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KNOTT COUNTY COMMUNITIES
| Anco,
This recently closed post office lies at the head of
Yellow Creek, 2 miles from its confluence with Carr Fork
Creek and 6 miles SSW of Hindman. The post office was
established on October 6, 1922, and named for its first
post master, Anderson Combs. |
| Bearville,
(Carrie) The post office serving this hamlet on Big
Branch of Balls Fork of Troublesome Cree, 4 miles NW of
Hindman, was established in the early 1950's with
Lucinda Combs, postmaster. Over the years it had been
necessary to distinguish the several Combs families in
that section by giving them nicknames. One family was
called the "Bear Combses," perhaps for some incident in
the life of an ancestor, and the post office was named
for them. |
| Betty
(Wayland) This extinct post office on Ky 80 at the mouth
of Triplett Branch of Jones Fork of Right Beaver Creek,
10 miles NW of Hindman, was in operation from February
1, 1950, to May 5, 1956. It was named for the
granddaughter of Hattie (Mrs. George) Cox, the
first postmaster, and served the community of
Porter. Porter was named for the owner of the Porter
Mining Company, who, in the 1920's established there a
way station at the end of a spur line he had built from
what became known as Porter Junction, just n. of Lackey
on the main C & O RR line. |
| Caney Creek
also known as Pippa Passes, Hindman, Kite. This village
with post office, home of Alice Lloyd College, extends
NE along the upper reaches of Caney Creek for about a
mile from a point 4 1/2 miles E of Hindman. When Alice
Geddes Lloyd of Boston Established Caney Creek Junior
College here in 1923, among the groups from whom she
solicited funds were the Robert Browning Societies of
New England. They agreed also to build the local post
office and are said to have suggested its name for the
poet's heroin, the devout and simple mill girl Pippa,
who, as she passes through her town on New Year's Day,
innocently touches the lives of those who hear her
songs of joy and fulfillment. The Post Office
Department's preference for one-word names led to the
post offices establishment on December 31, 1917, as
Pippapass, a meaningless name retained until July 1,
1955, when pressure brought about a return to the
intended spelling. Local people still call their
community Caney or Caney Creek as they always have. |
| Carr Creek,
(Blackey) This hamlet with recently discontinued post
office is on the new Carr Fork Lake, 3/4 mile up KY 160
from its jct with KY 15, and 6 miles S of Hindman. For
many years the community centered on a boarding school
founded in 1920 by 2 Massachusetts women, Olive v. Marsh
and Ruth E. Watson. The post office of Dirk,
established on December 22, 1905, to serve this area,
was renamed Carr Creek in 1928 to honor the school,
which had just sent its basketball team to compete in
the national high school tournament in Chicago. The
school had been named for the Carr Fork of the North
Fork of the Kentucky River, which in turn had been named
for a pioneer settle historically identified only as
"Old Man Carr," who was said to have been scalped by the
Indians on nearby Defeated Creek. Or perhaps, as Harry
Caudill recently suggested, Carr Fork was named for
Willie Carr, a mulatto who had "accompanied a band of
North Carolinian" hunters to that area around 1794.
Pursued by Indians, he jumped from a high ledge into
"the rock-strewn creek." The origin of Dirk is unknown |
| Cody,
(Blackey) One of several communities completely
inundated by the recent flooding of Carr Fork Lake.
Cody was centered at the jct of KY 15 and 160, at the
mouth of Breeding and Defeated Creeks, branches of Carr
fork (of the North Fork of the Kentucky River), 6 1/2
miles S of Hindman. Its post office established on
November 18, 1897, with Shade Smith, postmaster was
named for a local family. |
| Decoy,
(Knott and Breathitt) (Vest, Tiptop). This hamlet with
post office 12 miles NNW of Hindman and 15 1/2 miles E
of Jackson straddles the county line. Though the area
was first settled around 1809, the post was not
established until November 14, 1904, with Henry C.
Shepherd, postmaster. Shepherd was the hero of a most
unusual place naming account: Henry's goal of
intellectual self-improvement included systematic study
of a mail order dictionary. One day therein he came
across the word "decoy," to entrap, and was shortly able
to apply this concept when he successfully set a trap
for his unfaithful wife and her man. He was later to
say to his neighbors that he had decoyed them. When it
came to establish a post office in the community, Henry
was asked to be the postmaster, and he requested it be
named Decoy, for this word had much significance to
him. |
| Dirk
Post Office (Carr Creek) (Blackey) This hamlet
with recently discontinued post office is on the new
Carr Fork Lake, 3/4 mile up KY 160 from its jct with KY
15, and 6 miles S of Hindman. For many years the
community centered on a boarding school founded in 1920
by 2 Massachusetts women, Olive v. Marsh and Ruth E.
