Danville, Kentucky Danville, Kentucky Downtown Danville Downtown Danville Location of Danville, Kentucky Danville is a home rule-class town/city in Boyle County, Kentucky, in the United States.

It is the seat of its county. The populace was 16,690 at the 2015 Census. Danville is the principal town/city of the Danville Micropolitan Statistical Area, which includes all of Boyle and Lincoln counties.

In 2001, Danville received a Great American Main Street Award from the National Trust for Historic Preservation. In 2011, Money periodical placed Danville as the fourth-best place to retire in the United States. Danville has recently been twice chosen to host U.S.

5.5 Films shot in Danville Within Kentucky, Danville is called the "City of Firsts": Boyle County Courthouse in Danville Danville was part of the Great Settlement Area around Harrod's Fort (present-day Harrodsburg), which was first settled in 1774.

The town/city was titled for Daniel. The Virginia council officially established Danville on December 4, 1787. Between 1784 and 1792, ten conventions were held in Danville to petition for better governance and ultimately to secure independence from Virginia.

In 1786 the Danville Political Club was organized.

Transylvania University was established in Danville in 1783.

Danville Theological Seminary was established in 1853; in 1901 it became part of the Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary.

It became Caldwell Female College in 1876, Caldwell College in 1904, Kentucky College for Women in 1913, and consolidated into Centre College in 1926. In November 1806, Meriwether Lewis, co-leader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, visited Danville while traveling the Wilderness Road to Washington, D.C., to report on the expedition, which had returned from the Pacific Coast.

In December 1806, William Clark visited his nephews in school in Danville before following Lewis to Washington. The first school in Danville for black kids was established around 1840 by Willis Russell, an emancipated slave of Robert Craddock, a Revolutionary War veteran.

Craddock deeded a log home in Danville to Russell.

In 1842, Boyle County was formed from southern Mercer County and northern Lincoln County.

Danville became its county seat. In 1850, Danville and Boyle County backed assembly of the Lexington and Danville Railroad.

(Roebling lived in Danville amid the construction.) Even with the barns not being instead of to Danville, the county still owed the business $150,000.

Boyle County's courthouse was destroyed; its replacement was instead of in 1862. After the Union won the Battle of Perryville in the Civil War on October 8, 1862, it appropriated many Danville buildings, including the courthouse, for use as hospitals.

In 1775, Archibald Mc - Neill planted Kentucky's first recorded hemp crop at Clark's Run Creek near Danville.

By 1889 Boyle County was one of the ten Kentucky counties which together produced more than 90% of the US yield.

From the turn of the 20th century through the 1960s, Danville was home to a grow black company sector positioned on and around 2nd Street on the edge of what is now Constitution Square Historic Site.

On October 5, 2000, Dick Cheney and Senator Joe Lieberman, candidates for Vice President of the United States, debated at Centre College amid the 2000 presidential election. On October 11, 2012, Centre College again hosted the Vice-Presidential debate, this time between Vice President Joe Biden and Wisconsin Representative Paul Ryan. Danville is positioned in easterly Boyle County at 37 38 44 N 84 46 11 W.

Danville, Kentucky Water Tower viewed from the north.

Blue Grass Community Action Partnership provides Dan - Tran bus service inside Danville. BGCAP also joins Danville with Lexington, Stanford, Junction City, and Lancaster. Route 127 bisects Danville northwest (Harrodsburg) to south (Liberty).

Route 150 bisects Danville west (Perryville, Springfield) to southeast (Stanford).

Route 150 also bypass Danville on the west and south.

Elongated circle 33.svg Kentucky Route 33 enters Danville from north (Burgin, Versailles).

Elongated circle 34.svg Kentucky Route 34 joins Danville northeast to U.S.

Elongated circle 52.svg Kentucky Route 52 joins Danville east to Lancaster.

Stuart Powell Field (DVK), 3 miles (5 km) from downtown, serves as Danville's general aviation airport.

Norfolk Southern Railway operates a freight rail yard in Danville.

Its Louisville-Chattanooga line intersects with its Cincinnati-Chattanooga line just north of Danville.

