Fall 2008 beyond the log cabin kentucky’s Abraham lincoln Kentucky’s Signature Lincoln Exhibition Thomas D. Clark Center for kentucky history October 20, 2008 - June 6, 2009 www.history.ky.gov CHRONICLE CONNECTIONS. PERSPECTIVE. INSPIRATION.
Mar 26, 2016
Fall 2008
beyond the log cabinkentucky’s Abraham lincoln
Kentucky’sSignature Lincoln Exhibition
Thomas D. Clark Center for kentucky historyOctober 20, 2008 - June 6, 2009
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CHRONICLECONNECTIONS. PERSPECTIVE. INSPIRATION.
CHRONICLECONNECTIONS. PERSPECTIVE. INSPIRATION.
3 Letter from the Executive Director 29 Kentucky Historical Society News 31 Kentucky Historical Society Featured Events
Contents4lincoln events around the stateA celebration of the Lincoln-Hanks wedding; boyhood statue unveiled
5jefferson davis symposium draws large crowdCivil War scholar William J. Cooper Jr. is keynote speaker
6annual boone day celebrationFeatured Churchill Weavers collection and exhibition
8new oral history grantskentucky museum alliance formed
special sectionBeyond the Log Cabin: Kentucky’s Abraham Lincoln
25Featured new acquisitions in the kentucky historical society collectionsEarly Homer Ledford dulcimer, Torch Light newsletters and more
28National history day in kentuckyMore than 140 students participate
Fall 2008
02 |
Fall 2008. The Chronicle is published by the Kentucky Historical Society (KHS), Frankfort, Kentucky. It is a
periodical for KHS members and friends that builds awareness of the mission of the Kentucky Historical
Society as it engages people in the exploration of the diverse heritage of the commonwealth. The Chronicle
reports how the comprehensive and innovative services, interpretive programs, and stewardship of the
Society are providing connections to the past, perspective on the present, and inspiration for the future. If
you are interested in making a bequest to the Society’s work, use our full legal address: Kentucky Historical
Society Foundation, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601. Send all address changes to: The Chronicle,
Kentucky Historical Society, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601. Web site: www. history.ky.gov. Email:
A moment in time
We are so pleased that our Kentucky Historical Society (KHS) members and friends enjoyed the new format
introduced in the previous issue of the Chronicle. We continue to make minor adjustments to the layout, but
the feedback thus far has been extremely positive!
The commemoration of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial is truly a special “moment in time” especially for
the commonwealth of Kentucky. The Bicentennial is in full swing and KHS continues to be actively involved
in many Lincoln-related programs, including the unveiling of the Boy Lincoln sculpture in Hodgenville
and the Lincoln-Hanks wedding event in Springfi eld. KHS had an unprecedented presence at this year’s
Kentucky State Fair. Our 8,000 square foot educational display, entitled “Kentucky’s Abraham Lincoln,”
introduced Fair goers to Lincoln’s lifelong connections to the commonwealth. Stay tuned for more about the
Fair in the winter issue of the Chronicle.
In October, the Kentucky Historical Society will open Beyond the Log Cabin: Kentucky’s Abraham Lincoln,
the commonwealth’s signature Lincoln exhibition. We’re pleased to include a special commemorative
insert in this issue about the exhibition and invite you to visit KHS when Beyond the Log Cabin opens to the
public on October 21st. This exhibition is an ambitious undertaking for KHS because, in addition to being on
display at the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History, it will travel to two additional venues over the next
two years – the Speed Art Museum in Louisville and the Highlands Museum & Discovery Center in Ashland.
Speaking of “moments in time,” Boone Day 2008 was an opportunity for us to pause and express our
sincere appreciation to you – our members, donors, and supporters. Please know how grateful we are
for your continued interest and support that helps ensure the Kentucky Historical
Society is the recognized leader in helping people understand, cherish, and share
Kentucky’s stories.
Executive Director
Executive Director Kentucky Historical SocietyKent Whitworth
Assistant Director Kentucky Historical SocietyMarilyn A. Zoidis
Executive Director Kentucky Historical Society FoundationJames E. Wallace
Director of CommunicationsLisa Summers Cleveland
EditorLisa Summers Cleveland
Assistant EditorStephanie Siria
ContributorsJulienne Foster
Betty FugateChris GoodlettGretchen HaneyRebecca HanlyLeah HinsonDarrell Meadows, Ph.D.Deborah RoseAndrew StupperichJames WallaceJulie Sutter
Art Direction/DesignAmy Crittenden Charley Pallos Kelli Thompson
PhotographyKevin JohnsonCharlene SmithW.L. McCoyLee P. Thomas
Circulation ManagerBetty Fugate
The Kentucky Historical Society is an agency of the Tourism, Arts, and Heritage Cabinet.
KHS Executive Committee BoardChancellor, Governor Steven L. BeshearPresident, Robert Michael “Mike” Duncan, InezFirst Vice President, Robert E. Rich, CovingtonSecond Vice President, William “Bill” R. Black Jr., PaducahThird Vice President, Sheila Mason Burton, FrankfortWalter A. Baker, GlasgowYvonne Honeycutt Baldwin, MoreheadWilliam Frederick “Fred” Brashear II, HydenJ. McCauley Brown, LouisvilleBennett Clark, LexingtonJudge William Engle, HazardCharles English, Sr., Bowling GreenMartha R. Francis, StanfordRichard Frymire, MadisonvilleEd Hamilton, LouisvilleJohn Kleber, Ph.D., LouisvilleRuth Ann Korzenborn, EdgewoodKaren Cotton McDaniel, FrankfortAnn Pennington, DanvilleRichard Taylor, Ph.D., FrankfortJ. Harold Utley, Madisonville
KHS Foundation BoardPresident, Warren W. Rosenthal, LexingtonFirst Vice-President, John R. Hall, LexingtonSec. Vice-President, Henry C. T. Richmond III, LexingtonSecretary, Kent Whitworth, FrankfortTreasurer, James Shepherd, GeorgetownRalph G. Anderson, HarrodsburgHilary J. Boone, LexingtonLucy A. Breathitt, LexingtonBruce Cotton, LexingtonJames T. Crain Jr., LouisvilleDennis Dorton, PaintsvilleThomas and Clara Dupree, LexingtonJo M. Ferguson, LouisvilleAnn Rosenstein Giles, LexingtonFrank Hamilton, LexingtonJames “Jamie” Hargrove, LouisvilleRaymond R. Hornback, Ed.D., LexingtonElizabeth Lloyd Jones, MidwayJames C. Klotter, Ph.D., LexingtonHonorable Crit Luallen, FrankfortJames H. “Mike” Molloy, LexingtonMargaret “Maggy” Patterson, FrankfortErwin Roberts, LouisvilleMartin F. Schmidt, LouisvilleGerald L. Smith, Ph.D., LexingtonAlice Sparks, Crescent SpringsCharles Stewart, FrankfortJohn P. Stewart II, M.D., FrankfortWilliam Sturgill, LexingtonJoEtta Y. Wickliffe, HarrodsburgBuckner “Buck” Woodford, Paris
03www.history.ky.gov |
Kentucky Historical Society staff and the
KHS HistoryMobile were on the scene
on Saturday, May 31, as the Boy Lincoln
sculpture was unveiled in front of a crowd of
hundreds in Hodgenville.
The Boy Lincoln statue was placed at
ground level, allowing children to touch it,
stand beside it, and be photographed with
it. LaRue County Judge Executive Tommy
Turner said the new sculpture “allows all to
see that the greatest president was once a
young Kentucky lad” and that it should “inspire all youth who see it to know
they too can accomplish great things.”
The Boy Lincoln sculpture was funded, in part, by a grant from the
Kentucky Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, which is administered
by KHS. The grant was provided to the Kentucky Arts Council, which
worked in an advisory capacity for the public art commission of the Boy
Lincoln. The Kentucky Arts Council is a partner in the Lincoln Bicentennial
Commemoration.
Later that same afternoon, the Kentucky Lincoln Heritage Trail Passport
initiative was unveiled, just in time for the summer heritage-touring season.
The passport program offers travelers a fun way to explore Kentucky’s
Lincoln sites.
Before the day ended, more than 700 visitors had toured the “Kentucky’s
Abraham Lincoln” exhibit in the KHS HistoryMobile.
“The sun was shining on Hodgenville on May 31,” said Kent Whitworth,
executive director of KHS. “KHS was able to play a large role that day in
sharing the Lincoln story with hundreds of people.”
The Kentucky Heritage Council, another partner agency in the bicentennial
commemoration, oversees the Lincoln Heritage Trail Passport initiative. For
more information about the passport program, see www.kylincolntrail.com.
Photo Courtesy of W. L. McCoy, McCoy’s Image Studio, Elizabethtown, Ky.
boy lincoln statue unveiled in hodgenville
Hundreds of people made their way to Lincoln Homestead State Park in
Springfi eld to see the outdoor drama, Dearly Beloved: The Vows of a Lincoln
Legacy, on June 14. The play celebrated the 202nd anniversary of the
wedding of Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks, Abraham Lincoln’s parents.
The Museum Theatre program of the Kentucky Historical Society worked
closely with the Kentucky Department of Parks and the Springfi eld/
Washington County community to produce the outdoor drama, which was
the centerpiece of a day long event. The KHS HistoryMobile was also open
to visitors.
“The Lincoln-Hanks wedding celebration is a premier Kentucky family
historical entertainment experience,” said Kentucky Senator Dan Kelly, of
Springfi eld. “Dearly Beloved: The Vows of a Lincoln Legacy, is a fun, exciting,
and moving story about Abraham Lincoln and his Kentucky roots.”
In addition to the wedding ceremony, historical speakers performed throughout
the day, including Dr. Thomas Walker, Governor Isaac Shelby, George
Washington, and Thomas Jefferson. Food, music, and other activities provided
a look at America in the early 1800s when Lincoln’s parents were married.
lincoln hanks wedding event
04 | 04 |
“The Contested Legacy of Jefferson Davis,” a symposium held on June 27
at the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History, drew more than 150
people for a daylong discussion of Davis and his role in history.
Nationally known Civil War scholar and author William J. Cooper Jr. of
Louisiana State University, was keynote speaker. Cooper gave his up-to-date
interpretation of Davis based on the latest scholarship.
Other prominent speakers and panelists included Richard J. Blackett,
Vanderbilt University; Charles P. Roland, professor emeritus of history at
the University of Kentucky; Anne Marshall, Mississippi State University;
and John Coski, director of library and research at the Museum of the
Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia. Panel moderators were Edward M. Coffman
and James A. Ramage.
