Images of the Places We Were – A Photo Gallery
Published 9:58 pm Thursday, April 16, 2020
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Basketball goals at Millennium Park in Danville are off limits to players during the COVID-19 epidemic. Courts are blocked off with yellow caution tape, and goals are closed with black tape on the nets. (Jeff Moreland Photo)
Many activities at Millennium Park are off limits to the public during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Jeff Moreland Photo)
A #TeamKentucky sign is displayed in the window of the Third Street side of MedSource in downtown Danville. (Robin Hart Photo)
A flag hangs outside Farmers National Bank main office near a green light to pay tribute to those who have lost their lives to the coronavirus. (Robin Hart Photo)
The entrance of Kroger is taped off to guide shoppers through a line where they must wait to keep the number of shoppers at a minimum due to COVID-19. (Robin Hart Photo)
Health care professionals at Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center are prepared to treat people who come to the hospital's drive-thru clinic. (Robin Hart Photos)
Health care professionals at Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center are prepared to treat people who come to the hospital's drive-thru clinic. (Robin Hart Photos)
In a front yard on East Main Street, a flock of pink plastic flamigos are reminding passersby to stay six feet apart during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo by Robin Hart)
A sign on the door of Gordmans in the Danville Manor Shopping Center is just one of many found on the doors of local businesses over the past weeks following the arrival of COVID-19. The parking lot of the shopping center and other businesses in town are empty. (Robin Hart Photos)
A sign on the door of Gordmans in the Danville Manor Shopping Center is just one of many found on the doors of local businesses over the past weeks following the arrival of COVID-19. The parking lot of the shopping center and other businesses in town are empty. (Robin Hart Photos)
Since the arrival of the novel coronavirus, many places in the community that are normally full of people enjoying the spring weather, shopping or just getting out of their houses are now empty due to restrictions from the COVID-19 pandemic. Life looks much different in Danville and Boyle County lately, and scenes like these are becoming more common around the nation and the world.