Watson. The post office of Dirk, established on
December 22, 1905, to serve this area, was renamed Carr
Creek in 1928 to honor the school, which had just sent
its basketball team to compete in the national high
school tournament in Chicago. The school had been named
for the Carr Fork of the North Fork of the Kentucky
River, which in turn had been named for a pioneer settle
historically identified only as "Old Man Carr," who was
said to have been scalped by the Indians on nearby
Defeated Creek. Or perhaps, as Harry Caudill recently
suggested, Carr Fork was named for Willie Carr, a
mulatto who had "accompanied a band of North Carolinian"
hunters to that area around 1794. Pursued by Indians, he
jumped from a high ledge into "the rock-strewn creek."
The origin of Dirk is unknown |
| Elmrock
(Vest) This hamlet with post office is on KY 1098 and
Laurel Fork of Quicksand Creek, just above the mouth of
Baker Branch, 7 1/2 miles NNW of Hindman. The post
office was established on August 9, 1911, with Rachel
Ritchie, postmaster, and named for its location by a big
elm tree and a large rock. |
|
Emmalena,
(Carrie) This hamlet with post office is on KY 80 and
Troublesome Creek, 4 miles W of Hindman. The post
office established on October 5, 1984, was named for
Emma Thurman, the wife of the local school teacher who
had petitioned for it, and Orlena Combs Morgan, the
storekeeper and first postmaster. |
|
Fisty,
(Carrie) This hamlet with post office lies where Clear
Creek joins Troublesome Creek at the jct of KY 80 and
721, 5 1/2 miles W of Hindman. There were so many
Combses in this area that they had to be distinguished
by nicknames. One was called "Fisty Sam," and according
to local tradition he suggested that the new post office
be named for him. Margaret Ritchie became the first
postmaster on August 18, 1906 |
| Hindman,
This 5th class city and seat of Knott County is on KY
80, at the forks of Troublesome Creek, 153 miles ESE of
downtown Louisville. In April 1884, 3 commissioners
appointed to locate a site for the new county's seat
established it here. The McPherson post office
established here on February 17, 1874, with Peyton M.
Duke, postmaster was renamed on October 7, 1884 for then
Lt. Governor James P. Hindman. Duke gave the land for
the town of Hindman, which was incorporated in 1886 |
| Lackey,
(Floyd and Knott) (Wayland). This recently
disincorporated city, with post office and C & O RR
station, lies at the jct of KY 7 and 80 and the mouth of
Jones Fork of Right Beaver Creek, 10 1/2 miles NW of
Hindman and 13 1/2 miles S of Prestonsburg. The post
office was established on March 2, 1880, with Adam
Martin, postmaster, and was named for the family of a
prominent Floyd county Businessman and public official,
Alexander Lackey, a Virginia born pioneer who settled at
the forks of the Beaver (now Martin) around 1808 |
| Larkslane,
(Handshoe) This hamlet is on KY 80 and Jones Fork of
Right Beaver Cree, 5 1/2 miles NE of Hindman. Its post
office was established and named by its first
postmaster, Elizabeth Slone, for her husband, Lark
Slone, and the lane that went past his home. That
section of KY 80 has also been locally called Stringtown
for the arrangement of houses along the highway. |
| Littcarr,
(Blackey) This hamlet with post office at the mouth of
Little Carr Fork of Carr Fork of the North Fork of the
Kentucky River, is centered at the jct of KY 140 and
160, 5 1/2 miles S of Hindman. The post office was
established on June 23, 1922, by Burnard Smith, whose
request to name it Little Carr for its location was
accepted by the postal authorities on conditions that it
be shortened to its present form. |
| Pippa Passes,
Hindman, Kite. This village with post office, home of
Alice Lloyd College, extends NE along the upper reaches
of Caney Creek for about a mile from a point 4 1/2 miles
E of Hindman. When Alice Geddes Lloyd of Boston
Established Caney Creek Junior College here in 1923,
among the groups from whom she solicited funds were the
Robert Browning Societies of New England. They agreed
also to build the local post office and are said to have
suggested its name for the poet's heroin, the devout and
simple mill girl Pippa, who, as she passes through her
town on New Year's Day, innocently touches the lives of
those who hear her songs of joy and fulfillment. The
Post Office Department's preference for one-word names
led to the post offices establishment on December 31,
1917, as Pippapass, a meaningless name retained until
July 1, 1955, when pressure brought about a return to
the intended spelling. Local people still call their
community Caney or Caney Creek as they always have. |
| Puncheon
, (Kite). This post office, 3/4 mile up Puncheon Branch
of the Right Fork of Beaver Creek, 10 miles ESE of
Hindman, was established on April 4, 1900, with John
Franklin, postmaster. It is said to have been named for
the puncheon flooring of the building which it was
located. However, if the stream bore this name before
1900, it may well have been named for a local industry,
the splitting of logs for the floors of early cabins. |
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Razorblade,
(Democrat). (Mayking) This hamlet with post office is
now located on KY 7 at the mouth of Lower Appletree on
Rockhouse Creek and 8 miles N of Whitesburg. According
to Arthur Dixon, a former County Judge, it was first
called Razorblade Branch of Rockhouse Creek, q mile
above the present site. A post office called Stick was
established in this vicinity on February 12, 1889, with
Elhanan King, postmaster, though the exact location is
uncertain. The post office was renamed Democrat on
October 31, 1902. In 1915 it was located at the mouth of
Big Branch of Rockhouse, but was later moved to its
present site. Though no one seems to know why the
Razorblade and Stick names were applied, everyone agrees
that Democrat was named for the one lone Democrat in a
staunchly Republican precinct, the postmaster himself.
