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Kentucky Facts and Figures

 

General Information
Official name Kentucky
 
Capital Frankfort
 
Statehood June 1, 1792
  the 15th state
 
 
 
State nickname The Bluegrass State
 
Name for residents Kentuckians
 
State motto United We Stand, Divided We Fall
 
Land
Total area 104,664 sq km
  40,411 sq mi
 
 
 
Rank among states in total area 37th
 
Land area 102,905 sq km
  39,732 sq mi
 
 
 
Highest point Black Mountain
  1,263 m/4,145 ft
 
 
 
Forested land as a share of total area 49.9 percent (1997)
 
Federally owned land as a share of land area 4.8 percent (1999)
 
People
Population 4,065,556 (2001 estimate)
 
Rank among states in population 25th
 
Ten-year population growth 9.7 percent (1990-2000)
 
Population density 40 persons per sq km (2001)
  102 persons per sq mi (2001)
 
 
 
Urban population 51.8 percent (1990)
 
Largest cities (by population)
Lexington-Fayette 260,512 (2000)
 
 
Louisville 256,231 (2000)
 
 
Owensboro 54,067 (2000)
 
 
Bowling Green 49,296 (2000)
 
 
Covington 43,370 (2000)
 
 
 
Ethnic groups
Whites 90.1 percent (2000)
 
 
Blacks 7.3 percent (2000)
 
 
Asians 0.7 percent (2000)
 
 
Native Americans 0.2 percent (2000)
 
 
Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders less than 0.1 percent (2000)
 
 
Mixed heritage or not reporting 1.6 percent (2000)
 
 
Hispanics (of any race) 1.5 percent (2000)
 
 
 
Health and Education
Life expectancy 74.4 years (1989-1991)
 
Infant mortality rate 7 deaths per 1,000 live births (1999)
 
Residents per physician 473 people (1999)
 
Residents per hospital bed 264 people (1999)
 
Share of population not covered by health insurance 12.9 percent (2000)
 
Number of students per teacher (K-12) 15.4 (1999)
 
Government spending per student (K-12) $6,412 (1998-1999)
 
Share of students attending private school 11.6 percent (1999)
 
Share of people over age 25 with high school diploma 78.7 percent (2000)
 
Government
State government
Chief executive Governor
  Paul Patton
  (term ends December, 2003)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Legislature Senate, 38 members
  House of Representatives, 100 members
 
 
 
 
 
National representation
Members of the U.S. Senate 2
 
 
Members of the U.S. House of Representatives 6
 
 
Electoral votes 8
 
 
 
Economy
Gross state product (GSP) $114 billion (1999 estimate)
 
Income per capita $24,057 (2000 estimate)
 
GSP by economic sector
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 1.8 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Industry
Construction 4.5 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Manufacturing 27.5 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Mining 2.1 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Transportation and utilities 8 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
 
Services
Finance, insurance, and real estate 10.9 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Government 13.5 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Retail trade 9.6 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Wholesale trade 6.1 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
Other services 16 percent (1999 estimate)
 
 
 
 
Employment
Number of workers 1,968,000 (2001)
 
 
Unemployment rate 5.5 percent (2001)
 
 
Share of workers in unions 11.4 percent (2001)
 
 
 
Energy, Communications, and Transportation
Electricity production
Share from geothermal, solar, and wind 0 percent (2000)
 
 
Share from hydroelectric 2.5 percent (2000)
 
 
Share from nuclear 0 percent (2000)
 
 
Share from thermal 97.4 percent (2000)
 
 
 
Daily newspaper circulation per 1,000 people 160 newspapers per 1,000 people (1999)
 
Share of households with Internet access 36.6 percent (2000)
 
Number of library books circulated per resident 5.1 books per person (1999)
 
Length of highways 127,568 km (2000)
  79,267 mi (2000)
 
 
 
Length of interstate highways 1,226 km (2000)
  762 mi (2000)
 
 
 
Length of railroad tracks 4,519 km (2000)
  2,808 mi (2000)
 
 
 
Airports 130 (1997)
 
Sources
The Association of American Railroads (www.aar.org), Bureau of Economic Analysis (www.bea.doc.gov), Bureau of Labor Statistics (www.bls.gov), Census Bureau (www.census.gov), Energy Information Administration (www.eia.doe.gov), Federal Aviation Administration (www.faa.gov), Federal Highway Administration (www.fhwa.dot.gov), Forest Service (www.fs.fed.us), General Services Administration (www.gsa.gov), National Agricultural Statistics Service (www.usda.gov/nass), National Center for Education Statistics (nces.ed.gov), National Center for Health Statistics (www.cdc.gov/nchs), National Telecommunications and Information Administration (www.ntia.doc.gov).
 

 

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