「kentucky」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)12ページ目
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Underwood was born in Louisville, | Kentucky, on May 6, 1862. |
Born in Jefferson County, | Kentucky on November 13, 1801, Hinkle joined the early |
William Steinmetz was born in Newport, | Kentucky on September 2, 1847. |
ity (then Transylvania College) in Lexington, | Kentucky on a recommendation by Rupp. |
rried Lula Beatrice Taylor, of Lovelaceville, | Kentucky, on June 30, 1887. |
David Williams was born in Burkesville, | Kentucky on May 28, 1953. |
rd was born near Owensboro in Daviess County, | Kentucky on September 8, 1924. |
fantry mustered out of service at Louisville, | Kentucky on July 10, 1865. |
on November 30, 1846 and died in Louisville, | Kentucky on September 6, 1940. |
Fowler died at Lexington, | Kentucky on August 22, 1840. |
He was born in Monticello, | Kentucky on September 4, 1797. |
Isaac Taylor Tichenor was born in | Kentucky on November 11, 1825. |
As a young man he moved to Cloverport, | Kentucky, on the Ohio River and became a prosperous me |
e signed a "Memorandum of Understanding" with | Kentucky on April 6, 2007 which outlined his salary an |
Born in Bradfordsville, | Kentucky, on March 5, 1834, Rose was studying Latin at |
University of Tennessee with a 28-10 win over | Kentucky on November 29, 2008. |
fantry mustered out of service at Louisville, | Kentucky on July 18, 1865. |
fantry mustered out of service at Louisville, | Kentucky on July 21, 1865. |
He died in Liberty, | Kentucky on May 5, 1896. |
mp Beauregard Memorial, outside Water Valley, | Kentucky on Kentucky state road 2422 northeast of town |
He died in Hopkinsville, | Kentucky on March 12, 1859. |
He died in Henderson, | Kentucky, on August 17, 1921 and was interred in Fernw |
It is located in Richmond, | Kentucky on the campus of Eastern Kentucky University. |
fantry mustered out of service at Louisville, | Kentucky on July 17, 1865. |
He died in Covington, | Kentucky, on May 1, 1854. |
He died at Oak Grove, | Kentucky, on June 25, 1904. |
He died in Lancaster, | Kentucky, on June 6, 1880. |
fantry mustered out of service at Louisville, | Kentucky on July 20, 1865. |
Mahan died in Danville, | Kentucky, on November 1, 1966. |
led three men in a pistol fight in Frankfort, | Kentucky on January 16, 1900. |
rles Rice McDowell, Jr. was born in Danville, | Kentucky on June 24, 1926. |
He was born in Newport, | Kentucky on June 4, 1886. |
fantry mustered out of service at Louisville, | Kentucky on July 20, 1865. |
Master attended the University of | Kentucky on a basketball scholarship. |
ntly sits on Stateline Road, east of Dukedom, | Kentucky on the Kentucky/Tennessee state line. |
It reorganized at Louisville, | Kentucky on September 10, 1863 and mustered in under t |
Mosher was born near Latonia Springs in | Kentucky on September 1, 1824. |
racticing law until his death in Hodgenville, | Kentucky on August 5, 1880. |
Stephen B. Pence (born in Louisville, | Kentucky on December 22, 1953) is a former Lieutenant |
Asher G. Caruth was born in Scottsville, | Kentucky on February 7, 1844. |
Ben Brush died in Versailles, | Kentucky on June 8, 1918 at the age of 25. |
Hayden was born in Logan County, | Kentucky, on September 11, 1822, but grew up in Illino |
's record crowd was 25,610 for a game against | Kentucky on January 21, 1989, which is also the SEC re |
Marshall died near Frankfort, | Kentucky on July 3, 1841. |
enacted during Powell's term as governor gave | Kentucky one of the top educational systems in the ant |
1979 | Kentucky Open (as an amateur) |
That same year, the University of | Kentucky opened a branch campus of its College of Engi |
The Russell Center in Russell Springs, | Kentucky opened in 2003 and the Clinton Center in Alba |
The | Kentucky Opera is an important part of theater in Kent |
The | Kentucky Opera is the state opera of Kentucky, located |
th 619 seats, is named for the founder of the | Kentucky Opera, Moritz von Bomhard. |
