Every Type o’ Hotel » Kentucky
Looking for hotels in Padukah, Kentucky? (Actually spelled “Paducah”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Paducah hotels:
Here is some Paducah info from the wiki:
Paducah is the largest city in Kentucky’s Jackson Purchase Region and the county seat of McCracken County, Kentucky, United States. It is located at the confluence of the Tennessee River and the Ohio River. The population was estimated 25,661 in 2006 [2]. Twenty blocks of Downtown Paducah have been placed on the National Register of Historic Places.
It is the hub for the Paducah Micropolitan Area, which includes McCracken, Ballard and Livingston counties in Kentucky and Massac County in Illinois; which had a population of 98,127 in 2006.
There is a Paducah, Texas which was named after Paducah, Kentucky and is the only other American city to share its name.
Looking for hotels in Louiville, Kentucky? (Actually spelled “Louisville”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Louisville hotels:
Here is some Louisville info from the wiki:
Louisville is Kentucky’s largest city. It is ranked as either the 17th or 27th largest city in the United States depending on how the population is calculated. The settlement that became the City of Louisville was founded in 1778 by George Rogers Clark and is named after King Louis XVI of France. Louisville is famous as the home of “The Most Exciting Two Minutes in Sports”: the Kentucky Derby, the widely watched first race of the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing.
Louisville is situated in north-central Kentucky on the Kentucky-Indiana border at the only natural obstacle in the Ohio River, the Falls of the Ohio. Louisville is the county seat of Jefferson County, and since 2003, the city’s borders are coterminous with those of the county due to merger. Because it includes counties in Southern Indiana, the Louisville metropolitan area is regularly referred to as Kentuckiana. A resident of Louisville is referred to as a Louisvillian. Although situated in a Southern state, Louisville is influenced by both Midwestern and Southern culture, and is commonly referred to as either the northernmost Southern city or the southernmost Northern city in the United States.[4][5]
Louisville has been the site of many important innovations through history. Notable residents have included inventor Thomas Edison, the first Jewish Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, boxing legend Muhammad Ali, newscaster Diane Sawyer, and writers Hunter S. Thompson and Sue Grafton. Notable events occurring in the city include the first public viewing place of Edison’s light bulb, the first library open to African Americans in the South,[6][7] and medical advances including the first human hand transplant,[8] the first self-contained artificial heart transplant,[9] and the development site of the first cervical cancer vaccine.
Looking for hotels in Lexingtin, Kentucky? (Actually spelled “Lexington”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Lexington hotels:
Here is some Lexington info from the wiki:
Lexington, Kentucky, United States, (Officially: Lexington-Fayette Urban County), known as the “Horse Capital of the World,” is located in the heart of the Bluegrass region. It is the second-largest city in Kentucky, after Louisville,[1] and the 68th largest in the United States. On January 1, 1974 Lexington became the first municipality in the Commonwealth of Kentucky to form a consolidated city-county government by merging with Fayette County. In 2006, the population estimate given by the U.S. Census Bureau was 275,754.
Lexington is home to the Kentucky Horse Park, Keeneland race course, the Red Mile race course, Transylvania University, and the University of Kentucky.
Lexington has been selected to be the site of the 2010 FEI World Equestrian Games.
Looking for hotels in Fortknox, Kentucky? (Actually spelled “Fort Knox”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Fort Knox hotels:
Here is some Fort Knox info from the wiki:
Fort Knox is a United States Army post in Kentucky south of Louisville and north of Elizabethtown. The base covers parts of Bullitt, Hardin, and Meade counties, with Hardin county receiving the largest benefit, economically. It holds the U.S. Army Armor Center, the U.S. Army Armor School and the U.S. Army Recruiting Command.[1] It is also the site of the U.S. Bullion Depository and the General George Patton Museum,[2] both located on or near the army post. Parts of the base in Hardin and Meade Counties form a census-designated place (CDP), which had a population of 12,377 at the 2000 census.
Fort Knox has become an almost colloquial term in the English language, its name associated with high-tech security, impregnability and excess amounts of wealth. This occurrence has become proliferated due to the use of the site in media such as the 1959 James Bond novel Goldfinger by Ian Fleming, and the 1964 movie of the same name and its appearance in the 1981 comedy film Stripes, both of which utilize the large-scale security of the fort in the main narrative.
For more information on the security and gold located at Fort Knox, see the article on the United States Bullion Depository.
Looking for hotels in Bowlingreen, Kentucky? (Actually spelled “Bowling Green”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Bowling Green hotels:
Here is some Bowling Green info from the wiki:
Bowling Green is the fourth-most populous city in the U.S. state of Kentucky after Louisville, Lexington and Owensboro, with an estimated population in 2006 of 53,112. It is the county seat of Warren County and the principal city of the Bowling Green, Kentucky Metropolitan Statistical Area with an estimated population of 116,001 (2007). Bowling Green was founded in 1798 after Robert and George Moore donated 30-40 acres to the Warren County trustees. The land surrounded the 2-acre plot they had donated for the construction of public buildings. In 2003, Bowling Green and its surrounding communities were designated as a “metropolitan area”.
General Motors has an assembly plant in Bowling Green in which all Chevrolet Corvettes and Cadillac XLRs have been constructed since 1981 and 2003, respectively. Other significant businesses in Bowling Green include Fruit of the Loom, Houchen’s Industries, Hitcents, Holley Performance Products, and Camping World. The third largest Kentucky public university, Western Kentucky University, is situated upon a hill in central Bowling Green. Its athletic teams are called Hilltoppers.