Kentucky Route 300

(Redirected from KY 300)

Kentucky Route 300 (KY 300) is a 16.6-mile-long (26.7 km) state highway in the U.S. state of Kentucky. The highway connects mostly rural areas of Boyle and Lincoln counties with Parksville, Junction City, and Stanford.

Kentucky Route 300 marker
Kentucky Route 300
Map
KY 300 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by KYTC
Length16.6 mi[1] (26.7 km)
Major junctions
West end KY 34 / KY 1822 in Parksville
Major intersections KY 37 in Junction City
US 127 in Junction City
KY 78 in Stanford
East end US 150 in Stanford
Location
CountryUnited States
StateKentucky
CountiesBoyle, Lincoln
Highway system
  • Kentucky State Highway System
KY 299 KY 301

Route description

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Boyle County

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KY 300 begins at an intersection with KY 34/KY 1822 (Lebanon Road) in Parksville, within Boyle County; however, only KY 34 is signed at this intersection. It travels to the east-southeast and leaves Parksville. It travels just north of Wilsonville. It curves to the east-northeast and enters Alum Springs, where it intersects the northern terminus of KY 3365 (Hogue Hollow Road). The highway curves to the southeast and begins a concurrency with KY 37 (Stewarts Lane). Almost immediately, they enter Junction City. They split, and KY 300 crosses over some railroad tracks of Norfolk Southern Railway. KY 300 then intersects U.S. Route 127 (US 127). It intersects the western terminus of KY 1273 (Hustonville Road). It turns right onto Hustonville Road, and travels to the south-southwest. At the intersection with the eastern terminus of York Lane and the western terminus of Short Acres Road, the highway leaves the city limits of Junction City. The highway then enters Lincoln County.[1]

Lincoln County

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KY 300 turns left onto Knob Lick Road and resumes its trek to the southeast and crosses over Knoblick Creek. It begins a curve to the south-southwest and crosses over the creek again. Then, the highway curves back to the southeast and crosses over Hanging Fork Creek. On the southeastern edge of Stanford, it intersects KY 78 (Hustonville Road). The two highways travel concurrently to the east and travel through Buffalo Springs Cemetery. They curve to the southeast and then back to the northeast. When they cross over St. Asaph Creek, they enter Stanford proper. They curve to the east-northeast and intersect the eastern terminus of KY 2319 (Helm Street). Almost immediately, they split. KY 300 travels to the north-northwest and meets its eastern terminus, an intersection with US 150 (Wilderness Road).[1]

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
BoyleParksville0.00.0   KY 34 / KY 1822 (Lebanon Road)Western terminus
Alum Springs3.25.1 
 
KY 3365 south (Hogue Hollow Road)
Northern terminus of KY 3365
5.18.2 
 
KY 37 east (Stewarts Lane)
Western end of KY 37 concurrency
Junction City5.79.2 
 
KY 37 west (White Oak Road)
Eastern end of KY 37 concurrency
6.410.3  US 127 – Liberty, Danville
6.710.8 
 
KY 1273 east (Hustonville Road)
Western terminus of KY 1273
LincolnStanford14.523.3 
 
KY 78 west (Hustonville Road)
Western end of KY 78 concurrency
15.324.6 
 
KY 2319 west (Helm Street)
Eastern terminus of KY 2319
15.324.6 
 
KY 78 east (West Main Street)
Eastern end of KY 78 concurrency
16.626.7  US 150 (Wilderness Road) – Somerset, DanvilleEastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Kentucky Route 300" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
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