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Contact Information
Debbie Jones Click here for the 2010 HOLIDAY SCHEDULE Read about Boyd County.
The Boyd County population was recorded at 49,752 during the 2000 national
census.
In 1860, Boyd County was created from parts of Greenup, Carter, and Lawrence
counties. It was named in honor of Linn Boyd who had served as U.S. Congressman
as a representative of western Kentucky.
Born in Nashville, Tennessee on November 22, 1800, he moved to the Jackson
Purchase on a farm in Calloway County in 1826. He represented Calloway County in
1828-29 in the Kentucky legislature at the same time his father, Abraham Boyd,
represented Trigg County. He was elected to the U.S. Congress and served 1835-37
until he was unseated by the Whigs.
Democrats regained control of his district and Boyd served continuously in
the U. S. House of Representatives from 1835-1855. He helped Henry Clay with the
Compromise of 1850 and was Speaker of the House from 1851-55. He was a strong
supporter of Andrew Jackson and states rights, but insisted on preserving the
Union. He ran for Vice President in 1856 but was defeated. In 1859, he was
elected lieutenant governor of Kentucky but did not live to take the office. He
died December 17, 1859 and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery at Paducah.
Taken from
BoydCountyKY.net
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