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| Ritchie,
(Carrie) This hamlet with recently discontinued post
office is on the Clear Creek of Troublesome Creek and KY
721, 5 miles WSW of Hindman. The post office was
established on January 12, 1900, with Abbie Ritchie,
postmaster, and named for the large number of local
Ritchies, the descendants of pioneer of Crockett Ritchie |
| Sassafras,
(Vicco). This coal town with post office is on Carr fork
of the North Fork of the Kentucky River, 7 1.2 miles SSW
of Hindman. On March 27, 1879, Manton Cornett is said
to have established the post office under a large
sassafras tree at the mouth of Sassafras Creek, a branch
of Carr Fork. Around the turn of the century it was
moved 2 miles down the fork to its present site at the
mouth of Yellow Creek, and the community bearing its
name grew up around it. |
| Smithsboro,
(Blackey) The site of this extinct community on KY 15,
at the mouth of Smith Branch of Carr Fork of the North
Fork of the Kentucky River and 6 1/2 miles S of Hindman,
is now under Carr Fork Lake. Its recently discontinued
post office, established on October 15, 1902, with
George Francis, postmaster, was named for the brothers
Jeremiah and Thomas Smith, local landowning sons of
William and Millie (Combs) Smith, early Perry County
residents. |
| Softshell,
(Handshoe). This post office on Ky 1087 and Balls Fork
of Troublesome Cree, 4 miles NNE of Hindman, was
established on May 4, 1926, with Sarah Slone,
postmaster, and given the name popularly applied to the
Regular Baptists to distinguish them from the Hard Shell
or Primitive Baptists. |
| Stringtown,
(Handshoe) (Also called- Larkslane) This hamlet is on KY
80 and Jones Fork of Right Beaver Creek, 5 1/2 miles NE
of Hindman. Its post office was established and named
by its first postmaster, Elizabeth Slone, for her
husband, Lark Slone, and the lane that went past his
home. That section of KY 80 has also been locally
called Stringtown for the arrangement of houses along
the highway. |
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Vest,
This hamlet with post office is on KY 1087 and Balls
Fork of Troublesome Creek, 3 1/2 miles N of Hindman.
The post office was established on January 31, 1886,
with William Grigsby, postmaster, and named for the
postal inspector who had been sent to validate the need
for a post office and who stayed to assist in its
establishment. Nothing else is known about him.
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| Vicco,
This 6th class city with post office is on Ky 15 and
Carr Fork of the North Fork of the Kentucky River, 5 1/2
miles ESE of Hazard. Though there may have been a
settlement here prior to the establishment of the
Montgomery Creek Coal Company mines in the vicinity, it
was at this time that the town and its post office were
established as Montago, named for the company and the
creek, which joins Carr Fork at this point. The Montago
post office, which opened on March 1, 1921, with William
McKinley Stacy, postmaster, was renamed Vicco in 1923
for the Virginia Iron Coal and coke company which
dominated coal production in the area. |
| Wiscoal
(Vicco) This coal town with extinct post office and L &
N RR station is on Ky 1088 and Yellow Creek, & miles SSW
of Hindman. It was named for the Wisconsin Coal
Company, which had a mine and offices there. The
Wiscoal post office was established on May 22, 1929,
with Edward H. Griffith, postmaster, and closed when the
mines did. |
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