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Butler County, Kentucky

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Profiles

  • Edward Kessinger (1894 - 1951)
  • PFC John Earl Brown, [Twin] (1930 - 2000)
    PFC US ARMY KOREA
  • Pvt. (CSA), John Wilson Porter (1836 - 1919)
    John Wilson Porter was born in Butler County, KY on September 18, 1835 to Benjamin Clark Porter and Maltilda J. Wilson. In the winter of 1847, at the age of 12, he moved to Texas with his parents who s...
  • Maurice Thatcher (1815 - 1870)
    Hudson Thatcher (August 15, 1870 – January 6, 1973) was a U.S. Congressman. Thatcher was elected to Congress in 1922 from Kentucky. He served until 1933.BiographyBorn in Chicago, Illinois, Thatcher's f...
  • Pen Vandiver (1869 - 1932)
    Pendleton Vandiver (1869–1932) was a Kentucky fiddler, born there shortly after the American Civil War. He was uncle to bluegrass musician Bill Monroe, who immortalized him in a song, "Uncle Pen".Monro...

Please add profiles for those who were born, lived or died in Butler County, Kentucky.

History

Numerous archaeological sites are located along the Green River in Butler County. A 1932 survey found nine sites, many of which were a group of shell mounds, including the Carlston Annis and DeWeese Shell Mounds.

The area now known as Butler County was first settled by the families of Richard C. Dellium and James Forgy, who founded a town called Berry's Lick. The first industry was salt-making.

On January 18, 1810, the Kentucky General Assembly created Butler County from portions of Logan and Ohio counties. The new county was named for Major General Richard Butler, who died at the Battle of the Wabash in 1791. In June of that year, the Kentucky Governor commissioned a study to locate a county seat. They selected a two-acre tract belonging to Christopher Funkhouser. This site, at first called Funkhouser Hill, was later named Morgantown. The county site has remained at that site until present times.

In 1833 a navigation plan for the Green River was initiated. As one result of this plan, a town (Rochester) was founded at Lock/Dam #3, and another (Woodbury) at Lock/Dam #4.

The American Civil War in 1861 slowed the county's growth. The county was site of a few incidents during the conflict. There was a fight near Morgantown on October 29, 1861, and a skirmish on October 30 where the rebels were encamped. In the latter part of the nineteenth century, veterans from both sides raised funds to raise a monument at the courthouse. It lists county residents who fought in the war on both sides. This is one of only two Civil War monuments in Kentucky that honor the soldiers of both sides. The Confederate-Union Veterans' Monument in Morgantown, a zinc monument, was dedicated in 1907 on the Butler County Courthouse lawn.

Adjacent Counties

Cities & Communities

  • Aberdeen
  • Dunbar
  • Huntsville
  • Jetson
  • Logansport
  • Monford
  • Morgantown (County Seat)
  • Provo
  • Quality
  • Reedyville
  • Rochester
  • Roundhill
  • Welch's Creek
  • Woodbury
  • Youngtown

Links

Wikipedia

Genealogy Trails

National Register of Historic Places

KY Kinfolk

RAOGK

Butler County Marriages (1850-1851)

Butler county Census Records

Hearthstone Legacy



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