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        Image Caption        

Charles Kurtz of Harrodsburg, 1949 Novice light-heavyweight champion who will compete in the Open heavyweight class this year, gets his heart and lungs x-rayed while other Golden Gloves entrants wait for their turns. To make sure all entrants were physically sound, Golden Gloves headquarters used a mobile x-ray unit yesterday to make case studies of all the young athletes. The unit was furnished through the courtesy of the Kentucky Health Department and the Lexington and Fayette County Tuberculosis Association. From left to right, those waiting for their turns are Pat Hanley, 937 Williamson Street, who will defend his Open bantamweight title; Frank Lewis of Frankfort, a Novice light-heavyweight making his first appearance in the Gloves, and Cebert Burus, 246 Willard Street, a Novice middleweight also making his first Gloves attempt. Hanley, Lewis and Burus all are members of the Elks team.



This photograph was published on Jan 16th, 1950 (1950-01-16)

Photograph Number: 3-58.01

Archival Series: 3 Golden Gloves  |   Collection Guide

Location in this photo:

Preferred Citation

3-58.01. John C. Wyatt Lexington Herald-Leader photographs. 2004av001. University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center. Accessed April 16, 2024. https://lhlphotoarchive.org/ark:/16417/th7163jc5n8kr

Guide to the John C. Wyatt photographs, 1936-1990 (2004AV001)

DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY

Title

John C. Wyatt photographs

Date

1936-1990

Creator

Wyatt, John C.
Lexington Leader (Lexington, Ky. : Daily)
Lexington Herald-Leader
Lexington Herald (Firm)

Extent

274 Cubic Feet

Subjects

Health facilities -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Cityscapes.

Lexington (Ky.) -- Photographs.

Associations, institutions, etc. -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Transportation -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Aerial views.

Photographs -- Negatives.

Lexington (Ky.) -- Social life and customs.

Recreation -- Kentucky -- Lexington

Sports -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Agriculture -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Lexington (Ky.) -- Politics and government.

Business districts -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Lexington (Ky.) -- History -- 20th century.

Industries -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Tobacco industry -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Cities and towns -- Growth -- Kentucky -- Lexington

Education -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

City & town life -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Historic buildings -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Horse racing -- Kentucky -- Lexington.

Transylvania University

Lexington Leader (Lexington, Ky. : Daily)

Lexington Herald-Leader

University of Kentucky

Preferred Citation

[Identification of item], John C. Wyatt Lexington Herald-Leader photographs, 1936-1990,
2004AV001, Special Collections and Digital Programs, University of Kentucky Libraries,
Lexington

Repository

University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center

COLLECTION OVERVIEW

Biographical/Historical note

The origins of the Lexington Herald-Leader can be traced back over 130 years to the Lexington Daily Press. Its descendant, the Morning Herald, was first published January 1, 1895 and became known as the Lexington Herald in 1905. Another large circulating newspaper during this time was the Kentucky Leader (formed by a group of Fayette County Republicans in 1888) which eventually became known as the Lexington Leader in 1901.

In 1937, the owner of the Leader, John G. Stoll, bought the Herald, and both daily papers were published concurrently (the Herald in the morning and the Leader in the afternoon) for the next 46 years. The newspapers had a combined Sunday edition, but their editorial policies remained quite different. The Leader was a Republican, society-based evening edition, and the Herald a more political, heavily Democratic morning edition.

In 1973, the newspapers were purchased by the Knight-Ridder Corporation and in 1983 were merged into a single, morning paper that is still published as The Lexington Herald-Leader. The coverage of the newspaper has grown over the years and while its focus has always been on the Lexington Metropolitan area (including 7 additional counties) it presently circulates in 78 of 120 counties throughout central and
eastern Kentucky.

For nearly 44 years the collection was cared for by John C. Wyatt (1928-2005), who became a Lexington Leader photographer in 1946, was the chief photographer for many years, and retired from the Lexington Herald-Leader in 1990. He not only participated in the creation of this visual resource but he was also responsible for the organization and intellectual control of the collection. John C. Wyatt established and maintained the collection's original organizational scheme.

Scope and Contents note

The John C. Wyatt photographs (LHL) consist of an estimated 2 million unique photographic negatives spanning the years 1939-2001. The collection also contains associated newspaper clippings, job sheets, and hand-written photographers' notes. The LHL photographs are an unparalleled source of photographic evidence of the many historical, cultural, and industrial changes that have shaped Lexington and its surrounding region. The scope of the collection highlights the day to day activities of Kentuckians. It follows the changing urban landscape of Lexington, the agricultural, tobacco and horse racing industries, key national events such as World War II and Vietnam, as well as notable regional and national figures. It is the most extensive, single collection of still photographic images documenting Lexington's 20th Century history in existence.

RESTRICTIONS ON ACCESS AND USE

Conditions Governing Access note

Collection is open for research by appointment only.

Conditions Governing Use note

Copyright restrictions apply.


Persistent Link for this Record: https://lhlphotoarchive.org/ark:/16417/th7163jc5n8kr