Lincoln County, Kentucky: Historical Timeline

From frontier forts to one of Kentucky's nine original counties — "The Land of Firsts"

1775

Benjamin Logan establishes Logan's Fort (also called St. Asaph) near present-day Stanford — one of the earliest permanent settlements in Kentucky. This fortified station played a key role in pioneer defense and early governance.

1776

Virginia creates Kentucky County (encompassing future Kentucky). Logan's Fort becomes a hub for early settlers.

1779

Virginia Land Commission opens its first office at Logan's Station (St. Asaphs), aiding land claims in the region.

1780 (June/May)

Lincoln County is officially established by the Virginia General Assembly from Kentucky County, Virginia. One of the three original counties (with Fayette and Jefferson) that form the basis of future Kentucky. Named for Revolutionary War General Benjamin Lincoln.

1781

Lincoln County Court moves to Logan's Station; some records from this period survive as the oldest in the state.

1783

First courthouse in Kentucky built in what becomes Buffalo Springs area (early site in the county).

1785–1786

County partitioned: parts become Mercer and Madison counties. Stanford is named and established as the permanent county seat (land donated by Benjamin Logan).

1792

Kentucky achieves statehood (June 1). Lincoln County becomes one of the original nine counties of the Commonwealth. Isaac Shelby (with ties to the region) becomes Kentucky's first governor.

Late 1700s–Early 1800s

County gains fame for "firsts": William Whitley's circular race track (America's first, ~1788); early brick house; first bank west of the Alleghenies; and location along the Wilderness Road migration route.

1832 / 1909

Courthouses built/replaced in Stanford (current one dates to 1909 on historic site donated by Benjamin Logan).

1860s (Civil War)

County sees activity, including Confederate encampments near the old courthouse site and raids (e.g., John Hunt Morgan's cavalry actions in the region).

1880s–1900s

Crab Orchard Springs becomes a noted hydrotherapy resort. Swiss-German community settles at Ottenheim. Sophia Alcorn (resident) invents the Tadoma method for deaf-blind communication.

Present Day

Lincoln County (pop. ~24,000 as of 2020) preserves its heritage through sites like Logan's Fort Park, historic markers, the courthouse, and tourism focused on pioneer and early Kentucky history.

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