130 items found
Source starts with "1.09-"
Sorted by Title
Identifier Title Type Subject
ark:/16417/th7nqqkh47w1lWinchester High athletes get sweaters. Six boys five names. Can not identify.Image
ark:/16417/th7nf5v637t75Winchester Board of Commissioners meets. Harvey Brock, Mayor Tom Nunan and Sam W. Powell.Image
ark:/16417/th74h08dpn1bpWilliam L. Mahan and abandoned steam boiler which will be used in conserving his water supply.Image
ark:/16417/th71lxdh4q9r1University of Kentucky-Xavier basketball 77-71. Coach Adolph Rupp, Assistant Coach Harry Lancaster and Edwards M. Templin, promotion manager of the Herald-Leader Company, with cake presented to Rupp celebrating the eleventh anniversary of the last loss suffered by Kentucky on its home floor.Image
ark:/16417/th71qf7pr0fl5University of Kentucky-Xavier basketball 77-71. Behind Adolph Rupp (left to right) are Bill Bibb, Assistant Coach Harry Lancaster, Cookie Grawemeyer, Bill Evans, Lou Tsioropoulos, Frank Ramsey, Cliff Hagan and Edwards M. Templim.Image
ark:/16417/th7nt2zcdkrf9University of Kentucky Phi Betta Kappa initiates. Floyd M. Cammack, Mrs. Mary C. Voorhes, Sally W. Hill, Nancy Allen Turman, Patricia A. Hervey, Mary Ordell Ray and Diogenes Allen.Image
ark:/16417/th7g0k4mr3c62Union of Electricians organizers arrested outside Kentucky Glass Works. County Patrolman Guy Best, Norman Fawcett, Forrest Payne and Patrolman Larkin Powell.Image
ark:/16417/th768j7bfpf1rUnion of Electricians organizers arrested outside Kentucky Glass Works. Best between Payne and Fawcett as Miss Elizabeth Moore, another Union of Electricians organizer threatens photographer.Image
ark:/16417/th71932vvdqbrThe Harry Nelson dairy farm. Stone building, once used to house slaves, on the Huddleson farm in Bourbon county. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th7f135kbqcq7The Harry Nelson dairy farm. Stone building, once used to house slaves, on the Huddleson farm in Bourbon county.Image
ark:/16417/th7mwkrj3j2p9The Harry Nelson dairy farm. Joe Nelson here Locust Heights Delilah, Guernsey cow he raised from a calf and with which he has won a bunch of ribbons, plus, two district championships. County Agent Bob Wigginton is at right.Image
ark:/16417/th7sl3qkd58hjThe Harry Nelson dairy farm. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th7rzml5v546mThe Harry Nelson dairy farm. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th719vmt86jn8The Harry Nelson dairy farm. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th7gvcpv0l5pxThe Harry Nelson dairy farm. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th71rdgxf71hkThe Harry Nelson dairy farm. In addition to Harry Nelson his two sons, Charles and Joe, and County Agent Bob Wigginton are pictured.Image
ark:/16417/th715m0d6sqs3The Harry Nelson dairy farm. Charles and Joe go over one of the electric milkers.Image
ark:/16417/th7bz3k6tj1w6Six feet deep hole dug for the abandoned steam boiler.Image
ark:/16417/th71bzfjjnb4hSidelights on Manual-Clay County. Crowd watching the game. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th73bxt21sqmvSidelights on Manual-Clay County. Cheerleaders. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th7r8tcq9ftzpSenator John Sherman Cooper discusses parity problems with tobacco men. Senator Cooper, Herman Robinson, Paul Little and Robert Stivers.Image
ark:/16417/th7pjv1zllnkfSears Roebuck and Company honors scholarship recipients. Charles L. Hagan, R.C. Pebworth, Dewey D. Steele, Mary Ann Huflage and Oldin Steinhauser.Image
ark:/16417/th7g1cp0bfn0vSally Jane Norman, a victim of polio, will picket one of Lexington's banks in March of Dimes drive.Image
ark:/16417/th79blrg68kpxRussell school children file into the new school building for the first time. The $352,127 structure, part of the city schools' recent $1,200,000 construction program, will be the new school home of approximately 350 African American children. Image
ark:/16417/th712nsc1zzb2Reynolds Reports. General Assembly. Thomas R. Underwood, Alvin Kidwell and Lietenant Governor Emerson (Doc) Beauchamp. Representatives Charles Burnley, Harry King Lowman and Will T. Wathen.Image