was announced as the new general director of | Kentucky Opera. |
personal hunting rifles, which were typically | Kentucky or Pennsylvania type rifles. |
Was Jackson born in his "hometown" of Oneida, | Kentucky, or did he merely grow up there? |
John D. Winters moved from | Kentucky or Tennessee to central Illinois, and then to |
12 of the 15 buildings in | Kentucky over 300 feet are located in Downtown Louisvi |
Born near Georgetown, | Kentucky, Owens attended the common schools, also Kent |
It was the first racetrack outside | Kentucky owned by Churchill Downs since 1939. |
Houston is now a businessman in Louisville, | Kentucky, owning and operating a trucking/transportati |
From a | Kentucky paper we have copied an account of the detent |
The Western | Kentucky Parkway was also renamed the Wendell H. Ford |
interchanges with the Wendell H. Ford Western | Kentucky Parkway and the Martha Layne Collins Bluegras |
Born in Middletown, | Kentucky, Parsons attended the public schools at Louis |
the city of Louisville and Jefferson County, | Kentucky passed a hazardous materials ordinance in res |
A sliver of land that is part of Ohio County, | Kentucky passes under the bridge. |
Born on a farm near Vanceburg, | Kentucky, Paynter attended the common schools, Rand's |
While at | Kentucky Pease coached future NFL quarterbacks Jared L |
A native of | Kentucky, Pendergrast was married to Virginia Barron, |
He preached in | Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and New York, and died in East |
Moss, from | Kentucky, performed with vocal groups during his World |
A native of | Kentucky, Perkins moved in 1840 to Texas' Brazoria Cou |
Kentucky permits adoption by individuals. | |
Kentucky permits post-operative transsexuals to amend | |
n 1989 Newton's alma mater, the University of | Kentucky, persuaded him to replace athletic director C |
1990 | Kentucky PGA Championship |
1981 PGA Club Professional Championship, | Kentucky PGA Championship |
1986 | Kentucky PGA Match Play Championship |
The | Kentucky Pharmaceutical Society restored the Apothecar |
along the fault are the towns of Middlesboro, | Kentucky, Pineville, Kentucky. |
He was also a brother-in-law to | Kentucky pioneers Isaac, Joseph and John Jacob Bowman. |
Kentucky Place Names. | |
fferent monuments related to the Civil War in | Kentucky placed on the National Register of Historic P |
sixty different monuments to the Civil War in | Kentucky placed on the National Register of Historic P |
y-one different monuments to the Civil War in | Kentucky placed on the National Register of Historic P |
Thomas (born November 19, 1950 in Louisville, | Kentucky) played basketball at both the college and pr |
s senior year of 1979-80, he became the first | Kentucky player ever to be named consensus Southeaster |
played college football at the University of | Kentucky, playing in the 1999 Music City Bowl, and the |
Future Confederate colonel and | Kentucky poet Theodore O'Hara joined the Register shor |
l (November 26, 1811 - August 17, 1870) was a | Kentucky political figure. |
ier (January 24, 1896 - April 24, 1973) was a | Kentucky politician and Secretary of the United States |
er 14, 1833 - March 13, 1915) was a prominent | Kentucky politician and a member of the Breckenridge p |
Luska Twyman (1913-1988) was a | Kentucky politician and World War II veteran. |
John Caldwell (1757-1804) was a | Kentucky Politician, State Senator, and the second Lie |
James H. Garrard ( - 1865) was a | Kentucky politician. |
John Young Brown III (born June 2, 1963) is a | Kentucky politician. |
After the Revolution, Logan was active in | Kentucky politics, especially the campaign to establis |
Born in Louisville, | Kentucky, Pope attended the common schools and was gra |
Kentucky portal | |
He began his career as a reporter at the | Kentucky Post and the Albany (N.Y.) Knickerbockers New |
Southard Stokes, Class of 1968, author of the | Kentucky Postcard Series, "Postcards from William", 20 |