Throughout the day, speakers and panelists grappled with far-reaching
topics related to Davis, including the Lost Cause, the effect of the
Emancipation Proclamation, slavery, the Civil War, and Kentucky’s role
as a border state. The majority of the members of the audience were not
professional historians, but, rather, interested members of the Kentucky
Historical Society and the general public. They presented questions that led
to lively and often frank discussions.
Following Cooper’s address, panel discussions drew active audience
participation. These discussions focused on Davis and the Civil War and
Davis and Lost Cause Memory. After lunch, participants viewed Civil War
era collections from the Kentucky Historical Society and purchased books
written and signed by the scholars in attendance. The day ended with a
presentation on ways to interpret issues related to these topics in Kentucky’s
museums and historic sites.
Marilyn Zoidis, assistant director of the Kentucky Historical Society, said KHS
“was delighted with the response to this symposium.”
jefferson davis symposium draws large crowd
05www.history.ky.gov |
oone Day drew a near-capacity crowd to the Kentucky Historical Society this year. The Boone Day celebration, a proud Kentucky Historical Society tradition for more than a century, took place on Saturday, June 7, 2008, at the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History in Frankfort. Boone Day has been held annually at KHS since 1897. It celebrates June 7, 1769, when Daniel Boone looked across at the rolling upland of the Bluegrass region from Pilot Knob in what is now Powell County.
Boone Day provides an opportunity for the Kentucky Historical Society to say a sincere thank you to all of our loyal members and donors who make our work—the work of cherishing Kentucky’s treasures—possible.
Boone Day featured a variety of activities this year, many of which revolved around the temporary exhibition, Magic in the Weaving: The Churchill Weavers Collection Revealed. Visitors experienced this new preservation exhibition in the Keeneland Changing Exhibits Gallery along with KHS’s permanent exhibition, A Kentucky Journey in the Warren and Betty Rosenthal
Permanent Exhibits Gallery, in addition to tours of the Old State Capitol throughout the day.
Magic in the Weaving: The Churchill Weavers Collection Revealed exhibition opened May 10, 2008 and closed on September 6. For eighty-fi ve years, Churchill Weavers produced distinctive hand woven clothing and home textiles in Berea, Kentucky. Talented owners and employees helped it become one of Kentucky’s most beloved handcraft businesses. Faced with foreign competition and downsizing, the business was auctioned in 2007. The Kentucky Historical Society, with generous support from donor Joan Cralle Day, was able to purchase the Churchill Weavers Collection, which includes over 250,000 fabric samples, tools, looms, photographs, business records, and more.
KHS members enjoyed complimentary admission to all exhibitions on the KHS history campus along with a complimentary Southern brunch featuring some traditional Kentucky favorites. Following the brunch, guests had the opportunity to meet and listen to Lila Bellando, former president and manager of Churchill Weavers, tell her story of commitment to the integrity and legacy of Churchill Weavers and why she chose KHS to preserve this important collection for future generations.
A new tradition that began last year was a special celebration of “Enduring Donors.” This acknowledges the leadership of those generous individuals
who helped make possible so much of what we do at the Society to cherish
Kentucky’s story. During a morning reception, enduring donors heard a
“I am proud to be a member of an institution that realizes the importance of preserving our history and culture.”
B
– Marilyn Dishman, Lexington
BOONE DAY2008
06 |
summary of recent accomplishments, such as the KHS Foundation’s success raising money for the 2008 Annual Fund and the Campaign for Kentucky: The Thomas D. Clark Education Challenge.
Members and donors were also able to take a behind-the scenes tour of the museum and archival storage areas at the Center. These tours provided a sense of the depth of the KHS collections. Included in the tour was a look at the processing area for the Churchill Weavers collection.
A number of members and donors also participated in two brick dedications which took place at the Broadway entrance to the Center and in the Cralle Day Garden. The bricks allow for a family name or an organization to become part of a pathway through history. The dedication was a chance for families and groups to come together and enjoy this important occasion of laying their brick.
Throughout the day, visitors had an opportunity to learn about the resources offered by the Martin F. Schmidt Research Library, as well as resources available online through the KHS Web site at www.history.ky.gov. The KHS research library houses over 90,000 published works, dealing primarily with history and genealogy, as well as over 12,000 reels of microfi lm and over 20,000 vertical fi les of collected and contributed research. The KHS Special Collections manages fi ve collection programs: manuscripts, maps, oral history, photographs, and rare books. These collections document most major issues in Kentucky history, as well as the day-to-day lives of Kentuckians.
History came to life on Boone Day with several KHS Museum Theatre performances. Visitors enjoyed “Diary of the Depression: A Day with Mary Ruth Dawson,” which explores rural Kentucky life during the Great Depression through the eyes of a farm woman, and “Bound for Freedom: The Story of Frontier Slave Monk Estill,” which shares the challenges of frontier life from the point of view of an enslaved man whose bravery earned him his freedom. Both plays offered visitors an opportunity to connect audiences with the sights, sounds, and stories of the past.
During the afternoon, children tried their hand at weaving on a table loom. They were weaving their own pieces to take home using homemade looms during the History Zone program “Wonderful Weaving,” located outside the entrance to the Churchill Weavers exhibition.
“My visits to the Kentucky Historical Society are always rewarding – a pleasant stop at Dr. Clark’s gateway to the past.”
The Kentucky Historical Society is fortunate
to have a group of exceptional patrons who
understand the importance of collecting and
preserving the history of the commonwealth.
These supporters, known as Enduring Donors,
consistently contribute to the Kentucky
Historical Society Foundation by making an
annual gift of $250 or more, helping KHS
to fulfi ll its mission of engaging people in
exploring the diverse heritage of Kentucky.
Since 2007, Enduring Donors have been
honored at our annual Boone Day member-and-
donor recognition event. They enjoy sneak
previews of KHS collections and exhibitions; and
they meet with Society curators and leaders at
the Enduring Donors reception to socialize and
to share their love of Kentucky history.
We invite you to become an Enduring Donor and
to ensure that the Kentucky story is cherished
and shared with Kentuckians of tomorrow.
what is an enduring donor?
– Don Fowler, Covington
07www.history.ky.gov |
The Kentucky Oral History Commission is now offering a new set of grants
to help institutions preserve their oral history collections.
“In Kentucky and in the nation, most of the oral history collections are
on cassette tape,” said Commission Program Coordinator Sarah Milligan.
“Cassette tapes have about a 30-year lifespan and in many cases we’re
hitting that 30-year mark now.”
The new grants include a competitive cash grant of up to $3,500 to
institutions to be used to preserve, clean, or digitize their oral history
collections. The application deadline is October 15.
The second grant provides for the use of a mobile workstation and training,
allowing institutions to digitize their collections in-house. This application has
no set deadline, and submissions will be accepted beginning October 15.
The Kentucky Oral History Commission is an outreach program of the
Kentucky Historical Society. Since its inception in 1976, it has provided
for the collection of more than 25,000 oral history interviews, ranging
from tenant farmers and lay midwives to political leaders and nationally
acclaimed authors. The Commission’s goal is to record and preserve these
and other diverse stories that are part of Kentucky’s rich and colorful history.
The Commission is governed by a 12-member board and receives input
from an advisory board, consisting primarily of oral historians from across
the commonwealth. In addition to the two new grants, it also offers a grant
program that provides fi nancial and technical assistance to academic and
community oral historians. These historians are responsible for the collection
of the majority of interviews. The Commission also holds workshops and
conferences to support oral history collection and preservation.
The oral history collections, undertaken by support from the Commission,
are located at repositories throughout Kentucky. KHS has a collection of
nearly 8,000 interviews, which are available to the public at the Thomas D.
Clark Center for Kentucky History in Frankfort. Recordings and transcriptions
may be accessed in the Special Collections Research Room and requests
can also be made by submitting a signed user application.
For more information, visit www.history.ky.gov/oralhistory.
The Historical Confederation of Kentucky
(HCK) and the Kentucky Association of
Museums (KAM) held their joint annual
meeting in Elizabethtown, June 1-3. Members
of both organizations voted to create the
Kentucky Museum and Heritage Alliance.
The vote was the fi nal step of a two-year
process led by over 30 museum and heritage
professionals across the state. They worked
diligently to plan a course of action that would
benefi t the memberships of both HCK and KAM and continue programming
that would serve all museum and heritage organizations across the
commonwealth.
In addition, the 2008 annual meeting consisted of several professional-
development workshops and sessions on the theme “Kentucky Past and
Present: Interpreting Our Stories.” The presentations focused on the unique
ways our museums and historic sites present our culture and heritage to
the public.
Dr. J. Blaine Hudson of the University of Louisville was the keynote speaker.
His presentation focused on interpreting controversial topics at museums
and historic sites. He also discussed the issue of slavery and why it is
important to present it openly and honestly. He pointed out that no matter what
the particular issue of controversy may be, museums and historic sites should
not avoid interpreting relevant issues that might seem painful or upsetting.
The City of Elizabethtown also hosted activities to promote their city’s sites,
culture, and history including tours of central Kentucky’s Lincoln heritage
sites, connections to the Coca-Cola Company, and railroad history. For a
complete list of members and sponsors, visit www.kymuseums.org.
The 2009 annual meeting of the new Kentucky Museum and Heritage
Alliance will be May 31 - June 2 at the International Bluegrass Music
Museum in Owensboro.
Please visit www.kymuseums.org for updates.
Kentucky Oral History CommissionOffers New Preservation Assistance
Kentucky Museum and Heritage Alliance Begins to take shape
08 |
Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History, FrankfortOctober 20, 2008 - June 6, 2009
The Speed Art Museum, LouisvilleJune 28, 2009 - September 6, 2009
Highlands Museum & Discovery Center, AshlandOctober 2, 2009 - February 19, 2010
ON EXHIBITION
Cover: Images courtesy of Lee P. Thomas Photography, Inc. and the Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division
As the subject of over 14,000 books in just over 140 years, Abraham
Lincoln would top anyone’s shortlist for the most-written-about
person in history. And yet, despite numerous attempts to uncover the
“real” Lincoln, he remains an elusive fi gure. When historian Merrill
D. Peterson surveyed the vast cornucopia of Lincoln monuments,
books, images, and popular songs, he found that most all of these
representations boiled down to fi ve essential stories, or “Lincoln
myths.” In our major traveling exhibition, Beyond the Log Cabin: Kentucky’s
Abraham Lincoln, we hope to “unpack” the dominant images of Lincoln
the son of the frontier, Lincoln the self-made man, Lincoln the great
statesman and savior of the Union, Lincoln the emancipator, and
Lincoln the martyr. Each contains essential truths, yet none of them,
on their own, tells the whole story. How Lincoln is remembered at
any given time—and by whom—sheds as much light on the history of
Kentucky and our nation as it does on Mr. Lincoln.
