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Rabbit Hash Historic General Store – Kentucky

Rabbit Hash Historic General Store – Kentucky

Rabbit Hash General Store - Boone County - Kentucky

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The Rabbit Hash General store bills itself as the best preserved country store in the state of Kentucky. Located in Boone County, it takes its name from the famous meal that the town was known for by steamboats that stopped along the shores of the Ohio River.

The Rabbit Hash Historic District was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 4, 2003. It includes the store and a number of other nearby buildings.

One amusing anecdote about the town is its recent tradition of electing dogs as the official mayor. Beginning in 1998, with the election of Goofy Borneman-Calhoun, the tradition continues to this day. More than 22,000 people voted in the most recent election in 2020.

Mail Pouch Chew Tobacco Barn – Indiana

Mail Pouch Tobacco Barn - Jasper - Indiana

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The Mail Pouch Tobacco Barn, was a product of an advertising campaign conducted by the West Virginia Mail Pouch Chewing Tobacco Company (Bloch Brothers Tobacco Company), from 1891 to 1992. While barn owners were paid a small fee for the advertisements, the most valuable aspect of the arrangement was the fresh coat of paint their barns received every few years, that helped preserve the wood most barns of the time were constructed from. Most Mail Pouch barns were painted either red or black, with white and yellow writing. At the height of the advertising campaign in the 1960s, more than 20,000 barns, spread across 22 states displayed the Mail Pouch Tobacco ad.

The majority of what remains of these painted barns can be located in Indiana and Ohio.

Bean Blossom Bridge – Brown County – Indiana

Bean Blossom Covered Bridge – Brown County – Indiana

Bean Blossom Covered Bridge - Brown County - Nashville - Indiana

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Covered bridges are timber-truss bridges consisting of a roof, decking, and siding and are often painted red, or white. More than 14,000 covered bridges were built in the United States, mostly between the years 1825-1875. Many have since been replaced with more robust steel bridges that can handle heavier vehicles and more traffic, and last longer with less upkeep. Today, roughly 750 remain in the United States, mostly in rural areas of the Eastern US. Good places to spot them include; Indiana (98), Ohio (54), and Pennsylvania (219).

Brown County has at least two covered bridges, the other one being the two lane Ramp Creek Covered Bridge at the northern entrance to Brown County State Park. The park is the state’s largest, and covers more than 15,000 acres. Its particularly popular in the fall when the leaves change color in October.

The towns Nashville, Story and Gnaw Bone are worth checking out if you are in the area. Nashville is popular with artists, shoppers, and tourists wanting to get out in the woods for a weekend. Story, a small hamlet tucked away at the southern end of the park, is known for its history, and famous inn. As for Gnaw Bone, well I just find the rumors of its origins kind of funny. Supposedly the town derives its name from the French city of “Narbonne”. And for the English settlers who migrated to the area after the French first visited the region, Gnaw Bone was how the original name sounded to them, and it stuck. How true it is, I have no idea. But I have come across other examples of French-named cities in Indiana and Kentucky whose pronunciation has been anglicized. Such as Vincennes, IN, and Versailles, KY.