contour stripping
dominates hilly eastern Kentucky; area stripping is more common in the
west. Other leading mineral activities, by value of production, include
stone, petroleum, natural gas, sand and gravel, and clay.
Manufacturing
Manufacturing in Kentucky, employing more than 250,000 people, is dominant
along the Ohio River corridor between the Ashland-Catlettsburg area in
northeastern Kentucky and the Paducah-Calvert City area in the extreme
western part of the state. An additional manufacturing area is centered
in Lexington. Louisville is the state's principal center of manufacturing;
other important industrial cities are Owensboro and the Newport-Covington
area. The leading types of manufacturing include metals (steel and aluminum),
machinery, transportation equipment (automobiles), chemicals, food (including
bourbon whiskey and other alcoholic beverages), tobacco products, and
lumber and wood products.
Tourism
Five federal parks lie wholly or partly within the state: Mammoth Cave
National Park, Cumberland Gap National Historical Park, Abraham Lincoln
Birthplace National Historic Site, the Big South Fork National River and
Recreation Area, and Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area (a
Tennessee Valley Authority recreation site). The Kentucky state park system
supervises 17 areas, the newest of which is Kentucky Horse Park, near
Lexington. Breaks Interstate Park is jointly operated by Kentucky and
Virginia.
Six areas are significant to tourism: the Kentucky and Barkley lakes area,
the Mammoth Cave area, scattered locations in and near Daniel Boone National
Forest, the Lake Cumberland area, Lexington and the Bluegrass area, and
Louisville. The state has four Thoroughbred and three standardbred, or
harness, racetracks. The best known include the Thoroughbred tracks at
Churchill Downs in Louisville, site of the Kentucky Derby, and Keeneland
Race Course in Lexington, one of the country's most beautiful racing facilities.
Also popular is the historic Red Mile in Lexington, site of many record-setting
harness races. Rupp Arena, one of the nation's largest college basketball
facilities, is in Lexington.
Transportation
Kentucky has 112,654 km (70,000 mi) of highways, of which 2,274 km (1,413
mi) are freeways (consisting of an extensive system of interstates, parkways,
and toll roads). Local roads, however, are considered poor when compared
with those of adjacent states. The Mississippi and Ohio rivers and intrastate
rivers provide over 1,600 km (1,000 mi) of navigable waterway. In addition,
5,300 km (3,300 mi) of railroad tracks cross the state, and scheduled
flights are provided to five major airports. In all, 81 airports, including
Greater Cincinnati International Airport in northern Kentucky and Standiford
Field in Louisville, serve the state.
Energy
Kentucky, with coal reserves presently estimated at 66 billion tons, will
play a nationally important energy role in future years. At present coal
provides more than 90 percent of the state's electric generating capacity.
A total of 51 electric generating plants operate in the state; 33 are
steam generating plants, 9 are hydroelectric, and 9 internal combustion.
Kentucky has no nuclear generating plants.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
Kentucky is organized as a commonwealth rather than a state and operates
under its fourth constitution, adopted in 1891. Elected officials include
the governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general,
treasurer, auditor of public accounts, commissioner of agriculture, and
superintendent of public instruction--all of whom are elected for four-year
terms. The legislature consists of 38 senators, elected for two years,
and 100 representatives, elected for two years. The judiciary is composed
of one court of justice, which, in turn, is composed of four courts: supreme,
appeals, circuit, and district.
Kentucky has 120 counties, a number exceeded only by Texas and Georgia,
averaging 855 sq km (330 sq mi) in area. Counties are governed by a fiscal
court, composed of an elected judge-executive, who serves as county administrator,
and three or more magistrates. Cities in Kentucky are delegated powers
according to one of six class assignments based on population. Recently
a new legal entity was approved by the legislature that permitted the
city of Lexington and Fayette County to merge, thus forming a metropolitan
government. For planning purposes the state is divided into 15 multicounty
planning regions called Area Development Districts (ADDs).
Politically, the state has been dominated by Democrats, although the 1994
elections produced Republican inroads. Republican strength traditionally
has been greatest in a 15-county area in southeastern Kentucky.
Kentucky, the bourbon whiskey capital of the world, is conservative with
the sale of alcoholic beverages. Of Kentucky's 120 counties, 77 totally
prohibit alcoholic beverage sales. These dry counties are located primarily
in the rural, southern part of the state.
HISTORY
Indians established civilizations in Kentucky more than 13,000 years ago.
When the first white people entered the area, it was being used as a hunting
ground by the Shawnee and Cherokee Indians.
One of the early explorers, Dr. Thomas Walker, entered Kentucky after
discovering Cumberland Gap in 1750. The gap provided a relatively easy
route through the Cumberland Mountains, and in subsequent years countless
explorers and settlers were to move through it. One of the best-known
explorers was the legendary Daniel Boone, who first arrived in 1767. Others
reached Kentucky via the Ohio River and established settlements at Maysville
and Louisville.
The first settlement of Fort Harrod, now known as Harrodsburg, was established
by James Harrod in 1774. Boonesborough was settled in 1775 by Daniel Boone
and his companions. Increased settlement brought pressures for statehood.
