Talk:Kentuck Knob: Difference between revisions

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imported>Roger A. Lohmann
imported>Roger A. Lohmann
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: Wikipedia claims (without giving a source) that "The name Kentuck Knob is credited to the late eighteenth-century settler David Askins, who intended to move from Western Pennsylvania to Kentucky, but then reconsidered and remained at this very property, naming his tract of land Little Kentuck. It subsequently became known the Kentuck District of Stewart Township, one of the county's several rural mountainous townships. Ever since the summit of the property has been called Kentuck Knob." This sounds pretty plausible, but I didn't include that information here because I can't independently confirm it (yet). It may be historically accurate or just a local folktale.
: Wikipedia claims (without giving a source) that "The name Kentuck Knob is credited to the late eighteenth-century settler David Askins, who intended to move from Western Pennsylvania to Kentucky, but then reconsidered and remained at this very property, naming his tract of land Little Kentuck. It subsequently became known the Kentuck District of Stewart Township, one of the county's several rural mountainous townships. Ever since the summit of the property has been called Kentuck Knob." This sounds pretty plausible, but I didn't include that information here because I can't independently confirm it (yet). It may be historically accurate or just a local folktale.
::[[User:Roger A. Lohmann|Roger A. Lohmann]] 21:03, 25 July 2010 (UTC)
::[[User:Roger A. Lohmann|Roger A. Lohmann]] 21:03, 25 July 2010 (UTC)
::P.S.: To my knowledge, William Penn never went exploring in Kentucky, so if there is a Penn's Knob, it would probably be named for some one else with that surname! ;-) In this part of the country (and further west), combining a surname and a geological feature were actually very common etymological practices.

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 Definition Kentuck Knob, also known as the Hagen House is a one story Usonian house designed by noted American architect Frank Lloyd Wright near Chalk Hill, in Fayette County Pennsylvania. [d] [e]
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Must be some fascinating etymology!

Silly me -- I assumed Kentuck Knob would be in Kentucky. How did the name come about? Is there a Penn's Knob in Kentucky? :-) Does Knob have some non-obvious regional connotation? (There's some humor here, but I'd really like to know) Howard C. Berkowitz 20:46, 25 July 2010 (UTC)

Wikipedia claims (without giving a source) that "The name Kentuck Knob is credited to the late eighteenth-century settler David Askins, who intended to move from Western Pennsylvania to Kentucky, but then reconsidered and remained at this very property, naming his tract of land Little Kentuck. It subsequently became known the Kentuck District of Stewart Township, one of the county's several rural mountainous townships. Ever since the summit of the property has been called Kentuck Knob." This sounds pretty plausible, but I didn't include that information here because I can't independently confirm it (yet). It may be historically accurate or just a local folktale.
Roger A. Lohmann 21:03, 25 July 2010 (UTC)
P.S.: To my knowledge, William Penn never went exploring in Kentucky, so if there is a Penn's Knob, it would probably be named for some one else with that surname! ;-) In this part of the country (and further west), combining a surname and a geological feature were actually very common etymological practices.