Troublesome Creek (North Fork Kentucky River tributary)


Troublesome Creek is a creek in Breathitt, Perry and Knott counties, Kentucky, a fork of the North Fork Kentucky River.
It is long with a gradient of, normally free-flowing, and with banks that vary between tree-lined and open.
Its headwaters are where its Left and Right Forks join at Hindman, the Knott County seat.
The creek flows down to join the North Fork of the Kentucky River near Haddix in Breathitt County.

Tributaries and other locations

  • Its major tributaries are:
  • * Lost Creek just over upstream at an altitude of
  • * Hayes Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Halfway Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Riley Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Barge Creek upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Lewis Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Russell Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Andy Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream
  • * Millers Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Caney Creek upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream
  • * Fugate Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Laurel Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Left Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Lower Beaverdam Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Buckhorn Creek upstream at an altitude of
  • * Upper Beaver Dam upstream at an altitude of
  • * Cat Hollow upstream at an altitude of
  • * Francis Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Noble Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Steve Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Rowdy Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * McNelly Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Tom's Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Left Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * McJilton Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Left Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Laurel Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Williams Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Buck Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Beech Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Balls Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Little Ball Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Pigeon Roost Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Coalstone Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Left Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Coles Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Laurel Lick Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Bear Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Combs Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Left Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • *** Hog Wallow Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Trace Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Clear Creek upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Shop Hollow upstream at an altitude of
  • *** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Long Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • *** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Cockrell Trace upstream at an altitude of
  • *** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • *** Gearheart Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Dick's Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • *** Buzzards Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Montgomery Creek upstream at an altitude of
  • * Short Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Walker Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Mill Creek upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Buck Lick Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Big Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Sweet Gum Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Right Fork upstream at an altitude of
  • * Ogden Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Baker Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • ** Pushback Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Cy Everidge Branch upstream at an altitude of
  • * Hindman upstream at an altitude of and whose further tributaries and locations are in The Forks of Troublesome

    within Perry County

Of its total length, are in Perry County, where it has had ten post offices over the years.

General

The Troublesome post office was established on 1882-05-01 by Joe C. Eversole.
Eversole's first choice of name was Boggs but this was not acceptable to the USPS, so Eversole named it after the Creek, one of [|several things named after the Creek].
It was originally located at the mouth of Balls Fork, and Eversole was not its postmaster, that being local storekeeper J. C. Boggs, from whom came the original choice of name.
Troublesome post office moved one mile down Troublesome Creek in 1910, to the mouth of Williams Branch, and closed in January 1914.
The Tub post office was established on 1923-07-23 by postmaster George W. Allen.
His original choice of name had been Troy after his 26-year-old son, and it is unknown where Allen got Tub from.
It was located at the head of the Pigeon Roost Branch in several places over the years, and closed in 1933.
In 1918 Mowbray and Robinson had a mine in Upper Beaver Dam Branch,
Floyd Campbell had one in Cat Hollow, and Green Campbell one on a minor fork of Troblesome upstream.
Hays and Campbell had a mine up Francis Branch.
Walter Campbell had a mine on a minor fork of Williams Branch, upstream.
Lee Allen had a mine upstream on Troublesome, and S. M. Holliday had one at head of a minor fork upstream.
J. Smith had a mine on a minor fork of Left Fork of Tom's Branch, and Richard Smith had one at the head of Left Fork of McJilton Branch.
William Smith had one on a minor branch of the Left Fork of Pigeon Roost. and Lark Smith had one upstream on Pigeon Roost itself.
Jack Dobson's mine was upstream on Troublesome, and a Mr Ashley had a mine one a minor fork of Buck Fork, upstream.
Preston Williams's mine was on Williams Branch, upstream.
Both of Samuel Bush's mines were on minor forks of Left Fork Pigeon Roost, and William Brewer's was upstream on Left Fork.

Dwarf

The earliest of the post offices, Tunell Hill was established on 1878-07-24 by postmaster Joseph Hall.
It was named after the tunnel that Combs brothers Sam and Felix had cut for an aqueduct to their mill, and was at the mouth of Combs Branch.
It closed in 1881, and was re-stablished as Dwarf on 1883-07-13 by postmaster Thomas W. Gibson.
This name was another Combs association, this time with another Combs brother, Jeremiah, who was called "Short Jerry" because of his height.
The Dwarf post office still exists today, and is located a short distance up Combs Branch from Troublesome Creek.
George Combs had a mine up Coles Branch.
Wade Combs's mine was on a minor fork of Left Fork of Combs Branch.
C. C. Combs's mine was upstream on Troublesome itself, and Jerry Combs's mine was in a minor branch of Troublesome upstream.
The headwaters of Combs Branch are across a small ridge from Trace Fork.

Engle family mines and the Left Fork of Combs Branch

Albert Engle's two mines were on a minor fork of Laurel Lick, upstream. and upstream on Troublesome itself.
William Engle's was on a minor fork of Left Fork of Combs Branch.
Martha Cornett's was on a minor fork, upstream, of the same Left Fork, J. B. Stamper's two mines were one on another minor fork of Left Fork upstream and another upstream on Left Fork.
George Fugate had a mine upstream also on Left Fork itself.

Ary

The Ary post office was established on 1906-02-13 by postmaster Killus Combs.
Its original location is uncertain but was likely at the mouth of Pigeon Roost Branch.
Its original name was to be Dory after one of Killus's contemporaries in the Combs family, but this was rejected, and the origin of the name Ary is not known.
It moved several times between 1910 and World War 2, for short distances, finally moving down from Pigeon Roost to Balls Fork in 1946, where it still exists today.

Rowdy and Stacy

The Stacy post office was established on 1890-06-30 by postmaster Ira Allen.
Allen had wanted the name Noble because the post office was located at the mouth of Noble Branch, but that name had been already taken by another post office on Troublesome Creek.
Ira Allen was also the postmaster of another post office simultaneously.
This was the Rowdy post office which he established on 1890-07-18.
It was located at the mouth of the Rowdy Branch and closed the same year on 1890-10-02.
The name of the branch and post office were, according to local lore, because of the "rowdy" nature of the inhabitants of the Branch.
In 1918 Anderson Hays had prospected Noble Branch, Mary Allen had a mine up its left fork, and the Campbell heirs had a mine just up another minor branch upstream.
Andrew and Samuel Noble had a mine on Noble itself, upstream.
Stacy, in the meanwhile, lasted until its closure in 1933.
It was, however, re-established in 1944 by postmaster Pearlie Neace.
The environs had remained named Stacy, locally, after the post office closure, but the re-opened one used the name Rowdy.
It was still open in 2000.

Stacy family mines

George Stacy had a mine up the Right Fork of Beech Branch, and Jasper Stacy had one upstream on Troublesome itself. and another on a minor fork of Little Ball Fork.
Joseph Stacy had a mine upstream on the Coalstone Branch; and James Stacy had three, one on the Right Fork of Pigeon Roost Branch, and two upstream on the Right Fork of Combs Branch.
Elkannah Stacy's mine was on a minor branch of Pigeon Roost.