BY R. DARRELL MEADOWS
Frontier Kentucky and the LincolnsBy the time Abraham Lincoln was born in 1809, Anglo-American settlement of the Kentucky frontier had already proceeded for several decades. The Lincolns lived in a rapidly maturing agricultural and commercial society. Overland routes to Nashville and Louisville, and by extension New Orleans, connected seemingly isolated households in south-central Kentucky to the outside world. Locally, farmers and townspeople alike participated in a dense web of economic and social connections. Entirely typical of many households in this period, the Lincolns lived a rough-hewn, though not materially deprived, existence. Because of the difficulties of Kentucky land law, disease, and relatively high infant mortality, they faced many uncertainties. Overall, their experiences in Kentucky and their migration to Indiana in 1816 were far from extraordinary and in many ways exemplified the broad sweep of change that transformed the trans-Appalachian West in these years.
From Town to CountryAbraham Lincoln’s father, Thomas Lincoln, was born in Virginia, the son of Revolutionary War veteran Abraham Lincoln and Bersheba Herring. In Kentucky, Thomas lived in Elizabethtown, where he was active in community and church affairs and worked as a carpenter. Money earned from these endeavors fueled his plans to become a farmer and landowner. By the early 1800s, Thomas ranked among the top twenty percent of taxpayers in Hardin County. Originally called the Severn’s Valley settlement, by the 1790s Elizabethtown served as a trade and service center for the
surrounding countryside. It is there that Thomas Lincoln met his future wife, Nancy Hanks. The couple married in nearby Springfield in 1806, in the presence of Nancy’s kinfolk. Little is known about Abraham’s mother Nancy. Like her future husband, Thomas Lincoln, she was born in Virginia and
came to Kentucky as a child. Nancy died of a common frontier disease known as “milk sickness” in 1818, after their removal to Indiana, when Abraham was nine years old. No images of Nancy are known to exist. In 1963, artist Lloyd Ostendorf made a “composite portrait” based on descriptions by people who knew her and photos of relatives.
In fall 1808, Thomas Lincoln moved his wife and one-year-old daughter Sarah to a 348-acre farm at the Sinking Spring near Hodgen’s Mill. There Abraham was born the following
winter. By 1811, the rightful ownership of the farm had come under question, and Thomas moved his family to thirty acres of “bottom land” he leased at Knob Creek—the site of Lincoln’s earliest childhood memories. At the “Knob Creek place,” Lincoln later recalled, he lived in a log cabin, helped plant pumpkin seeds, and with his boyhood friend Austin Gollaher played and fi shed in the nearby stream. Unable to secure title to the Sinking Spring farm, Thomas decided in late fall 1816 to pull up stakes and try again in nearby Indiana, which had achieved statehood earlier that year. Unable to secure the prosperity he sought north of the Ohio, Thomas Lincoln’s future never again appeared as promising as it had in 1808.
Frontier Education and SlaveryChildren raised on the trans-Appalachian frontier rarely attended school. For brief periods in Kentucky and Indiana, Thomas Lincoln paid for Abraham and his sister Sarah to attend “blab” schools, where children learned through recitation. The bulk of Abe and Sarah’s learning, as with most
frontier children, came through reading, listening, telling stories, and playing. Lincoln’s earliest-known writings are six large manuscript pages he penned at about age fi fteen. On one of these pages, Lincoln solved math problems copied from Thomas Dilworth’s Schoolmaster’s Assistant.
The historical record may never yield the true meaning of Lincoln’s observation, made in 1860, that his father chose to leave Kentucky “partly on account of slavery.” We do know that during the years Thomas Lincoln sought title to the Sinking Spring farm (1808-16), more than one thousand enslaved African Americans resided in Hardin County, and slaves being sent overland to markets further south passed by the Lincoln’s cabin on the Cumberland Pike. Throughout the Green River Valley (and increasingly across the Bluegrass), slave laborers were integral to the early development of Kentucky as they worked alongside homesteaders to transform forest to farmland. Many believe this tacit knowledge of slavery in Lincoln’s childhood years must have stuck with him all his life—though we have no record of his actual experience of slavery from these years.
CLOCKWISE , FROM LEFTLloyd Ostendorf, composite portrait of Nancy Hanks Lincoln, (1784-1818), 1963 ©1995 by Lloyd Ostendorf and Walter Olesky. Used by permission from the Lloyd Ostendorf Collection
Thomas Lincoln (1778?-1851), ca. 1845-50Courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum of Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee
Araham Lincoln, page from student sum book, ca. 1824-26 Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Manuscript Division
Table, attributed to Thomas Lincoln, date unknownPrivate Collection
Bette Rowe Pallos, Knob Creek mural, 2007Private Collection
FOUNDING FAMILY AND KENTUCKY’S URBAN FRONTIERLocated at the center of overland trade and migration routes leading west and south, the Kentucky Bluegrass could not have existed without Lexington. Likewise, Lexington would not have existed without the entrepreneurial spirit of its founding fathers, among whom fi gured both of Mary Ann Todd’s grandfathers, Levi Todd and Robert Parker. By the time of her birth in 1818, Lexington had emerged as the leading and wealthiest city in Kentucky. Some called it the Athens of the West—a center of learning and culture built on a foundation of commerce and manufacturing.
If Abraham Lincoln’s father had no choice but to make his own way in the world, Robert S. Todd, his future father-in-law, inherited a legacy. As a community leader and wealthy businessman, and eventually a notable Kentucky politician, Todd could provide his children with opportunities most fathers could not aff ord. This inheritance shaped Mary’s future prospects and helped form her keen interest in politics.
As the matriarch of a founding family of Lexington, Elizabeth Porter Parker (“Grandma Parker”) was an imposing fi gure who in 1810 oversaw a large household of twelve, including six slaves, plus that of her married daughter, Eliza. Refl ective of her English-styled aristocratic tastes, Parker sought out exquisite examples of artisanal craft, such as an engraved spoon fashioned by one of the best silversmiths in Lexington. When her mother died in 1825 at the age of thirty-one, Mary was just seven years old. In the following years, Widow Parker, as her grandmother came to be known, was the most important female fi gure in Mary’s life.
ARISTOCRATIC EDUCATION AND URBAN SLAVERYMary Todd’s family valued education. Her mother, Eliza, had briefl y attended Beck’s Lexington Female Academy, while Robert Todd attended and later supported Transylvania University. They, in turn, provided each of their daughters with a well-rounded education. Mary attended exclusive boarding schools for nine years and then worked with a tutor for another year. At Ward’s and Mentelle’s schools, Mary obtained a solid education in reading, writing, arithmetic, geography, history, natural science, and religion. By her eighteenth birthday, Mary was one of the best-educated women of the entire antebellum period.
FOUNDING FAMILY AND KENTUCKY’S URBAN FRONTIERLocated at the center of overland trade and migration
Bluegrass could not have existed without Lexington. Likewise, Lexington would not have existed without the entrepreneurial spirit of its founding fathers, among whom fi gured both of Mary Ann Todd’s grandfathers, Levi Todd and Robert Parker. By the time of her birth in 1818, Lexington had emerged as the leading and wealthiest city in Kentucky. Some called it the Athens of the West—a center of learning and culture built on a foundation of commerce and
If Abraham Lincoln’s father had no choice but to make his own way in the world, Robert S. Todd, his future father-in-law, inherited a legacy. As a community
notable Kentucky politician, Todd could provide his children with opportunities most fathers could not aff ord. This inheritance shaped Mary’s future prospects and
As the matriarch of a founding family of Lexington, Elizabeth Porter Parker (“Grandma Parker”) was an imposing fi gure who in 1810 oversaw a large household of twelve, including six slaves, plus that of her married
aristocratic tastes, Parker sought out exquisite examples of artisanal craft, such as an engraved spoon fashioned by one of the best silversmiths in Lexington. When her mother died in 1825 at the age of thirty-one, Mary
women of the entire antebellum period.
From the slightly eccentric Charlotte Mentelle, Mary also received a lifelong fl uency in French and French hauteur—and
perhaps a bit of understanding and indulgence. Undoubtedly, Madame Mentelle served as a model of intelligence and independence. As an adult, Mary took pleasure (and perhaps a little pride) in her embroidery, using skills she learned from Madame Mentelle.
The Todds were slaveholders living at the center of what would become, by the 1820s and 1830s, a national
hub of the internal slave trade. Like half of all households in Lexington, the Todd family employed slave labor. In her childhood, enslaved men and women served Mary at home and at school. By 1830, as many as ten slaves worked in the Todd household, and Mary Todd’s views of the institution were indelibly shaped by their presence. “Mammy Salley,” a domestic slave owned by Mary’s Grandma Parker, frequently worked in the Todd home and appears to have been the most constant adult presence in Mary’s early childhood.
From the slightly eccentric Charlotte Mentelle, Mary also
The Todds were slaveholders living at the center of
From the slightly eccentric Charlotte Mentelle, Mary also received a lifelong fl uency in French and French hauteur—and hauteur—and hauteur
perhaps a bit of understanding and indulgence. Undoubtedly, Madame Mentelle served as a model of intelligence and independence. As an adult, Mary took pleasure (and perhaps a little pride) in her embroidery, using skills she
The Todds were slaveholders living at the center of what would become, by the 1820s and 1830s, a national
hub of the internal slave trade. Like half of all households in Lexington, the Todd family employed slave labor. In her childhood, enslaved men and women served Mary at home and at school. By 1830, as many as ten slaves worked in the Todd household, and Mary Todd’s views of the institution were indelibly shaped by their presence. “Mammy Salley,” a domestic slave owned by Mary’s Grandma Parker, frequently worked in the Todd home and appears to have been the most constant adult presence in Mary’s early
CLOCKWISE , FROM LEFTAsa Blanchard, silver spoon, date unknownCourtesy of the Mary Todd Lincoln House
View of Lexington, Kentucky, detail, ca. 1855Collections of The Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky
Miniature of Charlotte Victorie (Leclerc) Mentelle (d. 1860), date unknownCourtesy of the Mary Todd Lincoln House
Mary Todd Lincoln, silk embroidery, ca. 1865Courtesy of Hildene, the Lincoln Family Home
Meissen porcelain compote, date unknownCourtesy of the Mary Todd Lincoln House
Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee
Araham Lincoln, page from student sum book, ca. 1824-26 Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Manuscript Division
Table, attributed to Thomas Lincoln, date unknownPrivate Collection
Bette Rowe Pallos, Knob Creek mural, 2007Private Collection
LINCOLN’S STORY, AMERICA’S STORYNo other individual in American history has come to embody the American dream so completely as Abraham Lincoln. Why this should be so is an interesting question—for his story was far from unique in nineteenth-century America. As a child, Lincoln was born into a world in which ninety percent of households lived in log cabins. Like his own family, thousands of others felt the push and pull of migration north of the Ohio River. As a young politician in the Illinois legislature, Lincoln rubbed shoulders with numerous Kentuckians, and his embrace of Whig politics and Henry Clay’s American System mirrored thousands of his generation. In the example of Lincoln’s self-conscious eff ort to achieve respectability at home, at work, and in politics, we see the emergence of the American middle class.
