Bengal, Kentucky

Coordinates: 37°21′33″N 85°27′26″W / 37.35917°N 85.45722°W / 37.35917; -85.45722
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Bengal
UTC-4 (EDT)
GNIS feature ID507494

Bengal is an

Route 323.[1] Its elevation is 722 feet (220 m).[2]

It may have been named after an early street in

Calcutta via Bengal, who first settled in Paris, Kentucky.[3]

The first settlers of Campbellsville and this part of the county arrived after the American Revolutionary War. Many migrants used the Cumberland Gap to travel through the Appalachians. About 1802 Elias Barbee and Revolutionary War veterans James and Jonathan Cowherd established a school in the Bengal area, as churches were also being founded. Barbee served as a general during the War of 1812. He and numerous other migrants to what became Taylor County were from Pennsylvania; while others were from Virginia, North Carolina, and Maryland.[4]

In 1911 the community was provided service by the Bengal Telephone Company.[5]

References

  1. ^ Rand McNally. The Road Atlas '06. Chicago: Rand McNally, 2006, p. 42.
  2. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Bengal, Kentucky, Geographic Names Information System, 1979-09-20. Accessed 2007-12-31.
  3. ^ William Henry Perrin, J. H. Battle, G. C. Kniffin, Kentucky: A History of the State, Embracing a Concise Account of the Origin and Development of the Virginia Colony, Its Expansion Westward, and the Settlement of the Frontier Beyond the Alleghanies : the Erection of Kentucky as an Independent State, and Its Subsequent Development, Adair County (Ky.): F. A. Battey, 1887, pp. 287, 294
  4. ^ "Taylor County", The Encyclopedia of Kentucky, ed. John E. Kleber, University Press of Kentucky, 2015, p. 871
  5. ^ Biennial Report, Frankfort, Kentucky: Auditor of Public Accounts, The State, 1911, p. 472