Spottsville, Kentucky
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Spottsville, Kentucky is a tiny town in Henderson County, in Western Kentucky, with a population of about 2,400 people.
US Highway 60 cuts through Spottsville. The Green River runs through Spottsville, and the Green River Lock & Dam is located in the city. If you travel east through Spottsville, you can see the Lock to your right when you cross the Green River bridge; to your left, you can see a turning bridge for trains (it turns when a barge comes through).
There are no stores in Spottsville, just one church (most Spottsville church goers attend outside of the city), and one school, which serves all of the Eastern part of Henderson County (including Beals, Baskett, and Reed). Spottsville school provided Henderson County's first school bus service in 1920. The first Spottsville school burned down in March of 1932.
Spottsville was named for Colonel Spotts. The area was visited by the Spanish explorer, Hernando de Soto, in 1541. His army was attacked near the Ohio River by Indians of a tribe or tribes called variously the Kashinampo, the Quizqui, and the Chiska.
From 1904 to 1911 as many as 116 men of the Green River Coal Company mined coal in Spottsville. Then the Pittsburg Coal Company operated a 75-man coal camp in Spottsville from 1911 to 1924.
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