Climate data for Danville, Kentucky FBI crime statistics for 2009 list the crime rate (per 100,000 population) for Danville as follows: Crime Danville Kentucky United States Danville Schools operates three elementary schools, one middle school, and Danville High School for the town/city of Danville.

Boyle County Schools operates three elementary schools, one middle school, and Boyle County High School for portions of Danville and the remainder of Boyle County.

Kentucky School for the Deaf provides education to Kentucky's deaf and hard-of-hearing kids from elementary through high school.

Two private schools operate in Danville: Danville Christian Academy Danville Montessori School Centre College, a nationally recognized liberal arts college, is positioned in Danville.

Four other universities and universities have campuses in Danville: On March 2, 2010, Danville voted to go "wet" (to permit sale of packaged alcohol and sale of alcohol by the drink without restriction by size of premises). Danville National Cemetery contains Union soldiers who died amid the Battle of Perryville.

Four venues for theatrical productions live in Danville.

Pioneer Playhouse is the earliest outside theater in Kentucky, and the first theater officially designated as Kentucky's state theater.

Gravely Hall Performing Arts Center is positioned in Danville High School and is home to the performing arts in the Danville Schools system. The Boyle County Fair (June) is a fun-filled county fair. Kentucky's Governor's School for the Arts (July) at Center College provides an educational springboard for young artists from around the state. Perryville Battle Reenactment (October) is an authentic reliving of one of Kentucky's most momentous Civil War battles. Danville is a primary exchange point. The Advocate-Messenger, a daily (except Saturday) newspaper, serves Danville and encircling counties.

WDKY-TV was licensed to Danville but its facilities are positioned in Lexington.

Danville has one sister city, as designated by Sister Cities International: The following are highly noted citizens from Danville.

For a more complete list see List of citizens from Danville, Kentucky.

Representative; Boyle County, Kentucky, was titled after him Senator from Kentucky, Vice President of the United States, U.S.

Isaac Shelby (1750 1826), first and fifth governor of Kentucky, soldier in Lord Dunmore's War, the American Revolutionary War, and the War of 1812 Junction City, Kentucky, a close-by city originally known as Danville Junction and South Danville "Perros wins tight race for Danville mayor".

"Summary and Reference Guide to House Bill 331 City Classification Reform" (PDF).

"Danville Demographics - Get Current Enumeration Data for Danville, KY".

"Centre College in Danville chosen for 2012 vice presidential debate".

"Danville Kentucky: History".

City of Danville.

"Danville Kentucky".

Newspaper Story of a Town: A History of Danville Kentucky.

Danville, Kentucky: The Advocate Messenger.

"Kentucky Historical Marker Database".

"Boyle Landmark Trust, Willis Russell House" Fackler, Calvin M., Early Days in Danville, Louisville: Standard Printing Co., 1941 "Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Danville city, Kentucky".

"Danville bus service revved for take-off".

"Monthly Averages for Danville KY".

"Crime in the United States: Offenses Known to Law Enforcement".

"Danville Christian Academy".

"Danville Montessori School".

"Danville goes wet".

"Central Kentucky Wildlife Refuge".

"Danville High School: Gravely Hall".

"Kentucky State BBQ Festival".

"The Bourbon Chase: A 200-mile relay race along the Kentucky Bourbon Trail".

"Danville wins 'Most Spirited' award for Bourbon Chase participation".

"Danville, Carrickfergus seal bond as 'twin' cities".

"Danville Boyle County Community Profile: Business and Industry".

"Danville Was the First Post Office Established in Kentucky and in the Territory Beyond the Alleghenies".

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Danville, Kentucky.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Danville, Kentucky.

City of Danville official website Danville, Boyle County Chamber of Commerce Downtown Danville: The Heart of Danville Main Street Program Municipalities and communities of Boyle County, Kentucky, United States County seats in Kentucky 50 most crowded cities of Kentucky

Categories:
Cities in Boyle County, Kentucky - Danville, Kentucky - Cities in Kentucky - Former colonial and territorial capitals in the United States - County seats in Kentucky - Danville, Kentucky micropolitan region - 1787 establishments in Virginia