Owner: | Kentucky Power Company |
A resident of Vine Grove, | Kentucky, Prather was a State Senator and the nominati |
In 1803 Stone and others withdrew from the | Kentucky Presbytery and formed the Springfield Presbyt |
can social science, 1865-1905.. University of | Kentucky Press. |
Lexington: University of | Kentucky Press. |
is a 2007 book published by the University of | Kentucky Press. |
Almanac of World War I. University of | Kentucky Press. |
ich is still available from the University of | Kentucky Press. |
Kentucky Pride is a 1925 drama film directed by John F | |
ian preacher, Nathan L. Rice, for libelling a | Kentucky priest who was then absent in Europe. |
der scattered throughout southern and western | Kentucky, primarily in communities with more than 10,0 |
Standard Gravure was a major Louisville, | Kentucky printing company founded in 1922. |
ded Kavanaugh High School in Anderson County, | Kentucky prior to matriculating at UK. |
icine in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, moved to | Kentucky prior to 1812 and resided near Nicholasville. |
Vic also played in the | Kentucky Pro Am in June 2007 and led his team to a 3rd |
in-swollen Cumberland River and advanced into | Kentucky, proceeding as far as Cane Valley, camping be |
ments of the session were the creation of the | Kentucky Progress Commission (the forerunner of the St |
ock expanded the Ellerslie Stud to his wife's | Kentucky property and eventually transferred the bulk |
Kirby Smith, Confederate commander in eastern | Kentucky, proposed a threat against Nashville to draw |
DeMoss' breakthrough season with | Kentucky proved to be the 2005-06 season. |
is two histories of early Baptist churches in | Kentucky provide insight into the frontier society of |
He served as president of the | Kentucky Psychological Association and was a fellow of |
, and in return Chandler appointed him to the | Kentucky Public Service Commission in 1936. |
Peters, Webb and Co. in Louisville, | Kentucky, published it as "Wait For The Wagon: A Song |
d to stud, and will stand at Adena Springs in | Kentucky, putting an end to his racing career. |
then began a sports talk show on Louisville, | Kentucky radio station WQKC. |
For the Louisville, | Kentucky radio station, see WRKA. |
two Saturday programs broadcast over Newport, | Kentucky radio station WNOP-AM. |
Confederate Gen. John Hunt Morgan's first | Kentucky raid occurred here on July 9, 1862. |
ippi and founded the Ship Island, Ripley, and | Kentucky Railroad Company. |
Rail Car is one of four train vehicles at the | Kentucky Railway Museum on the National Register. |
Register of Historic Places, currently at the | Kentucky Railway Museum at New Haven, Kentucky, in sou |
Raised in Madisonville, | Kentucky, Ramsey was a multi-sport athlete at the Univ |
the grammy-nominated second hit single by the | Kentucky rap group Nappy Roots. |
"Headz Up" is the third single by the | Kentucky rap group Nappy Roots, from their 2002 debut |
Born near Cynthiana, | Kentucky, Rariden received a limited schooling. |
He chose to play for | Kentucky rather than Duke or Florida in a highly publi |
While at | Kentucky Ray coached future NFL players such as Dave R |
Born in Hardin County, | Kentucky, Read completed preparatory studies, studied |
past, the breed has alternatively been called | Kentucky Reds and Bourbon Butternuts. |
Kentucky reduced consensual sodomy from a felony to a | |
Born in Lexington, | Kentucky, Reed received an LL.B. from the University o |
ilar, but smaller area surrounding Lexington, | Kentucky referred to as the "Kentucky Bluegrass" area, |
He served as colonel of a | Kentucky regiment during the Spanish-American War. |
It was the only | Kentucky regiment in the Confederate service to serve |
Returning, | Kentucky regiments, camping near here, given leave to |
igan, the 3rd Minnesota, and the 8th and 23rd | Kentucky regiments. |
The largest city in the Northern | Kentucky region, Covington, is served by the Covington |
