PADUCAH


Meaning of PADUCAH in English

city, seat of McCracken county, southwestern Kentucky, U.S., at the confluence of the Ohio (there bridged to Brookport, Ill.) and Tennessee rivers. The site, known as Pekin, was part of a grant to George Rogers Clark, soldier and frontiersman. At his death his brother William, who was coleader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, received the land, laid out the town in 1827, and named it for Paduke, a Chickasaw Indian chief who lived in the vicinity. During the American Civil War, because of its strategic river facilities, the city was occupied by Union forces under General Ulysses S. Grant and was raided by General Nathan B. Forrest, a Confederate cavalry leader. Paducah is now an important market for tobacco, timber, strawberries, corn, livestock, and coal. Located in one of the world's greatest power-generating areas, its growth has been greatly stimulated by the Tennessee Valley Authority and Atomic Energy Commission (now U.S. Department of Energy) projects. Recreational facilities are provided by nearby Kentucky Lake and Kentucky Dam Village State Park. Paducah Community College was founded in 1932. Inc. city, 1856. Pop. (1990) 27,256.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.