Preserving Kentucky's Past

From Muhammad Ali to "Father of Bluegrass" Bill Monroe, Kentucky’s multifaceted heritage is kept alive at dozens of world-class museums around the state. Hear the strains of Kentucky’s musical history at the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum in Owensboro, and learn about the artists who changed music forever at the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame & Museum in Renfro Valley. Celebrate the champions of horse racing at the Kentucky Derby Museum, and experience a different kind of horsepower at the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, the only place in the world where "America's sports car" is manufactured.

 

Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky, as was his future wife, Mary Todd Lincoln. You can visit many historic sites and house museums related to both families along the Kentucky Lincoln Heritage Trail. Louisville is home to several state-of-the-art museums; explore the life of “The Greatest” at the Muhammad Ali Center, or delve into Kentucky’s bourbon history (and many more topics) at the Frazier History Museum.

 

And if that weren’t enough, the commonwealth's repository, the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History in Frankfort and smaller museums around the state offer glimpses into Kentucky people, places and stories. From the American Cave Museum to the Historic RailPark & Train Museum, there is no shortage of fascinating experiences in the Bluegrass State.

Trip Inspiration

Delightfully Spooky Kentucky

State Wide

For those who love spooky stories and experiences, Kentucky has plenty of paranormal destinations all over the Commonwealth.  

 

The Eastern Kentucky Appalachians are just brimming with tales of haunted coal camps. Eerie and abandoned mines, like Blue Heron Mine in McCreary County, offer not only a chance to see what life was like for miners and their families, but also to learn about local folklore. In addition to year-round tours, every October visitors can attend Blue Heron Ghost Mine and listen to spine-tingling stories about the mines, hills and hollows in the region.  

 

Want to take in some nature with your ghost stories? Don’t pass up on Lovers Leap at Cumberland Falls State Resort Park, where in the 1950s a newlywed bride, still in her wedding dress, fell 80 feet into the Cumberland River and was swept over the falls, never to be seen again. Over the decades since, many visitors have reported seeing a beautiful woman in a white wedding dress wandering the area around the falls.   

 

Owensboro, situated just down the Ohio River from Louisville, is a city that is home to more than a few eerie happenings. Schedule a Haunts of Owensboro walking tour and listen to chilling accounts of inexplicable footsteps in empty rooms, lights and faucets turning on and off on their own and ghostly figures appearing in doorways and windows. 


Paramount Arts Center is home to a mischievous specter affectionately known as "Paramount Joe"

 

In Ashland you will find the Paramount Arts Center, a thriving theater and event venue. However, according to local legend, in 1931 a workman, “Paramount Joe”, died in the theater while it was still under construction, and his spirit still haunts the premises. Since his demise, theater employees say Joe is known to show up in hallways, cause cold drafts, and make items around the playhouse disappear.  

 

Regardless of the time of year, Kentucky is the perfect place to find hair-raising, pulse quickening things to see and do. For more spooky trip inspiration, look up Kentucky After Dark. Visitors may plan their route through 21 paranormal destinations spread throughout the Bluegrass, and Kentucky After Dark Passports are available at each of the locations.  

 

Author Information

Ben Mackin holding a coffee cup while making a strange face.

Ben Mackin

Ben Mackin is a communications specialist for the Kentucky Department of Tourism.  Before joining KDT, Ben worked as a staff writer and freelancer for a number of publications including the Vicksburg Post, Williamsburg-Yorktown Daily and the State Journal in Frankfort. 

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