Scuffletown is a ghost town in Henderson County on the northern border of the western part of the U.S. state of Kentucky.
In addition to crops of tobacco and corn, Scuffletown was noted for its large number of pecan trees.
2, a sternwheel packet (steamboat) weighing some 129 tons and outfitted with six cannons capable of firing 24 pound shot, stopped at Scuffletown during its patrols of the Ohio.
Scuffletown is mentioned in the Civil War account "Operations of the Mississippi Squadron during Morgan's Raid".
[citation needed] On December 26, 1893, the group was officially welcomed as an Indian tribe by Governor John Y.
[citation needed] Through the years since, the descendants of these Cherokee have maintained ties to the culture and traditions of their people.
[citation needed] According to an atlas originally printed and copy written in 1895 by the Rand McNally Corporation, downtown Scuffletown had a population of 71.
The purpose of the proposed refuge is to protect, restore and manage a valuable complex of wetland habitats for the benefit of migrating and wintering waterfowl, non-game land birds, and other native fish and wildlife.