THE INVISIBLE HAND OF MIGRATIONWe also see a world shaped by the fl ood of trans-Appalachian migrants who, like the Lincolns, passed through Kentucky into Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois (as well as Tennessee). This invisible but no less powerful infl uence of migration would shape Lincoln’s choice of occupation and his prospects for marriage. Serving briefl y in the Black Hawk War in 1832, Lincoln met a number of young men who, like himself, had
been born in Kentucky. One of these, a young lawyer named John Todd Stuart, encouraged Lincoln to study law, and in 1837, he made Lincoln a partner in his Springfi eld fi rm. Upon arrival in Springfi eld,
Lincoln met another native Kentuckian, Joshua Fry Speed, with whom he formed a lifelong friendship.
Both Stuart and Speed were members of the Springfi eld “clique,” a social circle that included some of the most prominent politicians in Illinois. They frequently met at the home of Stuart’s cousin, Elizabeth Todd Edwards, and her husband, Ninian Edwards, son of the former Illinois territorial governor. It was in the Edwards’ Springfi eld mansion, several years later, that Stuart introduced Lincoln to yet another cousin of his—Elizabeth’s sister, Mary Ann Todd.
A POLITICAL PARTNERSHIPMary Todd and Abraham Lincoln were married on November 4, 1842. As a young bride, Mary was both vivacious and refi ned. Still, some members of the Todd family thought Lincoln “mighty rough” and did not approve of the match. But Mary’s choice refl ected the growing trend
to marry for love and compatibility rather than wealth or family interests. Mary and Abraham
proved intellectually compatible, sharing a deep aff ection for books, especially poetry, and an immense political ambition. Early on their
marriage showed itself to be both a loving and a political partnership.
Mary’s most important contribution to her husband’s political career may have been her supreme confi dence in his ability. But her practical engagement was also considerable, especially during Lincoln’s rise to national prominence in the 1850s (after which Mary played a much-diminished role). In spring 1849, with Lincoln’s term in Congress ended, she embarked on a letter-writing campaign to help secure the coveted position of commissioner of the General Land Offi ce, signing “A. Lincoln” to over forty letters addressed to friends and associates closely connected to President Zachary Taylor. In fall 1854, when Lincoln decided to give up his seat in the Illinois state legislature in order to pursue one in the U.S. Senate, newspapers described it as “a family decision.” During the U.S. Senate race of 1858 against Stephen A. Douglas, Lincoln found himself inordinately busy, traveling some 4,200 miles and giving no less than sixty-
three speeches between August 12 and October 30. Back in Springfi eld, Mary worked diligently, reviewing editorials and interpreting his moderate
Mary’s most important contribution to her husband’s political career may have been her supreme confi dence in his ability. But her practical engagement was also considerable, especially during Lincoln’s rise to national prominence in the 1850s (after which Mary played a much-diminished role). In spring 1849, with Lincoln’s term in Congress ended, she embarked on a letter-writing campaign to help secure the coveted position of commissioner of the General Land Offi ce, signing “A. Lincoln” to over forty letters addressed to friends and associates closely connected to President Zachary Taylor. In fall 1854, when Lincoln decided to give up his seat in the Illinois state legislature in order to pursue one in the U.S. Senate, newspapers
August 12 and October 30. Back in Springfi eld, Mary worked diligently, reviewing editorials and interpreting his moderate
cabins. Like his own family, thousands of others felt the push and pull of migration north of the Ohio River. As a young politician
family thought Lincoln “mighty rough” and did not approve of the match. But Mary’s choice refl ected the growing trend
proved intellectually compatible, sharing a deep aff ection for books, especially poetry, and an immense political ambition. Early on their
marriage showed itself to be both a loving and a political partnership.
antislavery views in personal letters to inquiring friends and associates. But perhaps the most fi tting testament to their political partnership occurred when Lincoln learned of his election to the presidency on November 6, 1860. Lincoln immediately left the telegraph offi ce and headed for home. As he approached the corner of Eighth and Jackson, Lincoln called out: “Mary, Mary, we are elected!”
RISING POLITICALLYWhen Mary and Abraham married in 1842, Lincoln had fi ve solid years of experience working with two of the best lawyers in Illinois, John Todd Stuart and Stephen T. Logan, had already argued important cases before the Illinois Supreme Court, and had just completed his fourth and last term in
the Illinois state legislature. As a leader of the Illinois Whig Party, Lincoln was an expert stump speaker, whose humor and storytelling were as perceptive as his language and probing logic were precise. Wherever he went, he engaged people with a combination of gregariousness, wit, fair-mindedness, and probity, whether on the political or judicial circuit, and these qualities undoubtedly account for his ever-expanding personal network of friends and associates. The
most infl uential and long-lasting of these relationships formed
in the decade between his arrival in Springfi eld and his election to the U.S. House of Representatives.
TOWARDS ANTISLAVERYIn Congress, Lincoln would support legislation prohibiting slavery from the territories acquired during the recent war with Mexico and would consider proposing compensated, gradual emancipation in the District of Columbia. This public support for antislavery measures was a new, if tentative, departure for Lincoln, and likely stemmed as much from his personal relations with Kentuckians residing in Illinois as with the rise of the Free-Soil movement. Because so many of his early associations in Illinois – including, most prominently, those with the Todd family – involved slaveholding Kentuckians or relatives of slaveholders, it is reasonable to believe that these individuals must have infl uenced Lincoln’s decidedly gradualist antislavery views, which he professed as early as 1837. But we have no records, for example, documenting conversations that likely took place between Abraham and Mary on the subject of slavery—though she too appears to have held conservative antislavery views. Nonetheless, Abraham Lincoln’s thinking about the problem of slavery in the United States appears to have undergone a maturing process sometime in the 1840s, which coincides with Lincoln’s growing familiarity with his native state. Aside from two trips to New Orleans in his twenties, Lincoln’s closest, if rare, observations of slavery occurred in Kentucky. The most extensive of these were the three weeks he spent at Farmington, the Speeds’ Louisville home and hemp plantation worked by dozens of slaves. Although Lincoln left no written record of what he may have observed walking the plantation grounds, contemporary paintings such as The Hemp Brake (ca.1840) suggest a range of possibilities. Clearly the moral question of slavery hung over him, for on
most infl uential and long-lasting of these relationships formed
in the decade between his arrival in Springfi eld and his election to the U.S. House of Representatives.
Lincoln’s closest, if rare, observations of slavery occurred in Kentucky. The most extensive of these were the three weeks he spent at Farmington, the Speeds’ Louisville home and hemp plantation worked by dozens of slaves. Although Lincoln left no written record of what he may have observed walking the plantation grounds, contemporary paintings such as The Hemp Brake Clearly the moral question of slavery hung over him, for on
cont inued on nex t page
CLOCKWISE , FROM LEFTTeapot from the Lincolns’ tea service, ca. 1850-55Courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum of Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee
Katherine Helm, portrait of Mary Todd Lincoln, ca. 1928Courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum of Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee
Pocket watch owned by Abraham Lincoln, ca. 1860Collections of the Kentucky Historical Society
Lincoln and Hamlin fl ag, ca. 1860Courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum of Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee
George Peter Alexander Healy, Joshua and Fanny Speed, 1864Courtesy of The Filson Historical Society, Louisville, Kentucky
his boat trip back to Springfi eld, he wrote of the dozen slaves on board, severed from their families and chained together for sale further south. This same scene would appear again, fourteen years later, in a letter to Joshua Speed.
We also know that after his return from Congress in spring 1849, Lincoln gave particular attention to Kentucky politics, where supporters of gradual emancipation – including James Speed, Cassius Clay, and the abolitionist John G. Fee – were campaigning for delegates to the upcoming Kentucky constitutional convention, where they hoped to add an antislavery amendment. When the death of Mary’s father, Robert S. Todd, provoked litigation over the estate, Lincoln timed his family’s visit to Lexington in late-October to coincide with the convention. With the emancipationists unable to secure a single delegate, proslavery politicians defended and strengthened Kentucky’s slave provisions—including a declaration on the inviolability of slave property. Here, Lincoln witnessed fi rsthand how strongly even nonslaveholders would fi ght to secure the future of slavery.
Despite his support for antislavery measures in Congress and his attention to Kentucky politics, the issue of slavery played little practical role in Lincoln’s political career thus far. As a committed Whig, Lincoln had pushed the platform of “internal improvements” (roads, canals, railroads), tariff s, and a national bank, as he would again as president. And in the years after his return from Congress, Lincoln mostly concentrated on his law practice, riding the judicial circuit, and improving his personal fi nances.
