Kyrock, Kentucky

Kyrock
Kyrock is located in Kentucky
Kyrock
Kyrock
Location within the state of Kentucky
Kyrock is located in the United States
Kyrock
Kyrock
Kyrock (the United States)
Coordinates: 37°15′48″N 86°15′24″W / 37.26333°N 86.25667°W / 37.26333; -86.25667
CountryUnited States
StateKentucky
CountyEdmonson
Time zoneUTC-6 (Central (CST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)
ZIP Code
42285
Area code(s)270 and 364
GNIS feature ID508410[1]

Kyrock is a ghost town in Edmonson County in south central Kentucky, United States.[1] The ghost town is located about 2.4 miles (3.9 km) east of Sweeden, or about 5 miles (8.0 km) north-northeast of the county seat of Brownsville.[2] It was once a referred to as a “company town” along the Nolin River during much of the first half of the 20th century, but the industrial town was disincorporated in 1966, about nine years after the closure of the company that created the town.[3][4][5]

Kyrock was one of several other central Edmonson County communities located near Mammoth Cave National Park.

History

Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company

Source:[6]

In 1918, the town was incorporated into a town that was built by the Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company, which the town's name, Kyrock, is derived from. The company was the successor of an earlier mining company, the Wadsworth Stone and Pavement Company, which had operated quarries in areas along the Green River near the town of Asphalt, about 6 miles (9.7 km) west of Brownsville from around 1900 until the plant relocated to its then-new location in 1918.[5] During the Kentucky Rock and Asphalt Company's heyday in the 1920s as Edmonson County's largest local business,[7] the company mined, processed, and shipped hundreds of tons of rock asphalt by means of steamboat transportation on both the Nolin and Green Rivers.[8] This was done to eventually pave roadways in areas where they were not previously served by minor or major roadways at the time. The company itself began operations in 1917 after a merger between two companies involved in rock mining and paving. Eight new quarries and a processing facility, which ended up becoming a vital part of the county's history, opened at the site that would become part of the town, which was incorporated in 1918. The material generated by the company, made of silica sand, was the first material ever laid for the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.[3][9] The asphalt rock from Kyrock was also used to pave the streets of some of the world's major cities such as Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Havana, Cuba.[10] In 1925, the company had national media exposure when some of its asphalt mine workers were sent to the Sand Cave, located within the present-day Mammoth Cave National Park just northwest of the Barren County community of Highland Springs, to aid in the rescue of the late cave explorer Floyd Collins when he fell victim of entrapment due to fallen boulders that sealed him in the cave.[11]

The company stayed open for a total of forty years, mostly due to its heavy promotions and advertising in many newspapers and trade publications, not only becoming the state's most successful asphalt mine during that period, but also the world's largest producer of natural rock asphalt.[12] Higher costs to pave with asphalt resulted in the end of the company with the advent of petroleum-based asphalt, which was a lower-cost method of paving. As a result of stiffened competition with other asphalt companies and higher shipping costs, Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company was shut down in 1957.[3][5][13][14]

The town itself was unincorporated at some point in 1966.[15] Aside from the original water tower, the only remnants of the town in the present day is a concrete foundation for a swinging footbridge over Pigeon Creek.[16]

The town itself consisted of about 150 residences, and the company also constructed an elementary and high school building, a commissary, a Methodist church, two hotels, a commissary,[17] and a small baseball stadium.[5][12] In addition, the town was divided into three sections, Kyrock was the main section, Ridgedale and Woodside were the names of the other two segments.[5]

Post office

Kyrock's post office operated from 1920 to 1955.[18]

Education

Kyrock High School, which was established sometime in the 1920s, was at one point the largest school in the county.[19] Kyrock High School joined the county's other rural high schools to merge with Brownsville High School in 1959 to form the Edmonson County High School in Brownsville. Since the fall semester of 1959, Kyrock School is the sole educational institution in the area, housing elementary students from the northern and northeastern areas of the county; it became the sole elementary institution for all of northern Edmonson County in 1979 following the closure of Sunfish Elementary. Kyrock Junior High School housed grades 1-8 until 1981, when Kyrock Junior High was shut down, and consolidated with Chalybeate Elementary School to form the Edmonson County Middle School in Brownsville.[20] That year also saw the establishment of Kyrock Elementary, which continued to house kindergarten through fifth grade, but then dropping fifth grade in 2004 with the opening of the Edmonson County Fifth/Sixth Grade Center. This was done in order to reinstate preschool classes in the county's two present-day elementary schools.

