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Kort Grocery

1880 establishments in KentuckyCommercial buildings completed in 1880Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in KentuckyGerman-American culture in KentuckyGrocery store buildings
National Register of Historic Places in Campbell County, KentuckyNorthern Kentucky Registered Historic Place stubsRetail buildings in Kentucky
Kort Grocery, Camp Springs, Kentucky
Kort Grocery, Camp Springs, Kentucky

Kort Grocery, also known as Camp Springs Grocery, is a historic property located on Four Mile Road in Camp Springs, Kentucky, a rural area of Campbell County, Kentucky. The stone building was constructed by Peter Kort in 1880 as part of a settlement built by German immigrants. The structure was added to the United States National Register of Historic Places in 1983.It was built as a grocery store. It is a 1+1⁄2-story stone commercial store and residence built along a hillside. Its five-bay front faces Four Mile Pike.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kort Grocery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kort Grocery
Four Mile Road,

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Latitude Longitude
N 39.000277777778 ° E -84.363611111111 °
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Address

Four Mile Road 6607
41059
Kentucky, United States
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Kort Grocery, Camp Springs, Kentucky
Kort Grocery, Camp Springs, Kentucky
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Silver Grove School

Silver Grove School was a pre-K–12 school located in the small city of Silver Grove, Kentucky, about 15 miles (24 km) southeast of Cincinnati in Campbell County, Kentucky. The school, which housed all grades in a single building, was located near the center of the city and operated by the Silver Grove Independent Schools district. The school sports teams had the unusual nickname of Big Trains (boys) and Lady Trains (girls), derived from the fact that the city and school were established in 1911 when the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad built a railyard in the community.By the 2018–19 school year, the Silver Grove district, one of the state's smallest, was plagued by both low enrollment and low test scores. Recent graduating classes had been in single digits, and even after a significant increase in enrollment in that school year, the district had only slightly more than 200 students. The district's average ACT score for its juniors (11th grade) in the 2017–18 school year was 14.8 on the test's 36-point scale, with only one other high school in the state scoring lower. However, only seven students took the test in that year. At a February 2019 meeting of the Silver Grove school board at which a merger with the surrounding Campbell County Schools district was discussed, one parent noted that 87% of Silver Grove students were in households that met U.S. federal poverty guidelines. During this meeting, one board member suggested that the Silver Grove district close its high school component but continue to operate a K–8 school.Later that month, the Silver Grove board voted to fully merge with the Campbell County district, which serves most of the county, despite resistance from many students, parents, and teachers. Within a week, the Campbell County district's board voted to approve the merger, and the Silver Grove School held its final day of instruction on May 16, 2019, with the merger of the two districts officially taking effect on July 1.