
City of Erlanger, Kentucky
A suburban city located in northwestern
Kenton County, was first settled around 1807, when Bartlett
Graves built a log cabin on land he had purchased there
in prior years. Large-scale settlement occurred after
the Covington-Lexington
turnpike
was chartered in 1829. The small community that grew up
around a tollgate was originally known as Timberlake in
honor local physician, William Timberlake.
When the Southern Railroad arrived in 1873,
the depot was named Greenwood after the president of the
railroad. The depot was renamed Silver Lake to avoid confusion
with five other cities along the rail line.
When a post office was established in 1882,
both the post office and the depot were named Erlanger
in honor of Baron Frederic Emile D'Erlanger. the Baron
was a German-born English financier who headed up a land
syndicate created to develop the city.
The land syndicate persuaded the railroad
to make Erlanger a stop for all passenger trains and it
offered one year of free rail transportation to anyone
who located there.
The town grew quickly and was incorporated
in 1897. A business grew along the Covington-Lexington
Road, which was paved in 1921. When Interstate I-75 came
in the early 60's, subdivisions and industrial areas built
up along the interstate, and Erlanger led the Cincinnati
metropolitan area in new construction for three years
in 60's.