The Culligan Difference
Danville is located on the 20-mile segment of the Historic Kentucky Wilderness Trail between Logan’s Fort (current day Stanford) and Fort Harrod (current day Harrodsburg). This 20-mile segment of the Wilderness Trail was the epicenter of the terrible Indian Wars in 1772-1773, that marked the tipping point in the settlement of Kentucky.
The Kentucky Wilderness Trail stretched from Virginia/Cumberland Gap to The Falls of The Ohio (present-day Louisville), to Fort Harrod/Logans Fort, to Fort Boonesboro & present-day Lexington and was the main conduit for the settlement of Kentucky.
Before the Wilderness Trail was widened in the 1770s to allow wagons to pass, the 20-mile segment between Logans’ Fort and Fort Harrod was a foot path or “Trace” for Settlers, Indians, and Animals, even Buffalo. (Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort Kentucky derived its name from the “Traces” that large herds of buffalo in the Blue Grass area of Kentucky used in the 16th – 18th century in Kentucky.)
Proudly Serving Central Kentucky
Serving our local community one glass at a time.
Enjoy cleaner, great-tasting water whenever you need it most.
We can’t wait to see our bottle-free water coolers in your office, break room, or at home!
We can’t wait to see our bottle-free water coolers in your office, break room, or at home!
Serving Central Kentucky since 1958.
Located in historic Danville Kentucky, our city is the location of the first Courthouse in Kentucky (1785), the first U.S. Post Office west of the Alleghenies (1792), where the first Kentucky Constitution was drafted, in (1792) and the first Capital of Kentucky.
Danville is located on the 20-mile segment of the Historic Kentucky Wilderness Trail between Stanford and Harrodsburg. Wilderness Trail was the epicenter of the terrible Indian Wars in 1772-1773, which marked the tipping point in the settlement of Kentucky.
The Kentucky Wilderness Trail stretched from Virginia/Cumberland Gap to The Falls of The Ohio (present-day Louisville), to Fort Harrod/Logans Fort, to Fort Boonesboro & present-day Lexington while being the main conduit for the settlement of Kentucky.
Before the Wilderness Trail was expanded in the 1770s to allow wagons, the 20-mile segment was a footpath or “Trace” for settlers, Indians, and animals, including Buffalo. (Buffalo Trace Distillery derived its name from the “Traces” that large herds of buffalo used in the 16th–18th century in Kentucky.)