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This property is
currently managed as a Non-for-Profit to encourage:
Rural Preservation
Education
Agritourism
Economical Development
efforts of this
beautiful region.
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Breck's

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Historical of the area where Heavenly View Farm Inn:
Maps:

Howard's Mill
Howard's Mill is in the near vicinity of
Morgan's Station, a block house rendezvous built by the first settlers as
protection against Indian forays. It was the only one in what is now Montgomery
County, and was, in April 1793 attacked by Wyandotte Indians on their last
invasion of Kentucky, one of the last to occur in that part of the state. The
Indians surprised and took the fort, carrying away a number of women and
children, some of whom were killed, but some were returned after the peace of
1795. That was before Mt. Sterling was settled. Beside the strategic location of
Morgan's Station, Howard's Mill is on the road from Mt. Sterling to Olympia
Springs, long a noted watering place resort. It was near also the Forge Iron
Works on Slate Creek, where iron ores were smelted and made into cannon balls
that served General Jackson at New Orleans. In those times the Howards Mill
settlement was of some note. When steam was substituted for water power, and the
rich ore deposits of the northwest outmoded Old Forge, and the roadhouse took
over the pleasure seekers who erstwhile made Olympia famous, old Howards Mill
fell into "innocuous desuetude" as an active business center.
Howards Mill was the site of an old water mill of
ambitious proportion and capacity for its time, long before steam was
introduced, built on Slate Creek and operated by the Howards -- an old and
famous mercantile family of the county. Capt. James Howard, for a long time
postmaster at Mt. Sterling, and prior thereto County Court Clerk, was of that
family. The mill dam stood the test of many years and floods. Then Mt. Sterling
installed water works for the city, the waters of Slate Creek impounded by the
dam were readily available for an adequate supply. A mural of the mill and dam
may be seen on the wall of the Montgomery Hotel at Mt. Sterling. The village is
about six miles southeast of Mt. Sterling. Map of area as of
1879, 2006. 1952
Stepstone
Stepstone was obviously suggested by the rock
formation of that stream which leads at the Hinkston water shed east of Mt.
Sterling and empties into Slate Creek. The bed of this stream is of rock ledges,
broken at intervals in steps of a few inches each in its descent. The C. & O.
Railway Company's line is down its valley. Once a station at that point called "Stepstone"
was maintained and maybe is yet so, about five or six miles from Mt. Sterling.
The village grew up about the station and bears its name and that of the creek.
1793
Morgan's Station
(Marker Number: 115)
Location: 2 mi. E. of
Mt. Sterling
Description:
Settled in 1789. Attacked by Indians April 1,
1793. 19 women and children captured while men worked in fields. One woman hid
in spring house and gave the alarm. 12 of the prisoners were massacred.
(Subjects:
Forts and stations |
Indians)
Morgan Station Map

More on the area
| | 1859 1952 |