Explore Trigg County, Kentucky with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 2 cities and towns in Trigg County below.
| County | Trigg |
| State | Kentucky (KY) |
| County Seat | Cadiz |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 36.912271 |
| Longitude | -87.772653 |
| Cities & Towns | 2 |
| Area Codes | 270 |
Trigg County unfolds across the western reaches of Kentucky, a landscape shaped by the slow, persistent work of water and earth. Its terrain is a study in gentle contours, where the rolling hills give way to broader bottomlands along the Cumberland River, a significant waterway that defines much of its eastern edge, feeding into the greater Ohio River system. To the north, the broad, often steely expanse of the Ohio River forms a natural and formidable boundary, a watery highway that has long dictated the flow of life and commerce. The land here is a mix of fertile river bottoms and higher, more wooded ridges, a subtle topography that hints at the underlying limestone bedrock and the springs that bubble forth, sustaining the verdant growth. Neighboring counties, like Caldwell to the west and Christian to the south, share this same soft, Upper South vernacular, yet Trigg County possesses its own distinct character, a quietude that settles over the land as the afternoon sun begins its slow descent.
The story of Trigg County is one of settlement, born from the westward push of pioneers and the enduring allure of fertile ground. Established in 1820, it was carved from the larger counties of Livingston and Christian, a testament to the growing population and the need for a more localized governance. The naming of the county honors Colonel Stephen Trigg, a Revolutionary War hero whose life was tragically cut short at the Battle of Blue Licks. The county seat, Cadiz, emerged as a natural gathering point, its location chosen for its accessibility and its proximity to vital water sources. Over the decades, the rhythms of agriculture and the quiet hum of small-town life became the defining pulse of Trigg County, punctuated by the occasional echo of a coal-camp memory from days when the earth yielded more than just crops. The deep roots of its early settlers, a blend of Scotch-Irish, German, and English stock, are still discernible in the enduring spirit of its communities.
Today, Trigg County’s economy remains tied to the land, with agriculture playing a central role, its fields yielding corn, soybeans, and other staples, while cattle graze on pastures that stretch under wide Kentucky skies. The presence of Lake Barkley, a vast reservoir that laps at its southeastern shores, introduces a significant recreational dimension, drawing visitors for fishing, boating, and the simple pleasure of lakeside tranquility. The character of Trigg County is one of understated resilience, a place where neighborly kindness is as common as the scent of ripening corn in late summer. Cadiz, the county seat, offers a glimpse into this unhurried pace, its downtown a collection of modest businesses and public buildings that serve as the nexus for the county's scattered localities, from the small hamlets along the riverbanks to the more inland agricultural communities. The light here at dusk has a particular quality, a soft, golden hue that seems to linger, bathing the fields and the quiet streets in a gentle, almost painterly glow.
This page provides an interactive map of Trigg County, Kentucky alongside links to detailed street maps for 2 cities and towns. The county seat is Cadiz. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |