History
In 1846 the name of the town was changed to Hamilton in honour of Joel Hamilton, the founder, who had since moved to Texas. The trustees of the town at this time were: Benjamin E. Garnett, John J. Miller, Marshall M. McManama, James R. Hawkins and Richard Johnson. The town was authorized to levy taxes the next year. This was a real estate tax, not to exceed fifty cents per hundred dollars. The limits of the town of Hamilton were extended in 1849. A provision was added by the legislature that citizens of the town were not required to work on the road more than half a mile beyond the new limit. In 1852 a new road, the Hamilton and Union Turnpike was chartered. This may have been in conjunction with the incorporation of the Big Bone Hotel Company at the nearby Big Bone Springs the previous year. Other projects chartered in the area that year were the Napoleon and Big Bone Lick Turnpike, and the Union and Beaver Turnpike. This seems to have been the high point of the town's history, though it was still a community up into the early part of the twentieth century. Lewis Loder (1819–1904), a magistrate and tavern keeper from Petersburg, Kentucky, in the same county, records going downriver to Hamilton on the steamer to purchase barrels of whiskey. The advance scouts of the Confederate army, from an encampment near Snow's Pond, visited the town in 1862, only to find that several troop transports of Union soldiers had camped there the night before, and were gone already. This was Hamilton's moment of attention by the opposing sides in that conflict. The fortunes of the town were closely linked with that of neighboring Big Bone, and was the point at which those visiting Big Bone Lick reached it by the river. There are at the present time only a few houses on the site of the town. The Hamilton Graded School, with Silvian C. Hopkins as Principal, and two additional teachers, enrolled 143 pupils in 1954. In 1982 there were 120 students at the school, which was consolidated and closed soon after; the building was torn down.References
*Paul Tanner, ''Acts of the Kentucky General Assembly Affecting Boone County Residents'', Frankfort, Kentucky: Privately Published, 1996. *William Conrad, ''The History of Boone County Schools; A Project of the Boone County Community Educational Council''. 1982. See pages 21–22. (available at: https://web.archive.org/web/20060419064932/http://www.bcpl.org/PDFfiles/HistoryOfBooneCoSchools.pdf ee pages 24–25 in PDF edition *Lewis A. Loder, ''The Loder Diary: Transcription of the Original''. Transcribed and edited by William Conrad. 6 Volumes. Florence, Kentucky: Boone County Schools, 1985-1988. *Daniel F. Dixon, ''Snow's Pond: The Forgotten Civil War Skirmish in Boone County, Kentucky's Past''. Mt. Vernon, Indiana: Windmill Publications, 1999. {{authority control Unincorporated communities in Boone County, Kentucky Unincorporated communities in Kentucky Kentucky populated places on the Ohio River 1846 establishments in Kentucky