Carpenter's Fort on McKenzie's Fork of Paint Lick Creek in Kentucky was established by Zophar Carpenter, a native of New York colony who migrated to western Virginia in the 1750s and to Kentucky about 1788. [1] The fort is also referred to as Zophar Carpenter's Station, and placed "near Suck Fork Creek". [2] Zophar Carpenter served as a drummer in Captain Dickenson's Company of Virginia Rangers in the French & Indian War. [3] He appeared on a 1792 tax list in Madison Co. KY with Edward Carpenter and John Carpenter. [4] He died on February 6, 1798, at age 65 and is interred in the Carpenter Graveyard near Paint Lick, Garrard County, Kentucky. [5]