He became the 30th | Kentucky registered architect in 1930 and was later pr |
Born in Newport, | Kentucky, Reis was drafted by the Philadelphia Phillie |
Kentucky Renaissance Pharmacy Museum: This is dedicate | |
azzoli (born November 2, 1932, in Louisville, | Kentucky) represented Kentucky's Third Congressional D |
om Philip Thompson, executive director of the | Kentucky Republican Party and a previous president of |
In | Kentucky, Republican Governor Ernie Fletcher appointed |
The 2008 | Kentucky Republican primary took place on May 20, 2008 |
Attorney, | Kentucky Republican Campaign, 1972 |
The | Kentucky Republican Party currently controls one of th |
University of | Kentucky Research and Education Center Botanical Garde |
ding to Ethelbert Dudley Warfield's book "The | Kentucky Resolutions of 1798: An Historical Study" Bre |
He served as president of the | Kentucky Retail Lumbermen in 1908 and of the Tri-State |
She also belongs to the | Kentucky Retired Teachers Association and Greenup Coun |
In 1948, | Kentucky returned the property to the Kentucky Medical |
In 1978, Givens and | Kentucky returned to the Final Four at the Checkerdome |
ch had been used by a station in Springfield, | Kentucky, returned to the Louisville market on May 11, |
Born near Lexington, | Kentucky, Richardson attended Transylvania University, |
an raised a company for Col. John Allen's 1st | Kentucky Rifle Regiment. |
from Virginia Tech, Combs was nicknamed "The | Kentucky Rifle" for his long-range shooting. |
produced several types of the highly-regarded | Kentucky rifles and Kentucky pistols using the flintlo |
Born in Cross Plains, | Kentucky, Ringo read law to enter the Bar in 1830. |
South Fork | Kentucky River |
etained the area to the south and west of the | Kentucky River in central Kentucky. |
The Little | Kentucky River is a tributary of the Ohio River, appro |
For the tributary to the | Kentucky River in eastern Kentucky, see Red River (Ken |
The | Kentucky River Museum is located in a former lock oper |
This article is about the tributary to the | Kentucky River in eastern Kentucky. |
The Northern | Kentucky River Monsters finished with the best regular |
(locks 5 through 14) are now operated by the | Kentucky River Authority. |
tainment and sporting events and the Northern | Kentucky River Monsters of the Ultimate Indoor Footbal |
The | Kentucky River Museum is located in Boonesborough, Ken |
le-long (55.2 km) tributary of the South Fork | Kentucky River, located in the Daniel Boone National F |
The Red River is a tributary of the | Kentucky River, approximately 57 mi (92 km) long, in e |
a tavern, as well as many ferries across the | Kentucky River. |
This path later became the Old | Kentucky Road, which roughly parallels the modern Stat |
Born in Greenville, | Kentucky, Roark attended the public schools and the Gr |
Born in Hodgenville, | Kentucky, Robertson pursued preparatory studies. |
Born near Harrodsburg, | Kentucky, Robertson pursued preparatory studies and at |
icksand is the location for the University of | Kentucky Robinson Station. |
Born near Louisville, | Kentucky, Roscoe Goose won a number of races, the most |
eum is located north-northeast of Petersburg, | Kentucky, roughly 12 miles (19 km) from the Cincinnati |
assing 1,625 acres (7 km2) in Spencer County, | Kentucky, roughly between Louisville and Lexington. |
continues south to U.S. Route 27 as unsigned | Kentucky Route 471. |
For the state route, see | Kentucky Route 6. |
At the state line, the route changes to | Kentucky Route 311 and continues on to Hickman, Kentuc |
For the state route, see | Kentucky Route 9. |
For the state route, see | Kentucky Route 8. |
Bridge is a cantilever truss bridge carrying | Kentucky Route 56 and Illinois Route 13 across the Ohi |
It lies east of Richmond on | Kentucky Route 52. |
For the state route, see | Kentucky Route 13. |
For the state route, see | Kentucky Route 12. |
For the state route, see | Kentucky Route 1. |
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