Following conventions in Danville, the first constitution was approved
in April 1792; Kentucky became the 15th state on June 1, 1792. In what
was essentially a compromise between Lexington and Louisville, Frankfort
was selected the state capital. The new state legislature adopted a strong
state rights position when it adopted (1798) resolutions opposing the
Alien and Sedition Acts (see Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions).
Between statehood and the Civil War, Kentucky increased its population
from about 75,000 to more than 1 million. Slavery became the dominant
social and political issue as the state expanded its farm production.
An agricultural market downstream on the Mississippi River was assured
by the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. The steamboat provided transportation
on the Ohio River by 1815, and a rail system was developed before 1860.
A border state, Kentucky attempted to remain neutral during the Civil
War but was unsuccessful because of its strategic location and the divided
loyalties of its citizens. Farmers who used the Ohio and Mississippi rivers
for transporting their produce wanted access to both waterways and the
international port of New Orleans. If the South separated itself from
the North, this free access would be impeded. On the other hand, influential
plantation owners and state rights advocates sided with the Confederacy.
As a result, Kentuckians could be found in both Union and Confederate
armies. Confederate forces invaded Kentucky in 1861. Most of the fighting
within the state's boundaries, however, had ceased by 1863, after the
Confederate army was driven out.
After the Civil War, the state changed economically and socially. Tobacco
replaced hemp as the major agricultural crop. Coal mining was stimulated
by the extension of rail lines into the coalfields of the eastern part
of the state. Increased employment opportunities arose in manufacturing
and services, and the major cities grew rapidly. After 1920 the state
began a 70-year trend of decreases in rural population and growth in urban
areas.
From World War II to the present day, Kentucky has changed with the nation.
Certain internal events, however, have had a particular impact on Kentucky's
historic development. A modern highway system of interstate routes and
an extensive parkway/toll-road system connecting all parts of the state
have been established. Authorization for the 15 Area Development Districts,
beginning in 1968, showed serious efforts to plan for the state's future.
Aggressive state involvement with industrial development and stimulation
of tourism was begun, particularly with the promotion of the state park
system. The state joined in the formation of the Appalachian Regional
Commission in 1965 and obtained assistance from the Tennessee Valley Authority
in the western part of the state. Higher education was upgraded through
the creation of regional universities and community colleges, along with
the Kentucky Educational Television Network. A coal severance tax was
enacted, to be levied at the time of extraction on an industry whose technological
changes have resulted in an increased use of machinery rather than human
labor, a major shift from underground mining to surface mining, and an
increase in pollution. The state's judicial system was revamped in 1976.
Through favorable corporate economic incentives, the state gained a Toyota
automobile plant in 1988. Increased concerns for educational quality and
funding contributed to the establishment of a statewide lottery in 1989
and to the Education Reform Act of 1990. Significant changes have since
occurred in school funding, organization, and in taxation.
In order to realize its potential, Kentucky must solve a number of problems:
regional economic inequality; a low standing in education; poor transportation
in certain areas; widespread pollution problems, particularly with regard
to the mining industry; and an agricultural base overly dependent on tobacco.
Kentucky's future looks promising, however. Continued economic development
is possible because of a current emphasis on education reform and the
state's advantages in energy, natural resources, transportation, water,
scenery, and climate. With intelligent land-use planning, the state's
abundant resources should provide Kentuckians with an improved economy
and quality of life.
Dennis E. Quillen
Bibliography: Bladen, Wilford A., A Geography of Kentucky (1984); Caudill,
Harry M., A Darkness at Dawn: Appalachian Kentucky and the Future (1976)
and Night Comes to the Cumberlands (1963); Channing, Steven A., The Encyclopedia
of Kentucky (1985); Clark, Thomas D., Agrarian Kentucky (1978) A History
of Kentucky, 4th ed. (1961) and Kentucky: Land of Contrast (1968); Coleman,
J. Winston, ed., Kentucky: A Pictorial History, 2d ed. (1971); Dykeman,
Wilma, and Stokely, James, The Border States (1968); Federal Writers'
Project, Kentucky: A Guide to the Bluegrass State (1939; repr. 1973);
Goldstein, Joel, Kentucky Government and Politics (1984); Harvey, Curtis
E., The Economics of Kentucky Coal (1977); High, Ellesa C., Past Titan
Rock: Journeys into an Appalachian Valley (1984); Jewell, Malcolm E.,
and Cunningham, Everett W., Kentucky Politics (1968); Karan, P. P., ed.,
Kentucky: A Regional Geography (1973); Karan, P. P., and Mather, Cotton,
eds., Atlas of Kentucky (1977); Miller, Penny M., and Jewell, Malcolm
E., Political Parties and Primaries in Kentucky (1990); Pearce, John E.,
Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics, 1930-63 (1987); Rice, Otis K.,
Frontier Kentucky (1975); Schwendeman, Joseph R., The Geography of Kentucky,
3d ed. (1970); Van Hook, Joseph O., The Kentucky Story, 3d ed. (1970);
Weller, Jack E., Yesterday's People: Life in Contemporary Appalachia (1965).
(c) 1996 Grolier, Inc.
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