ANTISLAVERY POLITICIAN But the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854, as Lincoln later said, “aroused him as he had never been before.” Introduced by Illinois senator Stephen A. Douglas, the act laid the groundwork for the organization of these two territories as new states and, while overturning key provisions of the 1850 Compromise, opened vast areas to legal slavery by popular referendum. Cutting a new fault line in American politics, the Kansas-Nebraska Act accelerated
the disintegration of the Whig Party and the realignment of the two-party system. In Illinois, Lincoln would become a key player in the politics of antislavery provoked by the Kansas-Nebraska Act. The moderate antislavery position Lincoln staked out in his famous speech at Peoria, Illinois, on October 16, 1854, would remain largely unchanged until his presidency. This
was Lincoln’s fi rst major public statement against the Kansas-Nebraska Act and its underlying
principle of “popular sovereignty,” which would authorize voters in each of the
territories to decide whether to permit or exclude slavery. Citing the 1787 Northwest Ordinance, which had excluded slavery from the territories, Lincoln argued forcefully that the Founding Fathers had placed slavery on the path to ultimate extinction and that the Kansas-Nebraska Act overturned this principle in favor of a moral indiff erence to the extension of slavery. Hoping to build a bridge of support among both conservative and antislavery Whigs as well as “free soil” Democrats in Illinois, Lincoln did not blame southerners for
slavery or for not knowing how best to end it. “They are just what we would be in
their situation,” he said. Distancing himself as well from northern abolitionists who sought
an immediate end to slavery, Lincoln advocated gradual emancipation and colonization of free blacks to Africa, the Caribbean, or Central America, as did his political hero, Henry Clay, saying that black equality was impossible in the America of his day. Finally, while stressing the moral wrong of slavery, Lincoln acknowledged the constitutional rights of slaveholders, including the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and the inability of the Federal government to interfere with slavery where it already existed. This would remain Lincoln’s position when he delivered his First Inaugural Address on March 4, 1861. With his election, however, the sectional crisis in the United States had come to a head, with South Carolina leading the charge of secession. By the time of Lincoln’s inauguration four months later, six other southern states had followed suit—Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. By April, the nation was at war.
where supporters of gradual emancipation – including James Speed, Cassius Clay, and the abolitionist John G. Fee – were campaigning for delegates to the upcoming Kentucky constitutional convention, where they hoped to add an antislavery amendment. When the
With the emancipationists unable to
politicians defended and strengthened Kentucky’s slave provisions—including
witnessed fi rsthand how strongly even nonslaveholders would fi ght to secure
Despite his support for antislavery measures in Congress and his attention to Kentucky politics, the issue of slavery played little practical role in Lincoln’s political career thus far. As a committed Whig, Lincoln had pushed the platform of “internal improvements” (roads, canals, railroads), tariff s, and a national bank, as he would again as president. And in the years after his return from Congress, Lincoln mostly concentrated on his law practice, riding the judicial circuit, and improving his personal fi nances.
But the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854, as Lincoln later said, “aroused him as he had never been before.” Introduced by Illinois senator Stephen A. Douglas, the act laid the groundwork for the organization of these two territories as new states and, while overturning key provisions of the 1850 Compromise, opened vast areas to legal slavery by popular referendum. Cutting a new fault line in American politics, the Kansas-Nebraska Act accelerated
would remain largely unchanged until his presidency. This was Lincoln’s fi rst major public statement against
the Kansas-Nebraska Act and its underlying principle of “popular sovereignty,” which
would authorize voters in each of the territories to decide whether to permit or exclude slavery. Citing the 1787 Northwest Ordinance, which had excluded slavery from the territories, Lincoln argued forcefully that the Founding Fathers had placed slavery on the path to ultimate extinction and that the Kansas-Nebraska Act overturned this principle in favor of a moral indiff erence to the extension of slavery. Hoping to build a bridge of support among both conservative and antislavery Whigs as well as “free soil” Democrats in Illinois, Lincoln did not blame southerners for
slavery or for not knowing how best to end it. “They are just what we would be in
their situation,” he said. Distancing himself as well from northern abolitionists who sought
an immediate end to slavery, Lincoln advocated gradual emancipation and colonization of free blacks to Africa, the Caribbean, or Central America, as did his political hero, Henry Clay, saying that black equality was impossible in the America of his day. Finally, while stressing the moral wrong of slavery, Lincoln acknowledged the constitutional rights of slaveholders, including the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and the inability of the Federal government to interfere with slavery where it already existed.
This would remain Lincoln’s position when he delivered his First Inaugural Address on March 4, 1861. With his election, however, the sectional crisis in the United States had come to a head, with South Carolina leading the charge of secession. By the time of Lincoln’s inauguration four months later, six other southern states had followed suit—Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. By April, the nation was at war.
KENTUCKY’S CIVIL WARKentucky voters overwhelmingly rejected Abraham Lincoln in the election of 1860. Yet their rejection of Lincoln was not a rejection of the Union. In fact, some two-thirds of Kentucky voters chose Union candidates John Bell and Stephen A. Douglas. This pro-Unionism was consistent with the Whig political tradition in Kentucky. But Kentucky was also a slave state, and the vote against Lincoln refl ected a strident anti-Republican fear that Lincoln would interfere with the institution of slavery. When civil war broke out in April, Kentuckians sought to avoid becoming a battlefi eld and initially opted for armed neutrality. But the room for neutrality soon disappeared and by fall the majority of Kentuckians had sided with the Union. With a small but vigorous Confederate minority, Kentucky soon became what all hoped to avoid—a civil war within the Civil War.
Between 25,000 and 40,000 Kentuckians wore Confederate gray uniforms, while some 90,000 to 100,000, including 25,000 black soldiers, served in Federal blue. But as recent studies have discovered, Kentucky’s Civil War, as with much of the Upper South and West, was also shaped profoundly by guerrilla warfare. In perhaps no other aspect of this period do we see how divided Kentuckians were all across the state, including the eastern Appalachian region. Opposed even by Confederate president Jeff erson Davis and members of the Confederate Congress, guerrilla warfare was very much a local aff air. From the earliest stages of the war, local bands of Confederate, and to a lesser degree, Union, guerrillas
Between 25,000 and 40,000 Kentuckians wore Confederate gray uniforms, while some 90,000 to 100,000, including 25,000
Kentucky’s Civil War, as with much of the Upper South and West, was also shaped profoundly by guerrilla warfare. In perhaps no other aspect of this period do we see how divided Kentuckians were all across the state, including the eastern Appalachian
president Jeff erson Davis and members of the Confederate Congress, guerrilla
CLOCKWISE , FROM LEFT:“Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men” campaign lantern, ca. 1858-60Courtesy of the National Park Service, Lincoln Home National Historic Site
Louisville Public Advertiser, August 19, 1826 Courtesy of University of Kentucky Libraries
Bugle used by John Washington Payne, Second Kentucky Regiment, Confederate States of America Collections of the Kentucky Historical Society
The Hemp Brake, attributed to Samuel I.M. Major, ca.1850 Collections of the Kentucky Historical Society
often operated outside of any larger command structure, pitting neighbor against neighbor and posing a difficult challenge for both local and Federal authorities. FEDERAL POLICY IN KENTUCKYThrough summer 1862, Lincoln had insisted that his commanders take a conciliatory approach toward southern civilians, including strict nonintervention with southern slavery. But as the war deepened and guerrilla warfare expanded, Congressional leaders, northern civilians, and Union troops urged Lincoln toward harsher treatment of secessionists and pushed slave emancipation and confiscation of Confederate property. Continued Border State intransigence toward Lincoln’s repeated offers of voluntary, compensated gradual emancipation emboldened his steps in this direction.
In large areas of Kentucky, John Hunt Morgan’s Confederate raids of 1862-64, which often employed civilians as informants and participants, catalyzed the growth of local guerrilla bands led by local men with local support. To suppress these bands, as well as other activities deemed acts of treason, on July 31, 1862, Brigadier General Jeremiah T. Boyle assumed responsibility for the establishment of Federal military government in Kentucky. Unable to stem this tide, by summer 1864, Confederate guerrillas were active throughout the state. It was in this context that Lincoln imposed martial law and suspended habeas corpus in Kentucky and Union commander Stephen G. Burbridge implemented his harsh “counter-insurgency” campaign. Throughout the war, the crisscrossing of armies and the constant presence of guerrilla “irregulars” weighed heavily on the civilian population. But Union actions in Kentucky, though ultimately successful, and the president’s tardy response to charges of military misrule also left a legacy of bitterness toward Lincoln’s administration.
EMANCIPATION AND BLACK RECRUITMENT IN KENTUCKYIn 1860, Kentucky held over 225,000 slaves, more than Maryland and Missouri combined, and had more slaveholders than any other state except Virginia and Georgia. Conflicts over slave policy thus shaped the Civil War in Kentucky as much as they drove national policy. From the outset, Kentucky regiments generally adhered to Lincoln’s conciliatory policy of noninterference with slavery, while officers and soldiers of Midwestern regiments–the vast majority of Union regiments serving in Kentucky–were more apt to defy it. By April 1862, radicals in Congress, who that month abolished slavery in the District of Columbia, increasingly voiced their opposition to Lincoln’s appeasement of the Border States. Even as Lincoln moved toward military emancipation in summer and fall 1862 and extended black recruitment to all of the other Border States during 1863, strong proslavery resistance in Kentucky forced Lincoln to tread cautiously for most of the war.
In late September 1862, Abraham Lincoln issued his preliminary Emancipation Proclamation and in December announced his plan to enlist African Americans into the Federal army. Both measures signaled a major shift in war aims. Out of military necessity, Lincoln now intended to harness the manpower of former slaves and a general attack on southern slavery to the larger end of saving the Union. Both measures provoked a firestorm in Kentucky. Although the proclamation did not apply to Kentucky slaves, slaveholders feared slave insurrection, while many of the enslaved believed it signaled their impending freedom. Over the next year, Lincoln felt the relentless backlash from Kentucky – from its congressional delegation, through his network of Kentucky informants, in newspaper editorials, in reports of the Kentucky legislature – and postponed black recruitment there until Congress forced his hand in early 1864.
The U.S. Conscription Act of February 24, 1864, included recruitment of “all able-bodied colored persons” of military age “resident in the United States.” In Kentucky, the measure faced bitter opposition, despite the assurance of compensation to loyal slaveholders. In Lexington on March 10, Colonel Frank L. Wolford called black soldiers “an insult and degradation” and denounced the policy as “unconstitutional and unjust,” provoking counter-speeches by Unconditional Unionists Robert J. Breckinridge and Green Clay Smith. Governor Thomas E. Bramlette drafted a proclamation advising the people of Kentucky to forcibly
resist black recruitments, but he relented after a March 15 meeting with Breckinridge and several other staunch Unionists. The revised proclamation, published the next day in the Frankfort Commonwealth, recommended compliance, thereby avoiding open confl ict between federal and state authorities. By mid-April, the congressional demand for 10,000 Kentucky recruits had failed by half, and Burbridge issued his General Orders No. 34, extending recruitment to free blacks and slaves, with the owner’s authorization.
