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Where Did Kentucky Get Its Name & Nickname?

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Anonymous answered
Kentucky got its name from the Wyandot indian name for plain
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Anonymous answered
Kentucky got the Bluegrass State as a nickname because it has beautiful blue grass.
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Anonymous answered
It got it's nick name because they play blugrass music
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Anonymous answered
It has a lot of Bluegrass and it came from the Wyandot word Ken-tah-ten which means plain or plains.
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Roberta answered
FROM :Http://www.netstate.com/states/intro/ky_intro.htm
Kentucky comes from the Wyandot Indian name for "plain" in reference to the central plains of the state.
The Bluegrass State: This common nickname for the Kentucky is given because of the vast expanses of Bluegrass across parts of the Commonwealth.  Bluegrass is not really blue.  It's green.  In the spring, however, when seen from a distance, the blue-purple buds of Bluegrass lend a bluish tint to the landscape.
other nickname histories:
The Hemp State: Hemp was one of the two most notable crops of Kentucky. This nickname originated based on the importance of this crop to the Commonwealth.
The Tobacco State: Tobacco, the other notable Kentucky crop is the source of this nickname.  At one time, about 2/3 of the national Tobacco crop was produced in Kentucky.
The Corn-cracker State: This nickname may have originated as a reference to the poorer people living in the mountainous regions of the Commonwealth.  Another theory has it that this nickname is derived from a crane that was common in Kentucky.  This crane was said to make a "craking" sound and was called a Corn-crake.  Some have proposed that "Corn-cracker" is a corruption of "Corn-crake."
The Dark and Bloody Ground State: This nickname refers to the Indian battles, between Creek, Shawnee, Chickasaw, Cherokee and other tribes, that took place along the Cumberland River in Kentucky and Tennessee. Some have said that the land was described in this way to Daniel Boone by an Indian Chief. According to The Kentucky Blue Book, "Dragging Canoe, a young Cherokee chief opposed to selling ancestral hunting grounds, warned the whites that they were purchasing a "dark and bloody ground."

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