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Paducah, originally known as Pekin, was settled around 1815. Settlers were attracted to the community due to its location at the confluence of the Ohio and Tennessee Rivers. The community was inhabited by a mix of Native Americans and Europeans who lived harmoniously, trading goods and services.
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Early history. Paducah was first settled as "Pekin" around 1821 by European Americans James and William Pore. The town was laid out by explorer and surveyor ...
Settled in 1821, it was platted in 1827 by General William Clark, incorporated in 1830, and made McCracken county seat in 1832. During Civil War, Confederates ...
Founded in 1827, Paducah, Kentucky's significant American heritage is reflected and preserved in architecture, museums and more. Learn more about local ...
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When a new county was formed in January 1825, it was named McCracken County in his honor. Paducah is the county seat. The marker reads: “McCracken county seat, ...
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Founded in 1827 by William Clark of Lewis & Clark fame, Paducah's origins and prosperity can be attributed to its strategic location at the confluence of the ...
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Paducah, originally known as Pekin, was settled around 1815. Settlers were attracted to the area because of its location at the confluence of the Ohio and ...
Kentucky. County · McCracken. Settled, c. 1821. Established, 1830. Incorporated, 1838. Named for, the Chickasaw Tribe. Government. • Type, Council-Manager.
William Clark, of Lewis and Clark expedition fame, founded Paducah (population 26000) in 1827, the only major city in the Commonwealth of Kentucky with an ...
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After the railroad was built in Paducah in the 1850s, a growing number of Jewish immigrants settled in the town. A handful of Jews who had been living in ...