Bracken County
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Bracken County Historical Society
Bracken County Historical Society received Dr. Clark�s compliment as a charge to maintain 200 years of records and condense them into publications to share with the public. The lives of its citizens and their celebrations were chronicled in county newspapers, and the society chose images and narratives accurately representing Bracken County to be included in this volume.
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Bracken County - Bracken County Historical Society
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INTRODUCTION
The Bracken County Historical Society had its origin in 1993, and its membership is comprised of representatives from all organizations in the county, as well as members from several states. The society recognized the need for a history, which could be conveyed by photographs, postcards, and other illustrations. This compilation of images will serve as a lasting memorial to past residents and a record for future generations.
Bracken County, founded in 1797, is a high rolling land possessing abundant clear waters from the Ohio River and North Fork of the Licking River, as well as a natural watershed providing farmers and industry with the earth’s most valuable resource. Plentiful forests rewarded early citizens with raw materials for shelter and animals for subsistence. Settlers arrived first from ports east on the Ohio River before wagon trains brought families over the Appalachian Mountains into central Kentucky. Once the land was safe from Native American attacks, Augusta flourished as a port city used for transportation of tobacco, hemp, grapes, and livestock. To complement this port, boats were constructed in nearby Levanna, Ohio, and flatboats were made in Claysville, near the southern border of Bracken County.
The county derived its name from two creeks, Big Bracken and Little Bracken, which were possibly named after an early hunter, William Bracken. Surveyors Robert McAfee and James McAfee charted the river lands as early as 1780, building a small surveyor’s cabin at the mouth of Chalfont Creek near Rock Springs. Soon after, James Pribble established a trading post on the southeast hill above Augusta. Pribble sent for the Teegarden, Thomas, and Smith families to settle the land, and they remained at the post for several years. These pioneers became the first owners of land farther inland in the county, instead of relocating along the Ohio River. Philimon Thomas acquired land near Buchanan’s Station, later named Germantown, and encouraged a group of Pennsylvania Dutch to settle in this area of relatively flat fields and bluegrass soil. The Pennsylvania Dutch were also credited with laying the first plank road in the 1870s on what is currently called Dutch Ridge Road. Trees were felled and split so they could be laid with the flat side up, enabling carriages to travel without getting stuck in ruts and mud.
Bracken County was the home of several stonemasons who quarried the stone, faced it, and constructed single and two-story homes in the eastern portion of the county. Reportedly, Abraham Baker Sr. labored with his employees and slaves to build five stone houses in the 1820s—several of them remain as residences on Dutch Ridge and Minerva Roads. Of course, log cabins predated the sturdier stone buildings, and remarkably, many of them dot the roadsides of Bracken County today. These log cabins were covered with wood siding, which makes them unrecognizable to most residents and tourists. Augusta has five cabins, some of which had been located in other parts of the county before being reconstructed, serving as summer homes and businesses.
Over the next two centuries, Augusta and Brooksville became the sites of several courthouses. Augusta trustees immediately provided educational training in legal, ministerial, and medical fields. Although the county was vastly rural, its location in relation to larger cities, within a few hours’ carriage ride, gave its citizens the ability to communicate and trade in both cultures. Once river traffic slowed as a result of rail transportation, a group of local businessmen constructed its own county railroad from Wellsburg on the Ohio River to the county seat, Brooksville. Big Windy
was a small locomotive with only a few cars that had to run forwards and backwards, with no turnaround area available. This effort continued for several decades. Brooksville and the remaining portions of the county were experiencing continued growth. Although small, this railroad was necessary for Brooksville and the remaining parts of the county to prosper.
A Beautiful Situation
is the phrase often used to describe the streets and landscapes along the Ohio River. The sunrises and sunsets over Augusta provided the natural beauty behind numerous poems and paintings; however, these placid waters at times turn angry, flooding homes and destroying businesses. Residents had to become resilient to these dangers and have turned empty lots into green spaces and neighborhood parks. Builders became quite imaginative in designing homes that could meet FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Association) regulations, which required living space to be elevated above the 100-year flood plain.
Hollow Bracken is the title of a small collection of poems by Hanson P. Diltz aptly describing this land among small hills that rise above the Ohio. Scattered on the ridges and along its creeks were those log cabins and stone houses built by a hearty pioneer group of men and women who endeavored to leave a legacy for their descendants. Hopefully this volume of photographs offers a visual history of Bracken County.
One
SETTLERS ORGANIZED LAND
WILLIAM BUCKNER. Buckner was the son of Philip Buckner (1747–1830), the founder of Augusta, and Tabitha Daniels Buckner. The Buckners arrived in Augusta with several families from Virginia in 1794. Although some early researchers believed this image to be Philip Buckner, there is more persuasive evidence that the illustration is of his son, William Buckner. Most of Augusta’s streets were named after Phillip and Tabitha’s children. The city was chartered by the Legislature of Kentucky on October 2, 1797. Land was deeded for the city by Philip Buckner. Buckner and his sons were fond of hunting and the chase, having the true pioneer spirit. When the elder Buckners chose to retire to a less-settled town, they moved to Phillip’s hunting lodge at Powersville, a site of only a few cabins. William continued to lead a privileged life as the son of a powerful and prominent representative to Frankfort. (Courtesy of Knoedler Library.)
FIRST COUNTY