Kyrock a Pictorial History


Book Description

In the early 1900's Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company opened a facility in Western Kentucky near Brownsville with quarries and an elaborate rock asphalt processing facility that produced an excellent asphalt paving material widely sold for the increasingly popular road paving industry. What resulted was a place called Kyrock where thousands came to live and work for the company. Information has been compiled about the company, the area, the people and their way of life. There are first-hand accounts from former workers and residents and numerous photos of the plant operations, quarries, school, church, communities and people. Many articles and papers were consulted to get as much information as possible so that this important part of local history could be preserved in a single book. The book describes and shows in hundreds of photos how the company was built and how the hard working people made the company a success while overcoming tremendous obstacles. Read about how the people overcame the difficult circumstances with the help of a strong leader and how great success can sometimes suddenly come to an abrupt end.




The Indiana Publisher


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The Falls City Engineers


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Forthcoming Books


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The Winning of the West


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The Mammoth Cave Estate


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"Mammoth Cave was under private ownership before it became a National Park in 1941. For over 85 years, the cave was owned and operated by John Croghan of Locust Grove and his heirs. This is the first comprehensive look into the history of the Mammoth Cave Estate using unpublished information and rarely seen photographs of the Cave Estate from private collections. Maps, drawings, and floor plans of the Hotel and Estate are provided as well as never before seen images of the 1916 Mammoth Cave Hotel Fire aftermath"--




Works of Art


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Roads and Streets


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Dirt Roads to Dixie


Book Description

At the conclusion of the nineteenth century, one of the issues that attracted the attention of reformers in the South was road improvements. Populists who subscribed to the tenets of the good roads movement sought to provide farmers with better access to markets, make the cultural and employment opportunities of cities more available, and perhaps even halt the mass exodus of young people from the farms.