Transportation

In addition to the Nolin River, Kyrock was also served with a ferry that connected the town to Whistle Mountain, and eventually to areas along what is now KY 728 into the northeastern portion of the county.[2] Ferry service was discontinued around 1958 before the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers impounded Nolin River and completing Nolin River Dam more than a mile north of Kyrock in 1963. State Highway 65 (KY 65; now signed as KY 259), which connected Kyrock to other communities and areas of the county including Brownsville, was the primary highway in and out of the general area. The main street in and out of the town of Kyrock, now Kyrock Road (CR-1051), led 2.4 miles (3.9 km) west to KY 65 in Sweeden.[2][21]

Today, Kyrock is nothing more than an rural, unincorporated community along a county-maintained road off KY 259 near Sweeden. Kyrock Road runs from KY 259 in Sweeden to KY 728 just west of Nolin Lake.[22]

Historical legacy

The legacy of Kyrock still goes strong long after the town was disincorporated in the late 1950s. A local volunteer fire department, the local elementary school, and more recently, a nearby diner bears the Kyrock name in the present day. The Kyrock Missionary Baptist Church still exists, but in a newer building along KY 259,[23] and has since been renamed as Sweeden Missionary Baptist Church. In 2014, the Kentucky Historical Society placed a historical marker on Kyrock in front of Kyrock Elementary School.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b c U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Kyrock, Kentucky
  2. ^ a b c Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (1937). Edmonson County Route Planning Map (PDF) (Map). 1:62500. Frankfort: Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Story, Justin (September 2016). "Man publishing Kyrock History in Photos". Bowling Green Daily News. Archived from the original on September 14, 2022. Retrieved September 14, 2022.
  4. ^ Elmore, Ernie (July 20, 2016). Kyrock a Pictorial History. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 978-1534881259.
  5. ^ a b c d e Demunbrun, R.A. (June 16, 1957). "Kyrock to Liquidate: Stockholders vote to close out Edmonson industry". Park City Daily News. pp. 1, 8 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ Kyrock. Wolf0r. March 8, 2009 – via YouTube.
  7. ^ Bledsoe, Lynn (September 7, 2022). "95 Years". Edmonson News. Brownsville, Kentucky. pp. 1–2.
  8. ^ Osiniki, Bill (February 28, 1981). "Edmonson residents recall once-thriving asphalt town". The Courier-Journal. Louisville, Kentucky. pp. B1, B3.
  9. ^ Mudd, Melissa (September 28, 2016). "Kyrock history at its finest". Edmonson News.
  10. ^ Minor, Robyn L. (July 3, 2008). "Kyrock may be on a roll". Bowling Green Daily News. Retrieved September 25, 2018.
  11. ^ "Floyd Collins Dead 24 Hours When Found By Rescuers". Mount Airy, North Carolina: The Mount Airy News. February 19, 1925. p. 1 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ a b c Kentucky Historical Society (May 23, 2014). Kyrock (Kentucky Historical Marker). Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Retrieved June 11, 2023.{{cite sign}}: CS1 maint: year (link)
  13. ^ Schulman, Sol (May 3, 1957). "Kentucky Rock Asphalt Company Shut Down First Season In 40 Years". The Courier-Journal.
  14. ^ Skinner, Bill (August 11, 1957). "Liquidation of Kentucky Rock is Big Blow to Edmonson Community". Park City Daily News. p. 12 – via Google Books.
  15. ^ "Homage to Kyrock". Archived from the original on July 7, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  16. ^ Butler, Telia (February 3, 2022). "Throwback Thursday – The ghost town of Kyrock, the boomtown that once was". WNKY. Archived from the original on September 14, 2022. Retrieved September 14, 2022.
  17. ^ "Three Juveniles Held In Edmonson Break-In". Park City Daily News. December 1, 1954. p. 4 – via Google Books.
  18. ^ "Postal History Search Results".
  19. ^ "Kyrock School is Largest in Entire County". The Edmonson County Newspaper. September 29, 1927. p. 1.
  20. ^ Koenig, Bill (June 2, 1981). "Edmonson school dispute could turn to bitterness". Park City Daily News. p. 5A – via Google Books.
  21. ^ Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (1958). Edmonson County Route Planning Map (PDF) (Map). 1:62500. Frankfort: Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
  22. ^ DeLorme (2010). Kentucky Atlas & Gazetteer (Map). 1:150000. Yarmouth, ME: DeLorme. p. 64. § C4. ISBN 0-89933-340-0.
  23. ^ Edmonson County Church Directory. Edmonson News. June 7, 2023. page 6.