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J.M. Aylor House (Hebron, Ky.)
Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Hollis Farm (Boone County, Ky.)
Floor Plan: Bungalow
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Hafer Farm (Hebron, Ky.)
Historic Status: Demolished
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Garnett-Krutcher House (Hebron, Ky.)
Floor Plan: L-Plan
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Dr. Nunley House (Boone County, Ky.)
Floor Plan: Unknown
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Cave Johnson House (North Bend, Ky.)
Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Alonzo Gaines House (Hebron, Ky.)
Floor Plan: Side Passage
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Point Pleasant Church of Christ Building (Hebron, Ky.)
Denomination: Church of Christ
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Hebron Gospel Fellowship Building (Hebron, Ky.)
Denomination: Non-Denominational
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Hebron Church of Christ Building (Boone County, Ky.)
Denomination: Non-Denominational
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Hebron Baptist Church Building (Hebron, Ky.)
Denomination: Baptist
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Faith Independent Baptist Church Building (Hebron, Ky.)
Denomination: Baptist
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Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Building (Hebron, Ky.)
Denomination: Mormon
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Bullittsville Christian Church Building (Bullittsville, Ky.)
Denomination: Christian
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Hebron Lutheran Church Building (Hebron, Ky.)
"Hebron Lutheran was organized in 1854 by sixteen German immigrant families who were originally members of Hopeful Lutheran Church near Florence – one of the oldest Lutheran congregations west of the Alleghenies.
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Point Pleasant Christian Church Building (Hebron, Ky.)
Point Pleasant Church began meeting at the old Point Pleasant Schoolhouse near Constance, under the leadership of Walter Scott in 1834. The first meetings were over a two week span, with initial membership of only two believers. Mr. Scott tried again in 1839, and was able to attract a much larger group of believers, numbering more than sixty. Officers were elected, and plans were put into place for a permanent home. The Trustees of Point Pleasant acquired an acre of land from Joseph Brown for one dollar in 1841, and officially hired the first minister, William Masters, for $12 per annum.
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Sand Run Baptist Church Building (Francisville, Ky.)
Part of the Francisville community near Hebron, the Sand Run Baptist Church has had a long history within the county. The church and it's adjoining cemetery are still active today. Following is an excerpt from the History of Sand Run Baptist Church, Boone County, Kentucky by Robert E. Kirtley, 1876: “Sand Run Church was constituted on the 20th of March, 1819, with seventy-eight members, fifty-five white and twenty-three colored […] During the early history of this young church, her discipline both formative and corrective, was most excellent. She sought out and brought into active exercise the gifts of her members. Men of business capacity were appointed to attend to business. Men that could sing were called on to exercise their gifts. Men that could talk to edification and comfort were encouraged in that work.”