Many slaveholders responded with violence toward slaves seeking to enlist, but Kentucky slaves proved determined to enlist and secure their freedom. By June, over Bramlette’s repeated protests, Burbridge had removed all restrictions on African American recruitment, and Kentucky tobacco farmers soon faced a major labor shortage. Resistance to black recruitment by armed guerrillas appeared in many districts, especially southern and western Kentucky, provoking Lincoln to impose martial law in Kentucky. By fall, some 5,400 slaves had enlisted at Camp Nelson alone. Thousands of others fl ed the state to enlist in Ohio, Tennessee, and to a lesser degree, Illinois. By summer 1865, nearly half of all eligible African American men in Kentucky–about 25,000–had enlisted in the Union army.
The social and economic impact of this de facto end of slavery in Kentucky and the bitterness engendered on all sides of the confl ict would linger for decades, and greatly shape how Kentuckians would remember Abraham Lincoln ever after.
issued his General Orders No. 34, extending recruitment to
CLOCKWISE , FROM LEFT“War in Kentucky . . . portions of the town burnt by the rebels,”
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 15, 1862Courtesy of the Kentucky Library, Western Kentucky University
“Freedom to the Slave,” recruitment poster, ca. 1863-64Courtesy of the Kentucky Library, Western Kentucky University
Sword, presented March 10, 1864, to Colonel Frank L. Wolford, First Kentucky Cavalry, date unknownCollections of the Kentucky Historical Society
U.S. M1855 cartridge boxCollections of the Kentucky Historical Society
THE CONTEXT OF LINCOLN MEMORY IN KENTUCKYAn understanding of how Lincoln has been remembered in Kentucky since his assassination in April 1865 cannot be divorced from the diffi cult relationship of Lincoln to Kentucky, beginning with his election as president. In 1864, Kentuckians again rejected Lincoln, preferring the Democratic candidate, George B. McClellan, by a ratio of 2.3 to 1. But Lincoln’s national victory helped to ensure that Unconditional Unionists like Robert J. Breckinridge would remain an important force in Kentucky politics through the early postwar years.
Despite their occasionally vociferous anti-administration criticisms, such men had counted among Lincoln’s staunchest supporters, and over thirty Kentucky Unionists attended Lincoln’s funeral in Springfi eld on May 5, 1865. Just two weeks earlier in Louisville, Governor Thomas E. Bramlette, despite his recent
criticisms, urged Kentuckians to accept the “revolution” that had lately swept over Kentucky. Lincoln’s ultimate aim, he reminded his audience, had been to preserve “the institutions of our country—to preserve all that is worth preserving and that could possibly be preserved from the wreck of this revolution.” Through the 1866 state elections, Unconditional Unionists (who, like Bramlette, urged Kentuckians to accept emancipation as a fait accompli) would continue to struggle, though unsuccessfully, for ratifi cation of Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution. With the return of ex-Confederate politicians to the Democratic Party, members of which considered the Thirteenth Amendment unconstitutional, Kentucky Democrats reunited into a cohesive bloc, able to push state’s rights and to voice opposition to Congressional Reconstruction.
In the wake of such enormous challenges and signifi cant anti-administration and anti-Congressional sentiment, white Kentuckians began to embrace a pro-Confederate public culture as early as 1866-67. In the following decades, enthusiasm among white Kentuckians for the memory of Abraham Lincoln (or the Union) receded from public view. In other ways, the development of a pro-Confederate identity in Kentucky was a by-product of the social and economic dislocations engendered by the war. For example, exploiting the economic potential of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad became crucial, since Louisville had lost ground to Cincinnati’s growing east-west trade. Thus, some of the fi rst promoters of Confederate public culture were local businessmen and politicians in Louisville, who mounted a major marketing campaign to gain new southern markets and attract southern businessmen to their city. Later, organizations such as the United Daughters of the Confederacy added a public dimension to this pro-Confederate cultural movement through the building of Confederate monuments in counties across the state and, more profoundly, through the insertion of pro-Confederate narratives in textbooks.
KENTUCKY’S LINCOLN CENTENNIALDespite the Confederate public culture of Kentucky, the state was a major site of commemorative activities honoring the one-hundredth anniversary of Lincoln’s birth. In 1909, Kentuckians and other visitors to the state joined President Theodore Roosevelt at the “Lincoln Memorial Farm” for a ceremony to lay the cornerstone of the new memorial in Hodgenville. The following May, Kentucky notables, including guest of honor Emilie Todd Helm, again gathered in Hodgenville to unveil one of the two Lincoln sculptures that Adolph A. Weinman would produce for the state. The other, a gift of the Speed family, would be placed in the rotunda of the new state capitol in Frankfort and dedicated in November 1911. And in February
ground to Cincinnati’s growing
politicians in Louisville, who
southern markets and attract
their city. Later, organizations such as the United Daughters
movement through the building of Confederate monuments in counties across the state and,
Despite the Confederate public culture of Kentucky,
1911, President William Howard Taft was on hand for the dedication of the completed Birthplace Memorial.
At all of these events, images of Lincoln the Great Emancipator contrasted uneasily with the more dominant images of Lincoln the great statesman and frontier American—a refl ection of the diffi cult transition from slavery to freedom in Kentucky and the recent adoption of Jim Crow segregation. The remarks of President Roosevelt at the Lincoln Memorial Farm on February 12, 1909, were indicative of this moment in American history and the
tendency to extol Lincoln’s role in saving the Union while downplaying the issue of slavery. Drawing attention
fi rst to Lincoln’s frontier origins, the president called
Lincoln “This rail splitter, this boy who passed his ungainly youth in the dire poverty of the poorest of the frontier folk”
and marveled at the dramatic rise of this unlikely savior of the Union: “After long years of iron eff ort, and of failure that came more often than victory, he at
last rose to the leadership of the Republic, at the moment when that leadership had become the
stupendous world-task of the time.”
But the image of Lincoln the Emancipator was not
absent from the 1909 Lincoln Centennial in Kentucky. In the less-public
commemorative events sponsored by members of the African American community, the Emancipator took center stage. On February 13, 1909, for example, an audience of several hundred African Americans held an event in honor of Lincoln at the Odd Fellows Hall in Frankfort. The most powerful of the three speakers that night was Dr. Edward E. Underwood, a member of the Negro Peoples’ Centenary Committee. Off ering due praise for Lincoln’s frontier origins and the eff ect of Kentucky soil and air on the would-be president, Underwood turned to the larger signifi cance of Lincoln’s actions for former slaves. If, like Roosevelt, Underwood stretched the “real” Lincoln story just enough to make his point, he diff ered in his strident defense of
Lincoln the Emancipator: “And so it was that when Abraham Lincoln saw four million of his fellow creatures in subjugation and chains he felt that it was but an act of mercy to strike the shackles from their limbs and bestow upon them the deathless boon
of freedom.” The name of Abraham Lincoln, Underwood observed, “shines out with imperishable luster,” his memory among African Americans was “holy ground.”
DISCOVERING KENTUCKY’S LINCOLN AT THE BICENTENNIALToday, Kentucky and the nation little resemble what they were in 1909. Funding appropriated by the state legislature places the Kentucky commemoration among the largest in the nation. In 2009, Kentucky chose this bicentennial moment to revisit its own past while exploring the life and accomplishments of its native son, Abraham Lincoln. In examining this past, we continue to pay tribute to Lincoln’s frontier origins and his remarkable rise from log house to White House. But unlike 1909, we are better positioned to understand our sometimes-diffi cult past and recognize that, in ending slavery, our nation took an important step toward forming a more perfect Union. Exploring the complex relationship between Abraham Lincoln and his native state of Kentucky can deepen our understanding of this extraordinary, yet ordinary, man and the state that reluctantly came to embrace him. In revisiting the life and character of Abraham Lincoln, we fi nd a source of inspiration for our collective future.
tendency to extol Lincoln’s
fi rst to Lincoln’s frontier origins, the president called
Lincoln “This rail splitter, this boy who passed his ungainly youth in the dire poverty of the poorest of the frontier folk”
and marveled at the dramatic rise of this unlikely savior of the Union: “After long years of iron eff ort, and of failure that came more often than victory, he at
last rose to the leadership of the Republic, at the moment when that leadership had become the
stupendous world-task of the
But the image of Lincoln the Emancipator was not
absent from the 1909 Lincoln Centennial in Kentucky. In the less-public
commemorative events sponsored by members of the
CLOCKWISE , FROM LEFT:The Apotheosis, ca. 1865
Courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum of Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee
Lincoln Centennial Souvenir Program detail, February 12, 1909Collections of the Kentucky Historical Society
Ed Hamilton, Slavery, photographic print of clay model, 2007Private Collection
Elsie at the Lincoln Birthplace Memorial, 2007Private Collection
www.history.ky.gov
This exhibition is made possible by
The Kentucky Historical Society is an agency of the Tourism, Arts, and Heritage Cabinet.
An exciting recent addition to the Kentucky Historical Society collections is
an early dulcimer made by the nationally–known Kentucky luthier, Homer
Ledford. As a maker of stringed instruments, Ledford is considered among
the fi nest in the United States. This piece is an exceptional example of his
early work and will help KHS share Ledford’s art and story with our visitors.
Born in Ivyton, Tennessee, in 1927, Ledford made his fi rst musical
instrument, a matchstick fi ddle, when he was only twelve years old. While
attending the John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, North Carolina,
eighteen-year-old Ledford crafted his fi rst dulcimers as commissions for
a store in New York. His life in Kentucky began when he attended Berea
College in 1949. With wife Colista, he settled in Winchester where he
taught industrial arts for several years. By 1965, Homer was making
instruments full-time. Highly productive, Ledford crafted over 6,500
instruments including 6014 dulcimers.
The story of how KHS came to acquire this special piece bears telling. A
few months ago, the Kentucky Historical Society received word that an
early Ledford dulcimer was for sale on eBay. KHS staff was contacted by
the seller who generously agreed to pull the instrument off auction to give
KHS a chance to examine it. Initial research suggested that this could be
one of the fi rst two dulcimers that Homer Ledford ever made. Excited that
this could be a signifi cant fi nd, the staff approached the Kentucky Historical
Society Foundation for money to purchase the dulcimer. The request was
wholeheartedly endorsed – this was an opportunity not to be lost.
Four pieces of evidence support the claim that this is one of the fi rst two
Ledford dulcimers. First, it is labeled “Made by Homer Ledford, Ivyton,
Tenn.” Therefore, we know that the dulcimer was made before Ledford
moved to Kentucky. Second, it is unnumbered, and Ledford did not number
his early instruments. Third, the label is handwritten in pencil on the inside
of the instrument. Ledford biographer R. Gerald Alvey in his 2003 book,
Dulcimer Maker, the Craft of Homer Ledford, states that “to identify his fi rst
dulcimers, Homer merely signed his name with a pencil on the inside of
the back. After he returned to Tennessee from the John C Campbell Folk
School, he whittled his own name stamp out of red cedar and dipped it
in ink to make the impression on the inside of his dulcimers.” Fourth, we
know that Ledford’s fi rst two dulcimers were commissioned in 1946 for a
shop in New York. This piece had been purchased in New York in the early
1950s by one of its prior owners.
