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A $100 million representation of Noah's Ark opened to ticket holders Thursday in Williamstown, Kentucky, but critics say the religious enterprise shouldn't have received government tax breaks.
Williamstown, Ky. – A 510-foot-long, $100 million Noah’s ark attraction built by Christians who say the biblical story really happened is ready to open in Kentucky this week.
Religious tour of Kentucky: Faith Trail offers a new way to see the Bluegrass State Some of the sites are the Ark Encounter, the Creation Museum and the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption.
Currently, the Ark Encounter is little more than a museum of fictional science, a petting zoo and a diner, but as Beemer mentioned in his guest column, more is to come.
Ark Encounter, a massive, modern-day interpretation of Noah's Ark, opened in July in northern Kentucky, and already has attracted more than 300,000 guests.
Ken Ham, the creationist founder of the Ark Encounter in Northern Kentucky, is sparring with a national group over whether public schools are legally allowed to visit his religious attractions ...
Creationism, it turns out, is big business. It's been 15 years since Answers in Genesis opened the Creation Museum and 6 years since it opened its Noah's Ark-themed park, both in Northern Kentucky ...
A Christian amusement park in Kentucky is announcing that it will be bathed in a rainbow of light each night. Ark Encounter, which says it's dedicated to "understand[ing] the reality of the events ...
Massive Full-Size Version of Noah's Ark Comes to Life in Kentucky Ken Ham had the ship built to match the dimensions in the Bible, but the $100 million project hasn't been without controversy.
Yet the owners of Kentucky’s Noah’s ark attraction are demanding their insurance company bail them out after flooding caused nearly $1 million in property damage.
A $100 million representation of Noah’s Ark opened to ticket holders Thursday in Williamstown, Kentucky, but critics say the religious enterprise shouldn’t have received government tax … ...
A $100 million representation of Noah’s Ark opens Thursday in Kentucky, but critics say the religious enterprise shouldn’t have received government tax breaks.
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