6 entries match your criteria.
Historical Markers in Elkhorn City, Kentucky
Pikeville is the county seat for Pike County
Elkhorn City is in Pike County
Pike County (45) ►
ADJACENT TO PIKE COUNTY
Floyd County (34) ►
Knott County (11) ►
Letcher County (23) ►
Martin County (7) ►
Buchanan County, Virginia (7) ►
Dickenson County, Virginia (21) ►
Wise County, Virginia (32) ►
Mingo County, West Virginia (22) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
ADJACENT TO PIKE COUNTY
Floyd County (34) ►
Knott County (11) ►
Letcher County (23) ►
Martin County (7) ►
Buchanan County, Virginia (7) ►
Dickenson County, Virginia (21) ►
Wise County, Virginia (32) ►
Mingo County, West Virginia (22) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 ► Kentucky, Pike County, Elkhorn City — 2203 — Daniel Boone's First Steps in Kentucky — ![]() |
Boone 1st visited Ky. on hunting trip in 1767-68. Hunted Clinch River before coming to Russell Fork of the Big Sandy River. Followed rim of Breaks Canyon through present-day Elkhorn City. He tracked 50 miles along buffalo trace to a salt lick at . . . — — Map (db m50654) HM |
2 ► Kentucky, Pike County, Elkhorn City — 2130 — Elkhorn City’s Railroads — ![]() |
Two major railroads, C&O from north and Clinchfield from south, connected at Elkhorn City, Feb. 8, 1915, opening up trade from Ohio Valley to South Atlantic Region. Elkhorn City became important railroad town. Trains went through several times a day . . . — — Map (db m89778) HM |
3 ► Kentucky, Pike County, Elkhorn City — 727 — Known But to God — ![]() |
Here rests the body of a soldier of the Confederacy, struck down by an unknown assassin in May of 1865-apparently on way to home in the South. He was buried in a coffin made of boards rived from a great oak by four men of this community. After the . . . — — Map (db m50655) HM |
4 ► Kentucky, Pike County, Elkhorn City — 2131 — Richard Potter — ![]() |
One of the first pioneers to settle in Breaks Canyon area, Richard married Mary Ramey in 1821 and had 11 children; later married Mary "Polly" Wallace. He was a farmer, hunter, and a distillery operator. Richard acquired several thousand acres of . . . — — Map (db m50656) HM |
5 ► Kentucky, Pike County, Elkhorn City — Russell Fork Overlook — Breaks Interstate Park — ![]() |
Russell Fork originates at the confluence of a number of small streams near Council Virginia. Typical of the Appalachian Plateau, the river valley is narrow and V-shaped. Flash floods are not uncommon. Major tributaries are McClure River and . . . — — Map (db m90657) HM |
6 ► Kentucky, Pike County, Elkhorn City — K-2073 — William Ramey — ![]() |
William Ramey, born ca. 1782, came from North Carolina. He purchased 200-acre tract near the mouth of Elkhorn Creek in 1816. Served as justice of the peace, sheriff, and commissioner of roads in Pike Co. Acquired thousands of acres by land surveys . . . — — Map (db m50658) HM |