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  1. Owensboro was named an All-America City in 2013. [24] Owensboro placed fourth on Area Development's Top 20 Southern Cities, with a 9th-place ranking for its "recession busting factors" among the Top 25 Small Cities. [25]

  2. Owensboro’s first settler was William Smeathers, popularly known as Bill Smothers, who in 1797 built a cabin on the south bank of the Ohio River. Original settlers arrived in flatboats coming from the northeast, the flatboats naturally drifting to the south side of the riverbank with the swift river currents.

  3. Sep 5, 2024 · The town, laid out in 1816, was named Owensborough (later Owensboro) to honour Colonel Abraham Owen, a veteran of early Kentucky wars. During the American Civil War , it was the site of the Union Camp Silas B. Miller.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Owensboro, but the first in Kentucky and believed to be the first in the West. The first passenger railroad was not built until 1871. It was a branch of the L. & N. When the locomotive, which was named for Joe Daviess, arrived by boat, all of Owensboro was at the wharf to welcome it, and it was a great day in the town.

  5. Oct 17, 2016 · The name was given because of the deep yellow color of the river bank, composed of yellow clay, extending about six miles along the river, and from ten to twenty feet above the highest floods in the Ohio. The site was selected as the County seat in 1815, by Commissioners appointed by the first County Court, held in April of that year.

  6. From its early Native American roots to its modern-day preservation efforts, Owensboro offers a fascinating glimpse into the past. Discover the pioneering families who settled here, the strategic importance of the city during the Civil War, and the industrial growth that shaped its economy.

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  8. Jan 11, 2019 · Here's the first in a series of brief little recaps of important moments in Owensboro's history. All told within 30 seconds!

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