The Kentucky Historical Society is proud to add this important Ledford
dulcimer to the collections. Ledford’s work has been recognized by
many, including the Smithsonian, the Southern Highlands Guild, and the
Governor’s Awards for the Arts. This is an integral part of Homer Ledford’s
legacy and its aquisition enables KHS to share that legacy with the people
of Kentucky.
Kentucky Historical Society CollectionsKentucky Historical Society Acquires Early Homer Ledford Dulcimer
25www.history.ky.gov |
ACQUISITIONSTobacco Baler, ca. 1977 Maurice Corn of Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, began constructing tobacco balers after working with one provided by the University of Kentucky. Convinced of the labor-saving capability of the baler, he constructed this baler, his fi rst. By 1998, the last year he made balers, he had assembled over 5000.
Donated by Mr. Maurice Corn, 2008.5.
The View-Master Model C, 1946-55Produced by Sawyer’s Incorporated of Portland, Oregon, this popular educational toy let families explore far-off places. Parents and children could, with the aid of the viewer, travel to Jerusalem, Bermuda, the Grand Canyon, or even Mammoth Cave, Kentucky.Donated by Mrs. Ann Gabhart, 2007.34.
Service Banner, ca. 1942The practice of displaying service banners can be traced to World War I and was popular during World War II. This banner belonged to the Masonic Lodge Hiram #4 of Frankfort. Each star represented a lodge member in military service. Lodge tradition states that this banner dates from World War II. Donated by Hiram Lodge #4 Free and Accepted Masons, 2008.9.
Doll, “Jimmy,” ca. 1910Won at a Harrison County carnival by LeRoy Bland in 1910, this doll features battery-powered light-up eyes. The doll was dressed in this uniform when three of the Bland family’s sons went to serve in World War I. Donated by Lucia Bland Lister, 2008.6.
Colonel James H. Hutson Postcards and Pamphlet CollectionThis collection contains 12 postcards of various locations in Kentucky, including Mammoth Cave, Fort Knox, and the Lincoln National Memorial. Also included is a pamphlet entitled “Brown-Forman’s Old Forester Derby Dope Book” from 1941.Donated by Danny Hutson, 2008.006.
Museum & SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
Torch Light Newsletters This collection contains approximately 31 issues of Torch Light, a newspaper published by the First Colored Baptist Church in Danville, Ky. The issues are dated from June 1902 through May 1903.Donated by Rowena Hooks-Bush, 2008.013.
Major Benjamin Graves Order Book, 1812This collection contains an order book kept by Major Benjamin Graves and his staff while serving with the Kentucky militia during the War of 1812. Graves was captured in 1813 at the Battle of the River Raisin and was never heard from again. Information in the order book includes troop movements, battle strategies, promotions, disciplinary actions, and other items related to camp and military life. Donated by Andrew Leighton, 2008SC08.
Representative Brent Spence LetterThis letter was written by the representative of Kentucky’s sixth Congressional District, Brent Spence, on August 25, 1961, in response to Kathy Gunther’s suggestion that Kentucky should have “Birthplace of Lincoln” inscribed on the automobile license plates.Donated by Kathleen J. Gunther Hanas, 2008.014
Commemorating the Sixty-Sixth Anniversary of the Sixty-Six Harrodsburg Tankers, 940.5472 T863This pamphlet provides a history of the 66 men from Harrodsburg, Kentucky, who served as part of the 192nd Tank Battalion in World War II, and their attempt to defend the Philippines from Japanese attack from December 1941 to April 1942.Donated by John M. Trowbridge, 2008.015.
Hawkins Family BibleThis donation includes a Bible belonging to the Hawkins family, Ohio County, Kentucky, and an Almanack printed in Dublin, 1814.Donated by Robin Reams, 2008.002.
Wilbert Riehemann Collection, ca. 1943This collection includes materials from the World War II era collected by Wilbert Riehemann while serving with the 12th AAA Group. Items include a photograph, information about the 12th AAA Group, and several World War II Memorial certifi cates.Donated by Geneva Riehemann, 2008.005.
Annie Wayne Scrapbook, ca. 1910-20Using an old 1870s store ledger, Annie Wayne created a scrapbook of newspaper clippings. These clippings include important news stories, poetry, images of celebrities, and information on crafts, local entertainment, and happenings.Donated by Thomas Rogers, 2008.010.
Kentucky National Guard 50th Anniversary Remembrance, 1958-2008: The Prestonsburg School Bus Disaster, 2008This pamphlet commemorates the history of the Prestonsburg school bus disaster of 1958. It includes primarily images of the students involved in the accident and soldiers who worked at the scene.Donated by John Trowbridge, 363.1259 T863.
Salyers Family FilmsThe Salyers Family fi lms consist of twenty-one reels of 16-mm fi lm, one reel of 8-mm fi lm, and one DVD. The fi lms were shot by James R. Salyers from the 1930s to 1960s while working for the United States Army on the National Recovery Act as well as the United Mine Workers as a claims evaluator. Some of the fi lms are family home movies in Lexington and Louisville, Kentucky, including Louisville’s Standiford Field during the 1940s and 1950s. Other reels are of the Eastern Kentucky coal fi elds and footage of miners, their homes, and families. The family portion of the fi lms was transferred onto a DVD.
Donated by David and Fran Salyers, 2008.003.
1Tobacco Baler, ca. 1977 1Tobacco Baler, ca. 1977 Maurice Corn of Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, began 1Maurice Corn of Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, began constructing tobacco balers after working with one 1constructing tobacco balers after working with one provided by the University of Kentucky. Convinced of the 1provided by the University of Kentucky. Convinced of the
2The View-Master Model C, 1946-552The View-Master Model C, 1946-55Produced by Sawyer’s Incorporated of Portland, Oregon, 2Produced by Sawyer’s Incorporated of Portland, Oregon, this popular educational toy let families explore far-off 2this popular educational toy let families explore far-off places. Parents and children could, with the aid of the 2places. Parents and children could, with the aid of the
3Service Banner, ca. 19423Service Banner, ca. 1942The practice of displaying service banners can be 3The practice of displaying service banners can be traced to World War I and was popular during World 3traced to World War I and was popular during World War II. This banner belonged to the Masonic Lodge 3War II. This banner belonged to the Masonic Lodge
4Doll, “Jimmy,” ca. 19104Doll, “Jimmy,” ca. 1910Won at a Harrison County carnival by LeRoy Bland in 4Won at a Harrison County carnival by LeRoy Bland in 1910, this doll features battery-powered light-up eyes. 41910, this doll features battery-powered light-up eyes. The doll was dressed in this uniform when three of the 4The doll was dressed in this uniform when three of the
5Colonel 5Colonel and Pamphlet Collection5and Pamphlet CollectionThis 5This collection contains 12 postcards of various locations 5collection contains 12 postcards of various locations in Kentucky, including Mammoth Cave, Fort Knox, and the 5in Kentucky, including Mammoth Cave, Fort Knox, and the Lincoln National Memorial. Also included is a pamphlet
5Lincoln National Memorial. Also included is a pamphlet
6Torch Light Newsletters 6Torch Light Newsletters This collection contains approximately 31 issues of 6This collection contains approximately 31 issues of Light6Light, a newspaper published by the First Colored Baptist 6, a newspaper published by the First Colored Baptist Light, a newspaper published by the First Colored Baptist Light6Light, a newspaper published by the First Colored Baptist LightChurch in Danville, Ky. The issues are dated from June 6Church in Danville, Ky. The issues are dated from June
7Major Benjamin Graves Order Book, 18127Major Benjamin Graves Order Book, 1812This collection contains an order book kept by Major 7This collection contains an order book kept by Major Benjamin Graves and his staff while serving with the 7Benjamin Graves and his staff while serving with the Kentucky militia during the War of 1812. Graves was 7Kentucky militia during the War of 1812. Graves was
8Representative Brent Spence Letter8Representative Brent Spence LetterThis letter was written by the representative of Kentucky’s 8This letter was written by the representative of Kentucky’s sixth Congressional District, Brent Spence, on August 25, 8sixth Congressional District, Brent Spence, on August 25, 1961, in response to Kathy Gunther’s suggestion that 81961, in response to Kathy Gunther’s suggestion that
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827www.history.ky.gov |
Students at the “Parade of States,” College Park, Maryland
Student historians from across the commonwealth attended the Kentucky
National History Day contest, held on Saturday, April 26, at the Thomas D.
Clark Center for Kentucky History.
One hundred forty students from 14 counties across the commonwealth
in grades 6-12 prepared projects in various categories, including
documentary, historical exhibit, performance, research paper, and Web site
connected to the theme of “Confl ict and Compromise in History.” The topics
of the student projects ranged from local and state history to American and
world history. Students participating in the 2008 state contest were from
19 schools in Boone, Clark, Fayette, Franklin, Floyd, Harlan, Henderson,
Jefferson, Kenton, Madison, Perry, Pike, Rockcastle, and Spencer counties.
“Students who participate in National History Day not only achieve
academically, but they also become very enthusiastic about history,” says
NHD State Coordinator Kate Hesseldenz of the Kentucky Historical Society.
“Students get so immersed in their topics that they become engaged
with history.”
For a list of the 2008 Kentucky’s National History Day state contest winners,
visit www.history.ky.gov and click on “Programs.”
Seven student historians from Kentucky were recognized at the National
History Day national contest held at the University of Maryland campus in
College Park, Maryland, June 15-19.
Four Kentucky students reached the national fi nals. Hannah Durbin, a
student at Madison Middle School in Richmond, placed seventh overall in
the Junior Web Site category for “The Nuclear War That Never Happened:
The Cuban Missile Crisis.” Alec Henthorne, a student at the Lexington
Traditional Magnet School in Lexington, placed thirteenth overall in the
Junior Web Site category for “The Missouri Compromise: The Pathway to
Abolition.” Shelby Detring and Sara Grashel placed fourteenth overall in
the Junior Group Documentary category for “Emmett Till: The Beginning
of a Revolution.” Detring and Grashel are students at Clark Middle School
in Winchester.