ark:/16417/th71g2clfkbnqReynolds Reports. General Assembly. Representative John Young Brown speaking in House.Image
ark:/16417/th713q2pk56bjRepublicans. Lexington's four commissioners with Mayor Fred Fugazzi, center. Peter Powell, Carl J. Boone, Frank Trimble and Shelby Kinkead.Image
ark:/16417/th7l9l91341dbRepublicans. County Jailer John Keller, left, deputies Guy B. Goodrich and Roy Jennings and Chief Deputy Press Eades.Image
ark:/16417/th716pd7fk3cbRepublicans. Commissioners W.W. Greathouse III and John H. Kerr Jr., Mrs. Bonnie Milbourn, deputy county clerk, County Attorney Charles Wylie, Commissioner Ted H. Hardwick and County Judge Dan E. Fowler.Image
ark:/16417/th76sds0935n0Past Potentate W. Emmet Milward, Oleika Temple, presents certificates of merit to Walden E. Lander, Curtis B. Feltner, second and third from left. At left is Don A. McCullough, retiring potentate.Image
ark:/16417/th7l7m5g35k8jOld tobacco barn on Romany road to be moved to the M. W. Anderson farm in Woodford county. Site sold to Bluegrass Petroleum Company which will erect filling station.Image
ark:/16417/th71mtvmm4jzlOfficers of Mt. Sterling Womans Club. Mrs. Paul Hubbard, Mrs. George Reynolds, Mrs. Vance Evans and Mrs. L.N. Kratzer.Image
ark:/16417/th7h320xw1cr3New staff officers named at St. Josephs hospital. Dr. Dick Crutcher, Dr. N.L. Bosworth and Dr. Richard Elliott.Image
ark:/16417/th71dxqb8gjvbNew officers of Winchester Kiwanis Club. Left to right, Henley McCready, Nathan Golton and W.G. Kagin.Image
ark:/16417/th715c4zhrc3pMt. Sterling Water Company reservoir at low ebb. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th7jv02bnw4h4Mt. Sterling Water Company reservoir at low ebb.Image
ark:/16417/th723z8bqgs67Mt. Sterling high students like ice cream even if the weather is cold. Norita Hollon, Bill Ledford and Betty Fuller.Image
ark:/16417/th71j876j95k4Mrs. William Mott and her daughter, Patricia Ann, first birth recorded in Lexington hospitals in 1954. (St. Josephs).Image
ark:/16417/th7gxhbzgjfccMrs. Ira A. Stowe to replace Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Burnett, who resigned as director of the Fayette County Welfare Department.Image
ark:/16417/th7qsnff1dwfwMrs. Grace Chapman being placed in ambulance after being struck by Lexington Railway System bus. Ambulance Drivers Ted Howard, left, and Doug McCullough.Image
ark:/16417/th7463kkd0xgcMrs. Arnollis Meade Jr. and one of the chinchillas which she and her husband raise.Image
ark:/16417/th7vlzkjsmq6zMr. and Mrs. J.B. Bays and their two sons, Larry, four, and Scott, two years old.Image
ark:/16417/th7vspqrhmxwwMontgomery Sheriff Charles T. Frederick, left, and Deputy Dale Fawn. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th7q9lmzl49z9Montgomery Sheriff Charles T. Frederick, left, and Deputy Dale Fawn.Image
ark:/16417/th7cqmhzz859fMiss Anne Shaver and Pat Wylie winners of Americanism essay contest sponsored by the Lexington Womans Club.Image
ark:/16417/th71r90sbm2xpMembers of Winchester Planning and Zoning Board meet. Shown at the meeting are, left to right, seated, R.E. Bagsby and W.R. Hanshaw. Standing, J.H. Pickford and Warren Zitzmenn.Image
ark:/16417/th7f0cwv3lm5hMembers of Fayette Fiscal Court sworn in by Judge Chester D. Adams. Judge Dan E. Fowler and Commissioners Ted H. Hardwick, John H. Kerr Jr. and W.W. Greathouse III.Image
ark:/16417/th7cx418l3trbMarch of Dimes. Operation Burley. Leonard Greathouse, Miss Jacqueline Wise and John Greathouse.Image
ark:/16417/th71bhjgjswnmMarch of Dimes campaign opens. Window display.Image
ark:/16417/th7ldgqpzwxcrManual-Clay County 67-60. Phil Shartzner (23), Manual guard, fouls Clay County's Billy Stone (12) under the basket in Friday night's tilt at Memorial Coliseum. Clayton Stivers (24), Clay County center, appears to be resting his leg on the shoulder of Manual's Norman Kercher.Image
ark:/16417/th7hlc0g6lb48Llangolien, the home of James G. Henderson, at 450 North Limestone street, Lexington, cited as fine example of late Georgian architecture. January 1954.Image
ark:/16417/th7gpzj9j2fg0Llangolien, the home of James G. Henderson, at 450 North Limestone street, Lexington, cited as fine example of late Georgian architecture. January 1954.Image