Mariam shares the history of Kentucky’s Separate Coach Law, and Lexington’s second African American attorney, J. Alexander Chiles, who took the fight to the US Supreme court multiple times in the 1890s and early 1900s. Kentucky’s Separate Coach Law was one of many of Kentucky’s explicitly racist Jim Crow segregation laws, and those who fought against it faced persecution, harassment and assault. J. Alexander Chiles was at the forefront of this fight for de-segregated equality.
A History Lover's Guide to Lexington with Peter Brackney (2023)
The 1964 March on Frankfort (2023)
The 20th Anniversary of the Lexington Ice Storm
Julia Perry, Composer (2023)
100 Years of the Kentucky Theatre: An Interview with Fred Mills (2022)
Black Enclaves of Lexington (2022)
John Wilkes Booth in Lexington (2022)
Library Building History (2022)
Ten Hours of Terror: The Barnes Family Murder, 1973 (Part 2 of 2, 2022)
Ten Hours of Terror: The Barnes Family Murder, 1973 (Part 1 of 2, 2022)
Nick Carter, Bloodhound (2022)
Washington’s Iron Butterfly, an Interview with Terry Birdwhistell and Don Ritchie (2022)
Charles Dickens’ Visit to Kentucky (2022)
Drowned Town: An Interview with Author Jayne Moore Waldrop (2022)
Who’s the Scammer? A Tale of a Horse Sale (2021)
History of Lexington City & Fayette County Public Schools (2021)
Lafayette’s Visit to Lexington (2021)
The Urge to Merge: The Merger of Lexington’s City and Fayette County’s Governments (2021)
Russell’s Cave: A Tiny History for Fayette County’s Biggest Cave (2021)
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