Two projects also won the Best of State-Kentucky award in the junior and
senior divisions. In the Junior Division, Hannah Durbin won in the Junior
Web Site category for “The Nuclear War That Never Happened: The Cuban
Missile Crisis.”
In the Senior Division, Sarah Berge, Laura Chiarot, and Ayla Murrell won in
the Senior Group Performance category for “Bra Burners vs. Homemakers:
The Confl ict Over the Equal Rights Amendment and the Social Compromise
That Ensued.” Berge, Chiarot, and Murrell are students at The Academy for
Individual Excellence in Louisville.
In all, 47 students representing eleven schools in Boone, Clark, Fayette,
Franklin, Jefferson, Kenton, Madison, Pike, Rockcastle, and Spencer
counties represented Kentucky at the National History Day national contest.
The National History Day program is an annual, year-long program
designed to promote the teaching and learning of history. Students analyze
the historical signifi cance of their topics and present conclusions in
dramatic performances, imaginative exhibits, multimedia documentaries,
Web sites, and papers to audiences throughout the country.
Students from the Academy for Individual Excellence, Louisville, with their teacher, Gillian Langley.
KENTUCKY Students Participate in 2008 National History Day Competitions
28 |
The successful partnership between the Kentucky Historical Society (KHS),
professors from the University of Kentucky, and school districts in eastern
Kentucky was awarded a fourth $1 million grant from the U. S. Department
of Education Teaching American History program to provide an intensive
professional-development training program in American history for teachers
in that part of the state.
The grant project, entitled “Democratic Visions: From Civil War to Civil
Rights,” began in July 2008 and will conclude in June 2011. Each
year of the project, teachers will participate in two separate two-day
seminars, a one-week summer institute, an online book discussion, and
a videoconference. The summer experiences will include a bus trip to
Civil War sites in Kentucky, a digital history lab/archival workshop, and
an in-depth study of the civil rights movement using the city of Memphis,
Tennessee, as a case study.
The grant, which also includes Berea College and the Kentucky Heritage
Council as partners, is based at Powell County Schools in Stanton, and also
includes Bath, Carter, Estill, Fleming, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Pulaski,
Rockcastle, and Rowan County Schools.
“This program, which fully reimburses all travel expenses and substitute
costs incurred by teachers and provides all materials free of charge, will
be a lifesaver for these districts whose professional development budgets
have been slashed and with gas prices on the rise,” says KHS project
administrator Rebecca Hanly. “This program provides much-needed funding
for professional development in history, a content area not often found on
the menu of workshop offerings available to teachers locally.”
For more information or to inquire about participating in the “Democratic
Visions: From Civil War to Civil Rights” grant program, contact Rebecca
Hanly at 502-564-1792, ext. 4475 or by email at [email protected].
KHS Partnership Awarded $1 Million Grant from U.S. Department of Education
Keely Green, an eighth-grade American
history teacher at North Oldham Middle
School, is the 2008 Kentucky fi nalist in
the Preserve America History Teacher of
the Year contest sponsored by the Gilder
Lehrman Institute of American History.
The Kentucky Historical Society has served
as the state coordinator for this program since it began in 2004 as a facet
of the Preserve America initiative of the White House. Intended to recognize
outstanding American history teachers, the contest alternates between
elementary and middle/high school teachers each year of competition.
Green, who holds master’s degrees in history and education from the
University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville, will be part of the
national selection pool of state winners. She will receive a prize of $1,000
plus an archive of books and other teaching materials from the Gilder
Lehrman Institute. These materials will be used for Green’s school library.
The national winner will be announced in late fall.
Kentucky Finalist for Preserve America History Teacher of the Year
|News
29www.history.ky.gov |
Dr. John P. Stewart II to be honored at Lincoln Society Gala
On Monday evening, October
20, members and friends of the
Abraham Lincoln Society will
gather at the 2008 Lincoln Gala
in the Thomas D. Clark Center for
Kentucky History to honor Dr. John
P. Stewart II and to celebrate
the debut of Beyond the Log Cabin:
Kentucky’s Abraham Lincoln, the
state’s signature exhibition on
Kentucky’s native son and the
16th president.
Dr. John P. Stewart II represents
the fi fth generation of his family
to operate The Stewart Home
School. The school’s origins
date to 1893 when Dr. John Q. A.
Stewart founded Stewart Home School to protect and to nurture people with
disabling conditions. It occupies the historic campus of the old Kentucky
Military Institute, as well as an adjoining 850 acres of serene rural farmland
in Frankfort, Kentucky. Today, the Stewart family continues to provide
intellectually disabled children and adults from around the world with a one-
of-a-kind community where they are appreciated and enriched.
Dr. Stewart, current chairman of the board and resident physician at the
school, has long had a love of Kentucky history, and he and his son Charles,
have been involved in various leadership roles at the Kentucky Historical
Society since the early 1990s. The Society is pleased to acknowledge
and to recognize the Stewarts for helping ensure that Kentucky heritage is
preserved and cherished.
The Abraham Lincoln Society recognizes and honors individuals,
corporations, and foundations that treasure Kentucky history and have
expressed their commitment through generous major gift support of the
Kentucky Historical Society. Each Lincoln Society donor has made a
cumulative gift of at least $25,000.
Annually, Lincoln Society participants gather at the Lincoln Society Gala to
acknowledge the contributions of new, incoming honorees and to celebrate
the continuing generosity of existing members. If you would like more
information on becoming a Lincoln Society member, contact the Society
development offi ce at 502-564-1792 ext. 4449 or e-mail [email protected].
The cemeteries of Kentucky have a story to tell about our history and the
people who helped build our communities. The Kentucky Historical Society’s
Cemetery Preservation Program plays an important role in assisting
communities and individuals across the commonwealth in preserving pieces
of the past.
Through workshops, seminars, and other educational resources, the
KHS Cemetery Preservation Program focuses on the best practices in
preservation and provides educational materials that offer guidance and
instruction to local citizens who wish to preserve family burial plots.
“Many people begin with an interest in genealogy and then develop a
passion for cemetery preservation,” said Ann Johnson, KHS Cemetery
Preservation Program Coordinator. “One of the fi rst places people who are
conducting genealogy research go to is their family Bible and then they go
to the family cemetery.”
Often, family cemeteries are in disrepair with crumbling gravestones or
they are threatened by encroaching development. Through the cemetery-
preservation program, Johnson provides both hands-on training and
educational resources on topics including repair, cleaning headstones,
mapping cemeteries, headstone rubbings do’s and dont’s, and applicable
Kentucky law.
KHS also maintains a Kentucky Cemetery Records Database, which is
online and contains hundreds of thousands of names transcribed from
gravestones across Kentucky and an in-house database that contains
records of more than 11,000 Kentucky cemeteries, including their locations
and historical information.
For more information or to request a workshop, please contact Ann Johnson
at 502-564-1792, ext. 4404, or by email at [email protected].
Cemetery-Preservation Program Helps Preserve Kentucky History
30 |
|September 27
Protecting and Preserving Family Burial Grounds Workshop8 a.m. – 5 p.m.Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky HistoryFrankfort, Kentucky
Join genealogists, preservationists, archeologists, and government offi cials
in a public discussion of the increasing problem of safeguarding the
cemeteries and burial grounds of the commonwealth. The fee is $25, which
includes a boxed lunch and postworkshop reception.
October 20
EXHIBITION OPENING & KHS FOUNDATION ABRAHAM LINCOLN SOCIETY GALA Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky HistoryFrankfort, Kentucky
Featuring the premier of the state’s signature Lincoln exhibition, Beyond the
Log Cabin: Kentucky’s Abraham Lincoln and the KHS Foundation’s Abraham
Lincoln Society Gala. The Gala honors both new inductees into the Lincoln
Society and long-term KHS donors and supporters. Beyond the Log Cabin
explores the complex relationship between Abraham Lincoln and his native
state (opens to the public on October 21).
featured events
Because of your support last fi scal year, the Kentucky Historical Society Foundation had the highest number of donors ever to the KHS Annual Fund. With your help, we’d like to beat that record again.
Although state funding supplies a portion of the facilities and staff needed to accomplish the work of the Kentucky Historical Society, it is your donations that bridge the gap between state funding and the actual cost of KHS exhibitions, collections, education programs, and outreach services. Your support helps students discover their family and community heritage, preserves Kentucky treasures, aids scholarly research, and enables KHS to make connections to the past, offer perspective on the present, and provide inspiration for the future.
For more information about how you can help support our mission of engaging people in the exploration of the diverse heritage of the commonwealth, go to www.history.ky.gov or call the Kentucky Historical Society Foundation at 502-564-1792 ext. 4451.
Donors like you help us make history.
special Holiday hours
NovemberKHS exhibitions, library, and store, will be closed to the public on KHS exhibitions, library, and store, will be closed to the public on Thursday, November 27, and open to the public normal hours on Thursday, November 27, and open to the public normal hours on Friday, November 28.Friday, November 28.
DecemberKHS exhibitions, library, and store, will be open to the public normal KHS exhibitions, library, and store, will be open to the public normal hours on Wednesday, December 24, and closed to the public on hours on Wednesday, December 24, and closed to the public on Thursday, December 25. KHS exhibitions, library, and store will be Thursday, December 25. KHS exhibitions, library, and store will be open to the public normal hours on Wednesday, December 31, and open to the public normal hours on Wednesday, December 31, and closed to the public on Thursday, January 1, 2009.closed to the public on Thursday, January 1, 2009.
November 7
Kentucky Historical Society Annual Meeting & ReceptionOld State CapitolFrankfort, Kentucky
Learn more about the Society and the programs it offers by attending the
annual business meeting, and end the day with a reception and viewing of
Beyond the Log Cabin: Kentucky’s Abraham Lincoln, the state’s signature
exhibition in commemoration of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial. Guest
will also enjoy a KHS Museum Theatre performance of “Lincoln’s Life
through Kentucky’s Eyes.” Reservations required by November 3. Contact
Julia Curry, ext. 4414.
November 13candlelight tour5-9 p.m.
Downtown Frankfort and the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History
Celebrate the beginning of the holiday season at the Kentucky Historical Society.
Enjoy an evening of entertainment for the family, including traditional and gospel
music. Experience the Beyond the Log Cabin: Kentucky’s Abraham Lincoln
exhibition. Children and adults alike will enjoy the Lionel “O” gauge train display
at the Center, as well as the Kentucky Treasures Tree, the Cornelia Vanderbilt
Whitney dollhouse, and performances by the Squallis Puppeteers.
31www.history.ky.gov |
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The Kentucky Historical Society is an agency of the Tourism
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